Don Briere, owner of Weeds Glass and Gifts stores in Vancouver - Stefania Seccia photo - 24 Hours Vancouver |
Federal government lacks common sense on medical marijuana.
Bill Tieleman’s 24 Hours Vancouver /
The Tyee column
Tuesday
April 28, 2015
By Bill Tieleman
"Once
you legalize something, you normalize it. When you normalize it, the message is
that it's safe and marijuana is not safe for young people."
-
Conservative Health Minister Rona Ambrose
It's
time to use common sense on the medicinal marijuana business that is growing
wild in Vancouver -- not a dose of reefer madness.
Unfortunately,
the federal Conservative government demands an ideological approach that
ignores reality while trying to score political points with its right-wing base
in an election year.
But
even some Conservative voters can't be happy with this ham-handed approach to
marijuana -- or Ambrose's obvious attempt to paint the opposition as drug
fiends pushing dope to kids.
Fortunately,
Vancouver council is taking a more sensible course by proposing regulations
for the 80 medicinal marijuana dispensaries that have sprung up since the
federal government in 2014 banned the cultivation of pot by patients with a
prescription.
The
proposed city regulations -- including a steep $30,000 annual licensing fee and
staying at least 300 metres away from schools, community centres and other
dispensaries -- ensure some reasonable level of responsibility instead of
chaos.
The
marijuana majority
The
issue of decriminalization or legalization of marijuana is anathema to Prime
Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives but an Angus Reid poll
last year found 59 per cent of Canadians and 70 per cent of British Columbians
backed legalization.
Even
43 per cent of Conservative voters agreed.
However,
Ambrose doesn't care about the majority who favour ending the criminal
prohibition on marijuana that has clearly failed to curb appetite for the drug
-- whether for medicinal or recreational purposes.
"I
would not support a Justin Trudeau Canada, where what's happening in downtown
Vancouver [is repeated elsewhere] where pot dispensaries are opening up on
corners. They are not regulated. Pot is illegal right now, unless you are
through the medical marijuana program of Health Canada," Ambrose told
CBC Radio host Stephen Quinn on Friday.
Tagging
Liberal leader Trudeau (who supports legalization) or New Democrat leader Tom
Mulcair (who backs decriminalization) as the problem insults voters'
intelligence -- and their desire for a sensible solution.
And
with both Washington State and Colorado recently voting to legalize marijuana,
even a Conservative cabinet minister should be able to tell which way the weed
wind is blowing.
In
fact, federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay publicly suggested
last August that the government might turn personal pot possession into a
ticketed offence instead of a crime where even possession of less than 30 grams
can lead to a six-month prison sentence.
And
ironically given the easy access to medical marijuana in Vancouver, eight B.C.
men have been ordered extradited
to the United States to face serious marijuana smuggling charges for allegedly
shipping hundreds of kilos to California.
So
let's be blunt about blunts -- marijuana will be consumed by a significant
portion of the Canadian population regardless of the laws.
And
while it has demonstrable health benefits
for some patients -- those suffering from cancer, glaucoma, nausea and other
illnesses -- it can also be unhealthy, particularly when smoked or used in
excess.
The
obvious answer is to look at the facts, not fuel the fiction.
Dispensing
evidence
Dr.
Sanjay Gupta, a neurosurgeon and CNN's chief medical correspondent, is one of
those who has taken a second look
at his opposition to medical marijuana and changed his mind.
"I
mistakenly believed the Drug Enforcement Agency listed marijuana as a schedule
one substance because of sound scientific proof. Surely, they must have quality
reasoning as to why marijuana is in the category of the most dangerous drugs
that have 'no accepted medicinal use and a high potential for abuse,'"
Sanjay wrote in 2013.
"They
didn't have the science to support that claim, and I now know that when it
comes to marijuana neither of those things are true. It doesn't have a high
potential for abuse, and there are very legitimate medical applications."
Sanjay
remains opposed to young people having access to marijuana, citing studies that
suggest early use can harm the brain.
But
unlike Ambrose, Sanjay doesn't use that as a scare tactic for a total ban.
"We
have been terribly and systematically misled for nearly 70 years in the United
States, and I apologize for my own role in that," Sanjay concluded.
In
Washington State, Governor Jay Inslee signed
legislation Friday that will regulate medical marijuana there, where
recreational sales are already legal.
"Until
today, our system has been completely unregulated," Inslee said.
"Today, after tremendous hard work and compromise by legislators on both
sides of the aisle, I signed a bill that will create a medical marijuana system
that works for Washington."
So
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson's regulation solution -- in the absence of
leadership from the Conservative government -- is both welcome and necessary.
Pretending
the marijuana mess will vanish into thin air by either ignoring it or putting
pot users in prison is far more delusional than you can get even by toking up.
.
4 comments:
Ambrose has done her party general damage with her focused propaganda that only the Conservative base---and maybe a diminishing portion of them---would approve.
Regulate it and tax accordingly. But getting it in the mail from some underground grow place run by the feds is not the way to go
we ought to treat it just like booze and have wineries, well, marijawaniries or some such thing. People ought to be able to have small operations and sell it just like wineries do. It would provide local jobs and income, not to mention tourists. It wouldn't concentrate it all in one area and it would be most likely of better quality than the stuff being grown in government authorized bunkers.
Of course they would pay taxes on it and everyone would live happily ever after. Once there are more places that grow and sell the stuff, the less organized crime will be involved. of course that might not work too well for those who make a living off of organized crime, like politicians, private prison corporations, etc.
Crafting social/business policy based on reality is just what the people of Vancouver and most of the rest of Canada are looking for.
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