Legalize Marijuana Sales Say B.C. Experts

Marijuana

First Posted: 10/27/11 01:16 PM ET Updated: 10/29/11 01:28 AM ET


A coalition of prominent B.C. police officers, health professionals, legal experts and academics is calling for the legalization and regulated sale of marijuana.


The group Stop the Violence, which includes former B.C. Supreme Court justice Ross Lander and B.C.'s former chief coroner Vince Cain, has launched a high-profile political campaign to "end the cannabis cash cow of organized crime."


Panel member Dr, Evan Wood, of the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, says marijuana prohibition is fuelling gang warfare, and school children now have easier access to pot than either alcohol or cigarettes, because of the reach of organized crime.


"Instead of having a regulated market, we've turned things over to this extremely violent unregulated market controlled by organized crime," said Wood.


"Cannabis is more available to young people than alcohol and tobacco, and what we've seen in a government-funded surveillance system is that the price of cannabis continues to go down and the potency of cannabis continues to go up."


Wood said the group is calling for the regulated sale of marijuana similar to cigarettes, so that it can be controlled, taxed and its use eventually reduced.


No deterrent


Former justice Lander said that 34 years on the bench taught him prohibition isn't working.


"The whole exercise is futile. [Marijuana's] being used prominently everywhere, not just in British Columbia but throughout North America, and it's impossible to extinguish," said Lander.


"There's no apparent deterrent to me. It wasn't a deterrent to even those people who were tried and other people who might enter the same trade in dealing with these drugs."


Stop the Violence said that in 2009 there were 43 gang-related deaths in B.C., and 276 drive-by shootings that put the public at risk.


Victoria police officer David Bratzer says his experiences as a front-line officer showed him marijuana prohibition just isn't working.


"I've investigated situations where people have been stabbed in drug deals gone bad over something as small as a simple [$10] bag of marijuana, so its very much based on my personal experiences that I think a public health approach to this issue would be more effective than a criminal justice approach.


The group also released the results of an Angus Reid poll it commissioned that suggested only 13 per cent of British Columbians support keeping the current marijuana laws unchanged.


The poll was conducted with a sample of 800 British Columbians and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 per cent.


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A coalition of prominent B.C. police officers, health professionals, legal experts and academics is calling for the legalization and regulated sale of marijuana. The group Sto...
A coalition of prominent B.C. police officers, health professionals, legal experts and academics is calling for the legalization and regulated sale of marijuana. The group Sto...
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06:40 PM on 11/12/2011
Why regulate the sale when you should be able to grow and give it away. Minors could get MIPs like with alcohol. Dispensaries could grow for MMJ and Pharma market. No reason to make complicated regulations on sales to recreational consumers. There's no black market for home microbrewers. Make a good, clean product, start a grow house, and subject yourself to regulations for medical or research use. Its not rocket science. Pharma is where the money is at anyway. Free pot for recreational use will stop all demand for importation by cartels, traffic by gangs, produce lucrative jobs and give back dignity to those who hide use from friends and coworkers for any reason. Imagine our neighborhoods where individuals become intertwined with our neighbors. Word of mouth is the best plan for increasing sales. No one talks to each other any more because we have no FREEDOMS. Big brother wants to put you in jail for anything they can because, "It creates jobs"
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sarah 2003
Tomorrow is another day. Maybe..
06:09 PM on 11/12/2011
My daughter, who lives in Canada can get it when she wants it. But the flower falls from the bud, so to speak, when it's clean, of numerous variety and kind. She smokes occasionally, iows.
And she will not be arrested like she would be here, in the US. No paranoia, isn't it grand.

When I last visited her, we were walking to the store in her rather upscale neighborhood. She pointed out a house with all the windows closed, no cars or trash can at the street. She said it was a grow house.
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joeythes
09:10 PM on 10/30/2011
Firstly, nothing will happen in Canada unless the US agrees. No way I can see them allowing us to legalize pot when we share 3000 miles of porous border.
What tickles me is their strategy with pot. It's a repeat of the Alcohol Prohibition in cause and effect and it stuns me that they think the outcome would be any different. Only a fool would do the same thing over and expect a different result.
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northof49th
01:22 PM on 11/04/2011
Well what we know about Alcohol and Pot is if we had to legalize one based on the pro's and cons how each one effects society. Pot would of been legalized years ago
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chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
06:17 PM on 10/30/2011
Of course it would hurt organized crime. They make MASSIVE profits from pot sales. They run most of the grow-houses in the lower mainland.
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momoluvsu
We live in a parallel universe
05:07 PM on 10/30/2011
If Canada legalizes it, and Mexico would the US would have no other choice. That's a funny thought.
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momoluvsu
We live in a parallel universe
05:13 PM on 10/30/2011
and it makes me happy to think about it. I would like to see some statistics about the cost of long term pain medications for a cancer patient compared to the cost of marijuana, and also compare the labs from each set. I think legalized pot would be cleaner for the body, and the labs would be better, and there would be protection against infection b/c pot enhances the immune system.
05:04 PM on 10/30/2011
Humanity will not be denied.

The 'War on Drugs' is an abject, disgracefu­l, obscene, self-right­eous American instigated worldwide FAILURE.

Humanity will not be denied. Be it sex, drugs, or rock n roll. The 30+ year 'War on Drugs' is not working, will never work, is a complete and utter failure.

The misconceiv­ed and fallacious American manifested 'War on Drugs' only serves the narrow morals of a repressed few, only serves to bolster and uphold American 'military might', and the trillions spent could have fed every man, woman, child, dog & cat on the face of planet 3 times over.

Humanity will NOT be denied. Prohibitio­n, banning, outlawing, forbidding­, only serves to drive the economics and consumptio­n undergroun­d.

Humanity will NOT be denied. The 'War on Drugs' has only brought increasing­ly unwarrante­d, excessive, disproport­ionate violence to our countries, our cities, our streets, our homes, our families.

End the 'war'. End the 'prohibiti­on'. Regulate, regulate, regulate.”
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Jeremy Echols
07:30 PM on 10/31/2011
Don't be absurd, we've only spent a mere one trillion on the war on drugs. Why, that's barely enough money to take care of America's most important people (read: the elite upper-class), much less the whole world!
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Leslie James Dalzell
One day at a time
04:42 PM on 10/30/2011
The more things change the more they stay the same! Trust me prohibition is too big of a business (too big fail as they say) We'd have a whole lot of cops and judges without jobs and they wouldn't be able to build their mega for profit prisons to house all the black and ethnic pot smokers! We still have a long time to go!
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Angel Whitebird
Invest in America..Buy a Congressman!
04:21 PM on 10/29/2011
Its a no brainer!!
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ReelBusy
I'm the Ghost of Hollywood Past
12:57 PM on 10/28/2011
Prohibition is a failed public policy.
12:52 PM on 10/28/2011
Yes it's like global phenomenon just like in recent news on Mexico & Colombia call for decriminalization oh what a way to go on like cannabis spring to occupy to rebuke the top 1%. We can see it's happening in Amsterdam, Portugal, California, etc. People are waiting for cannabis leader to leads us in new direction!
Not only cannabis but also hemp for industrial uses are propping up everywhere to show us new way of doing business!
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ray christl
HEMP can save us from ourselves.
11:39 AM on 10/28/2011
In Chicago my old home town they want decrim in a mob milieu ...prohibition taxed to purchase & taxed when caught using. Perfect symbiosis in an effete CIA-Mafia empire of shame.

Canada on the other hand can use logic & science if you can get that globalist stooge out of Ottawa. Send Harper back to his Beatles albums & this time an aide will explain the lyrics.
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RevRayGreen
Here to make cannabis legal worldwide again
07:13 AM on 10/28/2011
make it legal make it green make it worldwide.......
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rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
01:36 AM on 10/28/2011
A coalition of prominent B.C. police officers, health professionals, legal experts and academics---AND A LOT OF DUDES THAT WANT TO GET REALLY HIGH...... is calling for the legalization and regulated sale of marijuana.......I have heard that before...its the intelligent thing to doooooooo....
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claygooding
07:41 PM on 10/27/2011
Governments are slashing public programs to the bone because of the economy and throwing more money into prohibition.

Prisons are overcrowded and legislators are enacting laws to increase the prison population.

Yup,,this article has too much common sense for any legislator to "get it".
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ray christl
HEMP can save us from ourselves.
11:42 AM on 10/28/2011
the corruption pays them off--people only mean something before elections...you must pay to play.
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casualtysr
03:09 PM on 10/27/2011
It's refreshing to see logic and reason being expressed on this issue. The laws must be changed.
04:27 PM on 10/27/2011
I completely agree. It's amusing that all these experts are finally realizing things that most of us had figured out before we left high school.
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piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
05:37 PM on 10/27/2011
It is no more likely to happen than the legalization of prostitution but it is refreshing to know that there are other opinions out there. Unfortunately few will ever be voted into public office. There are just some things that remain still behind closed doors.
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Paul Stacey
Kill guns, not children.
05:17 PM on 10/27/2011
Prostitution is legal here. It is soliciting and living off the avails (pimping) that are illegal.
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casualtysr
06:09 PM on 10/27/2011
Personally I think it will be legal before prostitution. The pressure being put on politicians to change their attitude on it is getting stronger every day. I'm not sure how much longer they can hold out.