News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: PUB LTE: Lessons From Prohibition Not Heeded |
Title: | CN ON: PUB LTE: Lessons From Prohibition Not Heeded |
Published On: | 2007-05-18 |
Source: | Packet & Times (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 05:53:57 |
LESSONS FROM PROHIBITION NOT HEEDED
Det. Const. Jay Hutton said, "We've seen marijuana linked to
violence." What balderdash! Marijuana doesn't make people violent,
the money around it does. What he has seen is marijuana prohibition
linked to violence.
Luckily for the police, few Canadian journalists ever bother to ask
cops the hard questions, so the police never have to come clean.
"We're right because we say we're right," is the police story, and it
is simply regurgitated by the media.
Hutton even says; "We'll never get rid of the drugs. It's just trying
to make our communities as safe as possible." By enforcing
prohibition?! MORE nonsense! In the U.S. during the 1930s, alcohol
was prohibited much as drugs are today. Children had easy access to
bootleg liquor that blinded or killed many.
Gangsters ruled the streets with machine guns, police became less and
less effective as the gangs, wealth and power grew, and corruption was rampant.
Mothers, grandmothers, and teachers lobbied the government to
regulate alcohol so that it would be out of the hands of children.
They understood that when we criminalize a popular substance, we
create a black market that preys on children.
How is it that people from 70 years ago were so much smarter than we are today?
Easy! They didn't believe the police, government, school, and church
balderdash that says the only way to control drug use in society is
with strict criminal sanctions.
And since we know for a fact that prohibition is doing far more
damage to users and society than the drugs themselves ever could, who
or what exactly, are the police and government trying to protect?
Their jobs, their power, and their budgets - that's what!
Russell Barth,
federal medical marijuana licence holder,
Ottawa
Det. Const. Jay Hutton said, "We've seen marijuana linked to
violence." What balderdash! Marijuana doesn't make people violent,
the money around it does. What he has seen is marijuana prohibition
linked to violence.
Luckily for the police, few Canadian journalists ever bother to ask
cops the hard questions, so the police never have to come clean.
"We're right because we say we're right," is the police story, and it
is simply regurgitated by the media.
Hutton even says; "We'll never get rid of the drugs. It's just trying
to make our communities as safe as possible." By enforcing
prohibition?! MORE nonsense! In the U.S. during the 1930s, alcohol
was prohibited much as drugs are today. Children had easy access to
bootleg liquor that blinded or killed many.
Gangsters ruled the streets with machine guns, police became less and
less effective as the gangs, wealth and power grew, and corruption was rampant.
Mothers, grandmothers, and teachers lobbied the government to
regulate alcohol so that it would be out of the hands of children.
They understood that when we criminalize a popular substance, we
create a black market that preys on children.
How is it that people from 70 years ago were so much smarter than we are today?
Easy! They didn't believe the police, government, school, and church
balderdash that says the only way to control drug use in society is
with strict criminal sanctions.
And since we know for a fact that prohibition is doing far more
damage to users and society than the drugs themselves ever could, who
or what exactly, are the police and government trying to protect?
Their jobs, their power, and their budgets - that's what!
Russell Barth,
federal medical marijuana licence holder,
Ottawa
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