News (Media Awareness Project) - CN AB: PUB LTE: Marijuana Advocates Unite (1 of 4) |
Title: | CN AB: PUB LTE: Marijuana Advocates Unite (1 of 4) |
Published On: | 2004-07-13 |
Source: | Lacombe Globe, The (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 05:14:40 |
MARIJUANA ADVOCATES UNITE
Dear Editor,
The problem here is rooted more deeply than underage cigarette and
cannabis use.
When a child tells his mother to "F- off," it's obvious that the
child-parent relationship needs work.
This mother should work on that relationship, perhaps by spending more
time with her child, rather than decry the common-sense approach
police and school administrators used in this instance.
Tim Meehan
Ontario Consumers for Safe Access to Recreational Cannabis
Toronto
Editor's note: Seldom does one single piece in the Lacombe Globe
generate such a major response.
Two issues ago, we printed a letter titled, "Marijuana and cigarette
consequences irk mom," in which a high school student's mother was
disgusted that her son was fined for having cigarettes but not marijuana.
Our policy of not running anonymous letters didn't apply--neither the
mom nor son could be identified due to the Youth Criminal Justice Act,
but the contents of the letter were too interesting to ignore.
Within a week of the letter being published, my e-mail inbox began to
fill up. Marijuana advocates from across Canada were dismayed.
Here's a taste of what they said.
Dear Editor,
The problem here is rooted more deeply than underage cigarette and
cannabis use.
When a child tells his mother to "F- off," it's obvious that the
child-parent relationship needs work.
This mother should work on that relationship, perhaps by spending more
time with her child, rather than decry the common-sense approach
police and school administrators used in this instance.
Tim Meehan
Ontario Consumers for Safe Access to Recreational Cannabis
Toronto
Editor's note: Seldom does one single piece in the Lacombe Globe
generate such a major response.
Two issues ago, we printed a letter titled, "Marijuana and cigarette
consequences irk mom," in which a high school student's mother was
disgusted that her son was fined for having cigarettes but not marijuana.
Our policy of not running anonymous letters didn't apply--neither the
mom nor son could be identified due to the Youth Criminal Justice Act,
but the contents of the letter were too interesting to ignore.
Within a week of the letter being published, my e-mail inbox began to
fill up. Marijuana advocates from across Canada were dismayed.
Here's a taste of what they said.
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