News (Media Awareness Project) - CN QU: PUB LTE: Look To Europe For Drug Policy |
Title: | CN QU: PUB LTE: Look To Europe For Drug Policy |
Published On: | 2002-10-28 |
Source: | Montreal Gazette (CN QU) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-21 21:21:03 |
LOOK TO EUROPE FOR DRUG POLICY
Changing our bad prohibitive laws that criminalize marijuana is long
overdue (Gazette, Oct. 24, "Tolerance for legal pot higher"), considering
the LeDain Commission recommended decriminalization way back in the early
1970s. What are our lawmakers waiting for, permission from the Drug War
barons in Washington?
Canada's own drug laws are evidently tweaked, to put it mildly, by the
United States's own warped political interests and its puritanical
social-engineering mind-set of "just say no," zero-tolerance, zero-thinking
drug policies. Canadians deserve better than the failures of American
prohibition.
We should be looking to the Europeans, in particular to the Netherlands,
for a good example of not only a rational drug policy that works regarding
marijuana use but also one that has been clearly successful in separating
the truly dangerous hard drugs from the easy availability of the
uncontrolled, illicit marketplace.
It's time our government wised up and dumped the delusions of prohibition.
Decriminalization and legalization actually mean a regulated, controlled
market - just the opposite of what criminal interdiction and prohibition
policies have delivered for the last 70 years. Prohibition is not just a
failure; it's a counterproductive fraud.
The majority of Canadians are trying to tell their lawmakers something. Is
the government paying attention?
David d'Apollonia, Dollard des Ormeaux
Changing our bad prohibitive laws that criminalize marijuana is long
overdue (Gazette, Oct. 24, "Tolerance for legal pot higher"), considering
the LeDain Commission recommended decriminalization way back in the early
1970s. What are our lawmakers waiting for, permission from the Drug War
barons in Washington?
Canada's own drug laws are evidently tweaked, to put it mildly, by the
United States's own warped political interests and its puritanical
social-engineering mind-set of "just say no," zero-tolerance, zero-thinking
drug policies. Canadians deserve better than the failures of American
prohibition.
We should be looking to the Europeans, in particular to the Netherlands,
for a good example of not only a rational drug policy that works regarding
marijuana use but also one that has been clearly successful in separating
the truly dangerous hard drugs from the easy availability of the
uncontrolled, illicit marketplace.
It's time our government wised up and dumped the delusions of prohibition.
Decriminalization and legalization actually mean a regulated, controlled
market - just the opposite of what criminal interdiction and prohibition
policies have delivered for the last 70 years. Prohibition is not just a
failure; it's a counterproductive fraud.
The majority of Canadians are trying to tell their lawmakers something. Is
the government paying attention?
David d'Apollonia, Dollard des Ormeaux
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