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www.drugsense.org
The Drug fLaws.com
analysis of the drug laws by dennis mcbride
Newsbrief:
Canada's National Post Says Legalize It
9/10/04

Canada's National Post, whose position as Canada's national
newspaper of record is challenged only by the Toronto Globe &
Mail, called Tuesday in an editorial for the legalization of
marijuana. The newspaper cited two contemporary cases and the
contradictory way in which they are being handled as providing
the latest compelling reason to not fool around with the halfway
measure of decriminalization, which the government of Prime
Minister Paul Martin is prepared to move on this year.

The Post noted the case of Vancouver's Da Kine Café, which has
been selling marijuana in an Amsterdam-style coffee house
setting for four months. Café owner Carol Gwilt hoped to advance
the cause by forcing a crackdown on her open pot sales, but it
didn't happen. So she turned to the media to expose what she
was up to in what the Post referred to as "a slightly ridiculous play
for attention."

Even with the publicity, Vancouver police and political figures had
not gotten around to bothering her by the time the Post wrote its
editorial. Gwilt finally got her wish, though, on Thursday evening.
According to Canada's CTV, more than 30 police cars
surrounded the café and arrested six people as an angry
neighborhood crowd jeered and smoked joints defiantly. The
large number of police was there to protect the police, Vancouver
Police spokeswoman Sarah Bloor told CTV.

Still, it took two weeks of intense media scrutiny to force
Vancouver's police to finally make arrests at Da Kine. Contrast
that reluctance to enforce marijuana laws with the harsh 90-day
sentence meted out to marijuana seed entrepreneur and leading
Canadian pot activist, who currently sits in the Saskatoon Jail.
Vindictive authorities there charged him with drug trafficking after
he shared a joint with bystanders at the end of a pro-pot rally
there. The Post did, and it didn't like what it found.

"Even on its own, the indifference to the activities of the Da Kine
Café would speak to the absurdity of a criminal law that few
people -- including, it seems, some police forces -- have any
interest in enforcing," noted the Post. "But it is all the more telling
when contrasted with the case of Marc Emery, the marijuana
activist recently sentenced in Saskatchewan to three months in
prison on a trafficking conviction for passing a joint at a rally.

When our drug laws are enforced so arbitrarily that one individual
is imprisoned for trafficking when he did nothing of the sort, even
as another feels compelled to contact the media in order to draw
attention to the fact that her establishment has sold the same
drug over the counter for months without any consequences, the
need for reform is obvious."

Decriminalization would not go far enough, said the Post. "The
only sensible course of action is to end the pointless prohibition
of a substance that is neither more dangerous nor more addictive
than alcohol or tobacco, and one that has reportedly been
smoked by more than 10 million Canadians at some point in their
lives," the editorial concluded. "It's time to make official what
Vancouver's authorities have evidently already accepted, and
legalize marijuana."

The editorial, "Pointless Prohibition," is available online to
National Post subscribers only at http://www.nationalpost.com.
DrugSense's Media Awareness Project has an archived copy
posted at
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1267/a08.html?140656
online.

StoptheDrugWar.org: the Drug Reform Coordination Network,
P.O. Box 18402, Washington, DC 20036, (202) 293-8340 (voice),
(202) 293-8344 (fax), e-mail drcnet@drcnet.org. DP - Flex Your
Rights - IAL - Drug War Facts
StoptheDrugWar.org: the Drug Reform Coordination Network
(DRCNet)
1623 Connecticut Ave., NW, 3rd Floor, Washington DC 20009
Phone (202) 293-8340 Fax (202) 293-8344 drcnet@drcnet.org
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