Pubdate: Thu, 26 Dec 2002
Source: View Magazine (Hamilton, CN ON)
Copyright: 2002 View Magazine
Contact:  http://www.viewmag.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2393
Author: Tony Giovinazzo

COOL ON CANADABIS

Canada's Parliamentary Committee on the Non-Medicinal use of Drugs has come 
to this conclusion: Decriminalize Marijuana. Of the estimated two to four 
million Canadians who (as Willie Nelson would say) "smoke marijuana 
responsibly" the report doesn't go nearly far enough.

The report suggests a parking ticket-style system of fines for those 
"caught" in possession of up to 30 grams. Police officers (formerly 
reluctant to bust street users with a criminal offense) with the 
fast=ADtracked handing out of $200-$1000 fines are awaiting a cash cow 
perhaps enviable by our southern neighbours. Without the assistance of a 
lawyer, cannabis smoking Canadians could simply pay their fines and get on 
with their lives free of a criminal record provided the police pot scale 
doesn't tip past the 30 gram mark and leave them with the previous 
Bush-style prohibition laws.

Those opposed to "open-ended" decriminalization include Alliance MP Randy 
White who claims five grams is plenty for personal use. The Alliance, 
sounding more aligned with American Drug Policy than the Liberals or NDP, 
say no amount of marijuana should be allowable for home cultivation. This, 
of course, leaves many wondering, "Where does the Alliance think pot comes 
from?" Most notably opposed, John Walters, director of the US Office of 
National Drug Control Policy, better known as the Drug Czar (a rather 
ironic title) claims that "high-potency" B.C. pot has turned America's sons 
and daughters into pot addicts thanks to a $5 billion industry which ships 
95 per cent of the pot into the States.

British Columbia may grow the best pot but America still cultivates the 
best marijuana mythology.

Think you're sober? Try this: The UK approach to roadside marijuana 
impairment testing begins with an eye pupil examination. It progresses to 
walking a straight line while counting out each steps taken and then, the 
impossible part -- standing on one foot, tilting your head back, closing 
your eyes, stretching out your arms and touching your nose with each hand, 
all with out losing your balance.

Good luck.

On the proposed decriminalization issue:

"Three in 10 people [currently] engage in criminal activity [pot smoking]."

- -- Paddy Torsney

Chair of the House of Commons' Special Committee on non-medical use of drugs

"I'm saying if I ever were to run federally, I'd probably put in my plank 
that we should not only decriminalize it, we should legalize it."

- -- Roger Grimes, Newfoundland Premier

Possession or growing of up to 30 grams would not be a criminal offense 
under the proposed legislation. Instead a fine would be paid. On these fines:

"The maximum fine under the South Australian system is only $150, while the 
ticketing system being proposed in Canada by Keith Martin would carry a 
$200 fine for a first pot-possession offense, escalating to $500 the second 
time, and to $1000 for the third offense. With the fine payment set so 
high, there would likely be an even higher rate of default under this system."

- -- Dana Larsen

Editor, Cannabis Culture magazine

Trafficking in any amount remains a crime: "You heard the American drug 
Czar talking about the hothouses in B.C. and other parts of this country 
that are causing great concern to us domestically, and to them. We think 
that our recommendation to include cultivation of small amounts [of 
cannabis] will help address that problem."

- -- Paddy Torsney

On new drug driving laws:

"When a level of THC is found in somebody's blood, it's impossible to know 
when it got there. The same level could be the result of very heavy use 
days or even weeks ago or a small amount taken recently, the methods we 
have now just aren't precise enough to show impairment."

- -- Dr. Barry Beyerstein

Psychopharmacologist, Simon Fraser University

"We need to develop tools to test for impairment, it is already illegal to 
drive while impaired whether from sleep or alcohol or drugs and we want 
there to be a better test for marijuana impairment."

- --Paddy Torsney

CTV asked if decriminalization would be a source of tension with the United 
States. On the American war-on-drugs backlash: "I'm not concerned. It'll 
ultimately become a source of discussion. Some people in the U.S. have said 
it will raise problems at the border, so we'll see if that's true, I 
honestly don't believe in the end that it's true, because I think we'll do 
it in a way which reduces the tensions..."

- -- Bill Graham, Foreign Affairs Minister

Responding to a visit from American drug Czar John Walters, where he 
painstakingly gave a speech at a Vancouver Board of Trade luncheon amidst 
heckling from a table held by eight members of the B.C. Marijuana Party: 
"Somehow I just haven't been able to come to grips with marijuana being 
that devastating a drug. We don't see that here. I don't know why we don't 
see that here and they see it so clearly there."

- -- Larry Campbell, Vancouver Mayor-Elect

"They've got an armed camp going on in the United States and if we don't 
want Canada to be like that armed camp we have to take a separate path."

- -- Marc Emery, BC Marijuana Party

"They arrested and charged 40 thousand people in New York City for 
marijuana offenses. A lot of them went to a drug court, and the drug court 
says, `We can try and save you from a record. We won't put you in jail but 
we'll put you into treatment.' So they're into treatment, so therefore 
[John Walters] is extrapolating from that, the fact that the marijuana 
users are the ones that are in treatment. Well they're in treatment because 
of the structure."

- -- Philip Owen, Vancouver Mayor
- ---
MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens