Pubdate: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 Source: Whistler Question (CN BC) Copyright: 2003, Whistler Printing & Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.whistlerquestion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1034 Author: Matthew M. Elrod Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) COMPARING MARIJUANA USAGE TO OBESITY Dear Editor, At first blush, it may appear that setting the fines for possessing cannabis lower for young people than adults "sends the wrong message." ("Why the double standard?", May 30), however, calculated as a proportion of their average disposable income, teens will be hit harder than adults. South Australia introduced an "expiation" regime in 1987, under which those caught in possession of small amounts are ticketed and fined. The new law was, as you suggested, "vigorously" enforced. Over the next six years tickets almost tripled, from 6,000 to 17,000 per year. However, half the tickets went unpaid, so more users were criminalized after decriminalization than before. Further, Australians discovered that the police are more apt to ticket the young, the homeless and visible minorities, magnifying existing geographical, racial- and class-based enforcement disparities. Double standards? Obesity causes more preventable deaths than all illicit drugs combined. Why have we not established "diet courts" for coercing non-violent dietary offenders into weight-loss programs? Granted, junk food prohibition would be constitutionally questionable. It would clog our justice system, corrupt police, trample civil rights and finance organized crime through power-diverting basement "bake- ops" in our communities. Yes, snack-food traffickers would develop more potent and easily concealed confections of questionable toxicity and purity. Young hoodlums with bleak job prospects would push candy in our high schools on commission, along with their usual black market cocaine, heroin and methamphetamines. There would be no labeling nor quality control, and with zero tolerance, no way to teach consumers how to snack responsibly - or even acknowledge that such a thing is possible. However, I submit that our failure to prohibit junk food, or at least ticket and fine all junk food consumers, young and old, fit or fat, sends the "wrong message to kids" that it is okay to be obese. As a parent of three children, I would appreciate it if taxpayers ponied up 400 million dollars annually to enforce junk food laws and so help me teach my children to eat their vegetables. I am confident organized crime, police unions and prison guards would also be much obliged. Matthew M. Elrod Victoria - --- MAP posted-by: Josh