News (Media Awareness Project) - CN NF: PUB LTE: Senators And Marijuana |
Title: | CN NF: PUB LTE: Senators And Marijuana |
Published On: | 2002-06-08 |
Source: | Telegram, The (CN NF) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 05:31:31 |
SENATORS AND MARIJUANA
Your reportage of the Senate committee that investigates illegal drugs on
June 6, included a statement by Professor Bill McKim and Senator Tommy
Banks in which "both agreed before any decisions were made (about
decriminalization of cannabis), extensive testing and research would have
to be done to study the effects of the drug on the body, and on a society."
Some questions
On a society? Where will they find a discardable test-society?
And what if the drug alters the mind and not the body? Would that be OK,,
then?
Such poorly thought-out statements are in reality drug-war tactics designed
to stall the decriminalization effort. The marijuana war is just too much
of a gravy train to give up without a fight.
Also of interest was the passage where the RCMP "do not support legalizing
marijuana in any way." How unsurprising.
Police cuts
Ending the war on cannabis users would lead to personnel cutbacks and the
decrease of police power, and who could want that?
What a long way from when police were public servants and did the will of
the citizens, rather that politicking for advantage.
Harry D. Fisher
Woodland Hills, CA
Your reportage of the Senate committee that investigates illegal drugs on
June 6, included a statement by Professor Bill McKim and Senator Tommy
Banks in which "both agreed before any decisions were made (about
decriminalization of cannabis), extensive testing and research would have
to be done to study the effects of the drug on the body, and on a society."
Some questions
On a society? Where will they find a discardable test-society?
And what if the drug alters the mind and not the body? Would that be OK,,
then?
Such poorly thought-out statements are in reality drug-war tactics designed
to stall the decriminalization effort. The marijuana war is just too much
of a gravy train to give up without a fight.
Also of interest was the passage where the RCMP "do not support legalizing
marijuana in any way." How unsurprising.
Police cuts
Ending the war on cannabis users would lead to personnel cutbacks and the
decrease of police power, and who could want that?
What a long way from when police were public servants and did the will of
the citizens, rather that politicking for advantage.
Harry D. Fisher
Woodland Hills, CA
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