News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Busting Grow-Ops Is a Wasted Effort |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Busting Grow-Ops Is a Wasted Effort |
Published On: | 2004-07-23 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 04:40:57 |
BUSTING GROW-OPS IS A WASTED EFFORT
Re: Pot, hash use up almost 100% in Canada from 1989 to 2002, July 22
Marijuana use is here to stay. I don't want my tax dollars used to
fight grow-ops when the police can hardly bust but a small fraction of
them.
In the free and democratic society we supposedly live in, it should
not be up to a paternalistic government to tell me what I can and
cannot smoke. Marijuana has little risk to light users -- unlike tobacco.
There are no good arguments to stop anywhere short of legalization,
which would: allow our tax dollars to be spent on education of the
dangers of heavy cannabis use; weaken criminal gangs dependent on
grow-ops for their profits; provide excise taxes from cannabis to be
put into health care; and eliminate small, dangerous grow-ops that
would not be able to compete with larger, government-inspected operations.
If anyone wants to argue that cannabis should remain illegal because
it is bad for users' health, then I would beg them to press the
government to ban alcohol, tobacco, fatty foods, dangerous sports and
other "dangerous" pursuits we are freely allowed to engage in.
Scott Allan
Port Moody
Re: Pot, hash use up almost 100% in Canada from 1989 to 2002, July 22
Marijuana use is here to stay. I don't want my tax dollars used to
fight grow-ops when the police can hardly bust but a small fraction of
them.
In the free and democratic society we supposedly live in, it should
not be up to a paternalistic government to tell me what I can and
cannot smoke. Marijuana has little risk to light users -- unlike tobacco.
There are no good arguments to stop anywhere short of legalization,
which would: allow our tax dollars to be spent on education of the
dangers of heavy cannabis use; weaken criminal gangs dependent on
grow-ops for their profits; provide excise taxes from cannabis to be
put into health care; and eliminate small, dangerous grow-ops that
would not be able to compete with larger, government-inspected operations.
If anyone wants to argue that cannabis should remain illegal because
it is bad for users' health, then I would beg them to press the
government to ban alcohol, tobacco, fatty foods, dangerous sports and
other "dangerous" pursuits we are freely allowed to engage in.
Scott Allan
Port Moody
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