Pubdate: Wed, 02 Nov 2011
Source: Goldstream Gazette (Victoria, CN BC)
Column: Think About It
Copyright: 2011 Black Press
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/vvfJCciY
Website: http://www.goldstreamgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1291
Author: George Mortimore
Note: G.E. Mortimore is a Langford-based writer. Think About It runs every
second week in the Gazette.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)

THE CASE FOR LAWFUL, CONTROLLED POT

"Big Tobacco" would love to grab the billions of dollars that will 
flow from marijuana if its sale is made general and lawful across Canada.

But public health and the public treasury will arguably be in better 
shape if corporate industry is shut out and marijuana is carefully 
legalized, step by step, and made a government monopoly in Canada, as 
tobacco used to be in France and Spain.

I say "arguably" because there are hot-gospellers both for and 
against legalization, and wise decisions do seem more likely to occur 
if emotionally-based beliefs, and their supporting bundles of 
evidence, are held up to daylight.

When the shouting and banging of gavels quiets down, I believe the 
benefits of separating marijuana from nastier chemicals and placing 
pot under open public supply and control far outweighs disadvantages 
of any other possible policy choice.

In answer to objections, legalization campaigners can only say: 
Listen to everyone, take on the role of pathfinder for the world, 
build a consensus network, give the change a sufficiently long trial, 
don't surrender to drug hysteria, watch for unintended consequences, 
and be ready to fine tune the action.

Few Canadians have heard of Altadis, a name that sounds like a 
distant star. For those who know about it, however, the name raises 
thoughts of lung cancer. Altadis is a multinational manufacturer and 
seller of cigarettes, tobacco and cigars.

My wife died of lung cancer. For this and other reasons, I have 
strong feelings about the subject.

I found out from friends that Peggy was still taking occasional puffs 
long after she said she had quit. Altadis played a part in causing 
the premature deaths of millions of nicotine-addicted people.

By 1971, France and Spain -- inspired by the doctrine of the "free 
market" -- had reached the final stage in the privatization of what 
used to be their nationally operated tobacco industries.

Privatization meant a strong though subtle drive to increase the 
sales of this death-drug and get new addicts hooked while denying or 
concealing tobacco's fatal effects.

By the logic of the "free market," this is a virtue, not a crime. 
Commercial corporate executives are pledged to boost sales and 
profits. It's their duty to the shareholders.

The leaders of a publicly owned tobacco or marijuana operation have 
no such duty.

They may be enjoined to reduce sales and thereby stretch lifespans 
longer, while companion government offices raise compensatory 
revenues by taxing other chemicals and activities that are damaging 
yet popular. Activities such as stock-market and currency gambling, 
for example.

"Altadis was formed via a 1999 merger between Tabacalera, the former 
Spanish tobacco monopoly and SEITA, the former French tobacco 
monopoly," Wikipedia reports. "The company was acquired by the 
British tobacco giant Imperial Tobacco in 2008."

Hopefully there won't be any takeover of legalized marijuana by an 
Imperial Tobacco and Marijuana Corporation.

Marijuana is a socially popular, low-hazard, sometimes medically 
helpful drug that lacks the extreme dangers of alcohol. Is it a 
gateway to hard drugs, a major cause of road crashes, or a cause of 
lung cancer? A fast look at the evidence suggests that the answer to 
all three questions is "no."

The aroma of pot wafts up from millions of homes and party gatherings.

Forbidding its use, and filling jails with its growers and sellers, 
seems just as quirky, hazardous and self-defeating as the prohibition 
of alcohol was in the U.S.A. (and Canada briefly) long ago, when 
convivial drinkers filled speakeasies owned by gangsters, and 
referred to the forbidden beverage by such coy, joking terms as "panther sweat."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom