From: Arlene
Subject: [illusions] Intelligent decisions from Canada, a socially liberal country ...
Date: 29 May 2001 16:14:13 -0400
To: illusions@beyond-the-illusion.com, surfingtheapocalypse@egroups.com
Source: http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/ap/20010528/wl/going_to_pot_2.html
Monday May 28 12:29 PM ET
Canada Moves Toward Legalizing Pot
TOM COHEN,
Associated Press Writer
TORONTO (AP) - The Friendly Stranger used to be up a narrow stairway in a back room, a
crowded little
shop offering water pipes, T-shirts and other products of the cannabis - or marijuana - culture.
Now proprietor Robin Ellins has a prominent storefront on busy Queen Street and plenty of
room to
display everything from hempseed oil and chips to a full line of hemp clothing and
elaborate smoking
accessories.
The transformation from hidden emporium to thriving commercial venture is part of Canada's
slow but
clear shift toward decriminalizing marijuana.
Justice Minister Anne McLellan says the issue should be studied, and a new Parliament
committee on
drug matters will look at decriminalization. Conservative Party leader Joe Clark is urging
the elimination
of criminal penalties for possessing a small amount of pot.
``It's unjust to see someone, because of one decision one night in their youth, carry the
stigma - to be
barred from studying medicine, law, architecture or other fields where a criminal record
could present an
obstacle,'' Clark said last week.
The government has proposed expanding medicinal use of marijuana, and the Canadian Medical
Association Journal recently supported full decriminalization. Canada's Supreme Court will
consider a
case this year that contends criminal charges for the personal use of marijuana violate constitutional
rights.
Making possession and use of small amounts of marijuana a civil offense - akin to a
traffic fine-
instead of a criminal violation would move Canadian policy closer to attitudes in The
Netherlands and
away from the United States, its neighbor and biggest trade partner.
That worries U.S. anti-drug activists like Robert Maginnis of the Family Research Council.
``It will have a
residual effect in this country of depressing prices and making marijuana more
available,'' he said.
He also knows a shift by Canada would boost the arguments of American advocates for easing U.S.
drug laws. ``We find our allies are piling up on us and making it more difficult'' to
fight drug use,
Maginnis said.
Joseph A. Califano Jr., president of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse
at Columbia
University, is skeptical about that.
Califano, a former U.S. secretary of health and human services, said increasing medical
evidence on the
harm caused by marijuana makes it unlikely that a change in Canadian law will affect U.S.
policy. ``I
don't think it means much,'' he said.
Canada already has a legal industry for hemp - cannabis cultivated with very low amounts
of the
chemical that produces the high sought by marijuana smokers - while the U.S. federal government
prohibits hemp production.
In April, Canadian Health Minister Allan Rock proposed expanding the medicinal use of marijuana
beyond cancer sufferers now allowed to take the drug to people with AIDS and other
terminal illnesses,
severe arthritis, multiple sclerosis, spinal injuries and epilepsy. By contrast, the U.S.
Supreme Court
recently upheld a federal ban on medical marijuana.
Some U.S. states allow hemp production and medical use of marijuana, despite the federal
bans, noted
Bill Zimmerman, executive director of the Campaign for New Drug Policies in California.
Arrest statistics show the disparity in the two nation's approaches.
Richard Garlick of the Canadian Center on Substance Abuse said about 25,000 people were
arrested in
Canada for simple possession of marijuana in 1999.
The U.S. figure for that year under the ``zero tolerance'' policy of the U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration was 24 times higher, exceeding 600,000, says the National Organization for
the Reform
of Marijuana Laws in Washington. The U.S. population is about eight times that of Canada's.
``Thank God, I'm in Canada,'' said Ellins, a long-haired entrepreneur who gives his age as
thirtysomething. ``I just can't believe what's going on down there. ... That's a war
against people.''
Believing decriminalization was inevitable in socially liberal Canada, he moved his store
to a larger,
more public setting last year. It's named for the ``friendly stranger'' cited in 1930s anti-marijuana
propaganda as the supplier of ``reefer madness.''
Police leave him alone, because the store avoids anything considered drug paraphernalia,
he said.
``Before it was too compact and tucked away,'' Ellins said. ``There's definitely been an
increase in
business. We're more accessible. We're more in demand.''
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