Pubdate: Mon, 23 Mar 2009
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2009 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Ian Mulgrew

GANGS ARE A SYMPTOM, DRUGS ARE THE DISEASE

Attorney-General Wally Oppal spent the weekend focused on gangs -- 
meeting first with his western provincial counterparts and then with 
Mexican officials to share intelligence. There is no question the 
issue has risen to the top of his political agenda.

The four justice ministers emerged from their hand-wringing Saturday 
unanimously saying we need legal changes to combat the current wave 
of killings and shootings.

"We've seen more violence than we used to see," Manitoba Justice 
Minister Dave Chomiak said, gravely supporting Oppal's ideas for 
Criminal Code changes.

Everyone agreed.

Still, it will take a great deal more than singing a law-and-order 
version of We Shall Overcome to staunch the bloodshed. And I'm sure 
the A-G heard that from the Mexicans.

Oppal's suggestions -- stricter bail and looser wiretap laws -- will 
do little to stem the carnage and it's unlikely such amendments will 
even slow the growth of the gangs.

I'm sure the Mexicans on Sunday explained why such laws don't help 
that much and why even their military has been unsuccessful in 
defeating the gangs.

But I'm also sure Oppal knows: Too much easy money.

Gangs are not a Vancouver problem, nor a Western Canadian problem. 
They are a global scourge.

We didn't get any solutions from the justice ministers Saturday 
because they are avoiding the truth: The issue isn't gangs; it's illicit drugs.

Illegal drugs are big money precisely because they are prohibited: 
Marijuana grows like a weed and cocaine can be processed for pennies.

The U.S. and Mexico don't have our legal niceties problem and neither 
is dealing with the burgeoning gangsterism any better than we are. No 
country is.

That's because the gangs are a symptom, not the disease.

Whether you live in Tijuana, New York or Vancouver, murders and 
shootings have become common because of the illegal drug market.

There is only one solution that promises to reduce the violence -- 
the end of the drug prohibition. We can only sap the strength of the 
gangs by removing the enormous profits reaped from drug trafficking.

No modern nation, however, has been able to move in that direction 
because of American hegemony.

That may begin to change under President Barack Obama; he has 
certainly made immediate and startling changes to American domestic 
drug policy.

Regardless, we need to think for ourselves and we need to consider a 
fundamental change to public policy.

In Mexico, the dead in the drug war are counted in the thousands and 
so they are actively debating legalization, Yankee sensibilities be 
damned. They have had enough.

We need to follow their lead.

There are more illegal substances on our streets today than when 
disgraced president Richard Nixon launched the War on Drugs. This 
public policy has been an overwhelming and abject failure. Worse -- 
it made things worse.

Yet the provincial justice ministers focused on insignificant 
concerns rather than this elephant in the room.

By all means update the wiretap laws. Tighten bail restrictions and 
improve the custodial conditions of already crowded provincial remand 
centres so two-for-one credit isn't awarded out of fairness.

But remember: For every gangster we put behind bars, there is a 
lineup to take his or her place.

There have been nearly 40 shootings in Metro Vancouver leaving 17 
people dead since late January.

Chomiak is right. We are seeing more violence than we used to see. 
Each of us is at greater risk than ever as a result of the 
indiscriminate gunfire that accompanies the drug prohibition.

What we're doing is exacerbating the situation and endangering our 
children -- so let's change our approach.

Let's stop using the criminal law to regulate drug use. It doesn't 
work. Let's start talking about what comes next.

Removing massive drug profits from the underground economy won't 
eliminate gangs, but it will reduce their number and scope considerably.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart