Admit it, the Drug War is a Failure

Bill C-15 Nearing Passage - Let the Prison Building Begin!

Bill C-15 is Garbage - It Will Not Work and will Increase the Cost to The Tax Payer to Imprison Non Violent Mom and Pop Marijuana Growers

Bill C-15 is a prohibitionist drug bill being put forward by the Conservative Government. It is intended to deter people from growing marijuana by instituting mandatory minimum prison sentences for growing as few as 1 marijuana plant. It has just passed a crucial step in the senate review process and will soon be passed back to the house.

Thanks to our hypocritical, dishonest, and smug Conservative government’s Bill C-15 we’re going to repeat the same mistake that the US has been making for decades. We’re going to be ignoring all scientific evidence and expert advice that marijuana should be legalized and regulated, and instead throw otherwise law abiding Canadians in prison for growing as few as one cannabis plant. Seriously, sometimes I think the world is just fucking with me. Sigh.

Like come on - just look at the facts Harper! The state of California has to release 40,000 inmates because they can’t provide a humane prison environment for the prisoners. They have too many people behind bars because of their mandatory minimum sentence drug laws. Laws that intended to help win the war on drugs - but the war is not being won and the state is going broke trying.

Those kinds of laws are being reversed across the USA because they failed to reduce drug use, production or distribution. They have only increased the burden on the tax payer by having to house non violent drug “offenders” in jail. And this is what Harper wants to sign us up for?

So why is Stephen Harper choosing to go down this road that has proven to be a failure? Probably because the failure of this policy won’t be known until Harper is long gone. And while he’s still in power he’ll benefit from this bills passage. His political base will love him for getting tough on those evil drug users. After all, Jesus would lock em up and throw away the key too wouldn’t he? Not.

There’s also a high likelihood that Harper likes the privatized prison system in the US and the way that system works is to keep prisons full of non violent drug offenders.

Of course the Conservatives couldn’t pass this Bill without Liberal support, and of course they got it. This castrated opposition party is as useless as a leaky bong and to avoid a crushing defeat in the next election they aren’t going to look “soft on crime” by defeating this legislation. Even if that is to the detriment of the Canadian tax payer.

All I can say is get ready to invest in privatized prisons if the Cons ever get a majority because they’re certainly laying the groundwork for keeping the cells full. And God knows Canadians aren’t going to give up their herb so it looks like we’re in for an expensive and devastating criminal justice experiment.

Top 10 Reasons Why Legalizing Drugs Is Better Than the Status Quo

 

Drug prohibition has failed just like alcohol prohibition

1. The majority of street gangs are financed almost entirely by selling narcotics on the black market. A black market we created by criminalizing the drug trade in the first place. Reversing these well intentioned but devastatingly flawed drug laws will bring drug sales into a regulated legal marketplace. Criminals will no longer be involved in the drug trade when it no longer offers them a profit margin which will in turn weaken street gangs. Over time legalizing and regulating the drug trade will reverse the establishment of gangs as a normal part of our society.

2. Drugs are very inexpensive to produce yet on the black market their price includes a super high risk premium. This often forces the most severely addicted people to commit other crimes to get the money they need to feed their addiction. Even though the most severely addicted and most visible drug users (the ones in the alleys - the stereotypical addict) account for a very small percentage of the drug market they cause a disproportional amount of drug prohibition caused crime in our neighborhoods causing further cost to the non drug using tax payer.

3. Even though drug prices are hyper inflated on the black market compared to their cost to produce drug prices are falling while quality increases. Today drugs are more affordable than ever and more potent which is an economic indication that supply is high and the markets demand is being met by skilled manufacturers. This is a really good indicator that we are losing the war on drugs BIG TIME. Ending drug prohibition would usher in a system of production and distribution controls designed to keep price and quality under control.

4. Our drug laws are creating a lack of trust in law enforcement. This is best evidenced by the fact that the word narc is considered a bad word in almost all circles. Nobody wants to be called a narc. In my view nobody should have to avoid law enforcement contact because they use marijuana or have a hard drug addiction. Yet our current laws force people to hide their addiction and avoid police contact - this is clearly not what we intended when we passed our drug laws. Police should be viewed as a positive by people, due to drug laws they often are not.

5. Our drug laws are a leading cause of police and political corruption. The profits to be made in the drug trade are very enticing. Police and public leaders are as susceptible to greed as anyone else. We’re all human. Add to that, if a cop or politician feels like they or their family may be threatened by a criminal organization they will probably do whatever they are told to do just to stay alive. This corruption is caused by the illegal drug trade taking place on the black market that we created when we made drugs illegal.

6. Environmental damage is being caused by unregulated drug manufacturing. We’ve all seen the news stories about drug labs and pot farms that are throwing dangerous chemicals into our lakes, streams and other wilderness areas. What those news stories often neglect to mention is that all of this damage could be stopped if we regulated and monitored the production of these drugs. It’s the illegal black market production of these drugs that leads to the dangerous dumping. By monitoring the production we’d also be able to ensure quality and purity making the use of these drugs less deadly for the addict.

7. We finance terrorists and other enemies by outlawing drugs. This one is simple - we outlaw drugs, we outlaw the production of drugs, our enemies grow drugs, our enemies ship us drugs, we buy the drugs, we use the drugs, we get addicted to drugs, we fill our prisons with drug users, we have less money to fight our enemies and the drugs, our enemies make billions off the drugs. This cycle ends immediately upon ending drug prohibition.

8. Money that could be used to treat addicts gets spent chasing drug dealers and making them face justice. So instead of focusing our efforts on helping addicts we focus our resources on the punishment of dealers. You can see this by the abhorent lack of drug treatment facilities and addiction specialists compared to the number of drug cops, drug lawyers, drug courts, prisons guards, prisons, etc. The status quo will continue to harm addicts caught in the middle of the never ending cat and mouse game between gangs and cops.

9. Kids have greater access to drugs now then they did before drug prohibition. Ask any high school kid in any city if they could find drugs if they wanted them, and would it be easier than getting alcohol? You’ll get a resounding YES, YES. This is an epic failure for drug prohibition and should be enough of a reason to end it NOW.

10. Our current drug laws ignore the effectiveness of Government anti-smoking messages on cigarette packaging. If, with each and every purchase of a narcotic, the user was forced to stare the reality of drug abuse in the face through horrific images and scary text we might start to see some return on our drug use prevention tax dollars. Unfortunately, until we change our laws we will never be able to do this because the Government does not control drug distribution, and thus drug packaging - gangsters do. That’s why drugs are sold in clear zip lock baggies or flaps of white paper with cute characters drawn on them - with no health warnings to be seen.

Vancouver 420, Huge Success but There's More to Do

Yesterday in Vancouver, all across Canada and around the world, the cannabis culture gathered in high profile public places to show their strong opposition to cannabis prohibition. Their message was loud and clear. Like the smell of BC Bud in the air it could not be missed.

Legalize cannabis and move on! Put an end to the frivolous persecution of law abiding citizens who choose to use cannabis - medicinally or recreationally! We are done with frivolous persecutions of good people. Persecution like what is being proposed in Bill C-15 by the Conservative government!

I’ve been saying it for a long time, and I’ll keep saying it until the laws are changed - adults should be allowed to consume cannabis if they want to.

Legalization of marijuana is more than just a matter of personal freedom and the right to choose to do to ones self as one chooses. Legalizing marijuana is also an issue of money. Both in terms of how much money our government is wasting trying to eliminate pot from our society and in terms of the money that goes to gangsters and cartels that profit from our misguided laws.

We have many examples in Vancouver over the past few months were this equation has been played out in the media. Vancouver cops running out of cash to fight the bloody gang war on our streets (tax dollars wasted and in short supply), and the gangs fighting for control of the lucrative VanCity drug trade without any concern for the public (massive profits from drug trafficking at any cost).

And we could so easily turn the loss of these tax dollars into positive programs to help the addicted and educate the non addicted. All it would take is some courageous politicians to write new drug policy and get it passed. New laws that directed resources at treatment, prevention and harm reduction and eliminated law enforcement from the equation (aside from enforcing laws similar to those we have around alcohol and tobacco).

Over night those new laws would take massive amounts of cash away from organized crime. It would be a massive kick to the collective crotch of gangsters.

And overnight we could start to tax marijuana sales and license growers. BAM - money going in the coffers instead of out and no more dangerous grow ops in our communities.

All of this is just common sense, its just not politically safe to talk about. Thankfully the mood across Canada is changing. Sooner or later the politicians will have to act. After all, in the short time that I’ve been following the injustice of our cannabis laws (about 20 years) I’ve seen encouraging trends and they’re all leading to the eventual end of cannabis prohibition.

But for right now I’m just going to relax and reflect on the awesome 4/20 I had in Vancouver yesterday. And how sweet it was to smoke a jay and watch this beautiful sun set on Burrard inlet.

Vancouver and cannabis were made for one another - that sun set proves it.

Vancouver 420 2009 - Sunsetting on a Wonderful Cannabis Filled Day

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