News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: PUB LTE: Here's A Reality Check |
Title: | CN ON: PUB LTE: Here's A Reality Check |
Published On: | 2002-12-21 |
Source: | Ottawa Sun (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 16:35:06 |
HERE'S A REALITY CHECK
RE: Pot and safe injection sites. It must be so easy for people to joke
about or criticize government initiatives on these issues. It must be so
easy to discount the value of lives of drug addicts (who are often homeless
and at higher risk of having HIV/AIDS or hep-C) by saying: "Throw the bums
in jail!" ... they're are eyesore after all! We feel sorry for alcoholics,
but have no sympathy for drug addicts. The only difference: One substance
is legal ... and we all know that not everything legal is necessarily moral
or ethical. We would all prefer this reality did not exist, but it does, so
let's deal with it.
HERE'S A REALITY CHECK: DECADES AGO, POT WAS DECRIMINALIZED IN THE
Netherlands and usage rates are lower today than in 1982. The cost of
supplying anti-HIV medication for one person can be over $24,000 a year. An
addict doesn't much care where their dirty needle is left, the legality of
their actions, or their health ... they worry about getting their next fix.
Think you're angry because $1 billion was mismanaged on the gun registry?
How much do you think it would cost to track down, arrest, prosecute and
keep in jail every single Canadian who smokes pot?
The same people who go the morality route on drugs are the same ones who
would be up in arms upon learning of tax hikes to pay for increased law and
order, or asking why harm-reduction strategies weren't in place when their
darling six-year-old catches HIV from a needle found in the school yard.
Eternally dissatisfied hypocrites!
D. Connors
Ottawa
(Maybe, but that doesn't make their argument wrong or right)
RE: Pot and safe injection sites. It must be so easy for people to joke
about or criticize government initiatives on these issues. It must be so
easy to discount the value of lives of drug addicts (who are often homeless
and at higher risk of having HIV/AIDS or hep-C) by saying: "Throw the bums
in jail!" ... they're are eyesore after all! We feel sorry for alcoholics,
but have no sympathy for drug addicts. The only difference: One substance
is legal ... and we all know that not everything legal is necessarily moral
or ethical. We would all prefer this reality did not exist, but it does, so
let's deal with it.
HERE'S A REALITY CHECK: DECADES AGO, POT WAS DECRIMINALIZED IN THE
Netherlands and usage rates are lower today than in 1982. The cost of
supplying anti-HIV medication for one person can be over $24,000 a year. An
addict doesn't much care where their dirty needle is left, the legality of
their actions, or their health ... they worry about getting their next fix.
Think you're angry because $1 billion was mismanaged on the gun registry?
How much do you think it would cost to track down, arrest, prosecute and
keep in jail every single Canadian who smokes pot?
The same people who go the morality route on drugs are the same ones who
would be up in arms upon learning of tax hikes to pay for increased law and
order, or asking why harm-reduction strategies weren't in place when their
darling six-year-old catches HIV from a needle found in the school yard.
Eternally dissatisfied hypocrites!
D. Connors
Ottawa
(Maybe, but that doesn't make their argument wrong or right)
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