|
| News Groups Blog Forum Chat Video Audio Images Documents Wiki Home |
|
|||||||
| Register | Tags | FAQ n Rules | Mark Forums Read |
| Notices |
| Miscellaneous News Miscellaneous News about drugs |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
||||
|
POT LAW MUST BE CHALLENGED
It may not rate up there with Rosa Parks and the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott, which was the beginning of the end of racial segregation in the U.S. It lacks the drama of the literally life-and-death struggle to move abortions out of back alleys and give women the right to choose. But the activities going on at the Da Kine Food & Beverage Shop on Commercial Drive are every bit as much an act of civil disobedience in the face of an unjust law. The fight to legalize pot is not new. The first explosive battle took place in Vancouver more than 30 years ago. There was another Mayor Campbell running the city and the police. The NPA's Tom "Terrific" Campbell was a not uncommonly lubricated businessman. His penchant for hysteria on the subject of youth and drugs was nurtured by Jack Webster, a devilishly effective and influential broadcaster in his day. Campbell's hysteria infected the cops. And on a steamy night in August, they charged on horseback into a group of relatively benign hippies having a "smoke-in" on the streets of Gastown and left us the historical footnote known as the Gastown Riots. Our police have become a little more sophisticated over time and our mayor, Larry Campbell, like his predecessor Philip Owen, thinks marijuana should be legalized. Last week's raid on the pot shop was cleverly planned to go off at a quarter to six in the evening-exactly the right time to get the local TV news chopper in the air above Commercial Drive and make the top of every major newscast in town. The show of force-three dozen cops and a whole block cordoned off-was ample to vindicate the police department for not getting to the widespread lawlessness in the previous four months Da Kine was operating. But the cops and their ability to enforce the law is not the issue. It is the law itself and our lawmakers that present the problem. From the Gastown Riots until today, there have been repeated calls to remove all aspects of marijuana use from the Criminal Code. It began with the LeDain Commission on the Non-medical Use of Drugs and continued through the most recent Special Senate Committee looking at the issue. Throughout that time, the B.C. Civil Liberties Association has argued in favour of legalizing every aspect of marijuana activity, saying, "the continued criminalization of cannabis violates a fundamental principle of democratic societies classically enunciated by John Stuart Mill, that the law should not interfere in the private lives of citizens except to prevent clear and serious social harm that cannot be addressed other than by legal means." The BCCLA points out that the plans by the federal Liberals to "decriminalize" pot possession under Bill C38 would make matters worse. The bill would lead to far more people coming in contact with the criminal justice system and the police as they would be ticketed for possession. It would leave the bulk of the business in the hands of organized crime and it would increase the penalties for cultivation to the point where they are greater than the penalties for financing terrorism, trafficking in illegal firearms and sexual assault. Meanwhile, those who use marijuana and want to see it legalized have grown to include an enormous cross section and comprise a sizeable minority, if not the majority, in Canada. The law is held in contempt by judges like Justice Mary Southin who says it "appears to be no greater danger to society than alcohol" and Judge William Kitchen who says putting people in jail for possession of pot is "pretty silly." These comments and the widespread acceptance simply encourage those who are willing to commit acts of civil disobedience. They understand history's lesson: obeying a bad law brings no change at all. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Club Pot Med (Feature on medical marijuana in Washington) | Bajeda | Law and order | 2 | 23-12-2008 04:29 |
| USA - Finally! Impeach Bush is Here! | Panthers007 | Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics | 77 | 03-08-2008 10:50 |
| USA - Making Pot Legal: We Can Do It -- Here's How | Heretic.Ape. | Drug Policy Reform & Narco Politics | 0 | 15-02-2008 00:58 |
| Tennessee Precursor Law Challenged | old hippie 56 | Law and order | 0 | 11-08-2006 19:49 |
| Council Passes Pot Law Changes | Alfa | Law and order | 0 | 27-02-2006 12:37 |
| Sitelinks: | Site Functions: |