Letters | Some reasons pot is illegal

Published Thursday August 21st, 2008
d7

Some reasons pot is illegal

To The Editor: Regarding James Foster's City Views column "Is society benefiting from the war on pot?". Aug. 20: "Other than lawyers, who benefits from criminalizing pot smokers?," he asks.

Cops, gangsters, court staff, and jailers.

Marijuana was criminalized in Canada in 1923 based on racist lies and supposed "dangers to society" that never actually existed.

In fact, it took until 1937 (a full 14 years!) before the first pot bust happened.

A quick search of Google will show that the real reason pot was criminalized was to demonize its sister plant, hemp.

Hemp is a major threat to Big Oil because everything we make out of crude can be made with hemp (fibre, fuel, polymers, cloth), only it can be done cheaply, locally, and with no damage to the environment.

The main function of marijuana prohibition is control.

The police have control over people of colour, the poor and the young.

The government has total control over the economy, whereas hemp would give the control back to the people.

As for a "good reason" to legalize pot: It has dozens of proven medical applications, and recent science out of Germany shows how cannabinoids stimulate the body's production of TIMP- 1, which helps healthy cells resist cancer invasion (see www.webmd.com/cancer/ news/20071226/pot-slowscancer- in-test-tube) I think "potential cure for cancer" is the best reason to legalize pot, if "thwarting the black market" isn't a good enough reason in and of itself.

But Big Pharmaceuticals will hear none of it, because they can't profit from it.

Beyond that, if you accept that the government has any say at all as to what you can and cannot put into your own body, then you must accept their ownership.

That means the government owns you like a slave, or pet, or cattle and that you have only the rights that they grant. If you are stupid or weak enough to accept that, then maybe you deserve to have no rights at all.

Russell Barth,

Patients Against Ignorance and Discrimination on Cannabis,

Nepean, Ont.

Please Log In or Register FREE

You are currently not logged into this site. Please log in or register for a FREE ONE Account.
Logged in visitors may comment on articles, enter contests, manage home delivery holds and much more online. Your ONE Account grants you access to features and content across the entire CanadaEast Network of sites.

Comments (2)

All comments are subject to the site Terms of Use. For a full commenting tutorial click here.

Our editorial team relies on filtering technology and our visitor community to identify inappropriate comments. In the event that a site user has submitted offensive content that has evaded our filter, please select the option to Flag As Inappropriate presented within the comment. Thank you for helping to keep this site clean.

Excellent letter! Thanks so much for the intelligent insight.
16
Thumbs Up
2
Thumbs Down
Flag as Inappropriate
Flag as Inappropriate
Anon Reader, Moncton on 21/08/08 09:27:19 AM AST
I absolutely agree. Decriminalizing will be the first step, but legalizing and regulating should be on the agenda as well. Alcohol is in no way safer than marijuana, but that is freely available and the taxes provide money for our government. Further, legalizing and having a legitimate source means otherwise law-abiding citizens are not reliant on seeking out strangers who may be shady characters selling a product which may or may not be what they think they are getting.

18
Thumbs Up
2
Thumbs Down
Flag as Inappropriate
Flag as Inappropriate
C P, Moncton on 21/08/08 10:41:11 AM AST
Advertisement
Advertisement

Search Articles