Pubdate: Wed, 25 Feb 2004 Source: Evening News (UK) Copyright: 2004 Archant Regional Contact: http://www.eveningnews24.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/141 Author: M. J Sankey WAITING FOR THE SMOKE TO CLEAR WITH regard to the reclassification of cannabis. So a great day has dawned and passed. As yet there have been no riots and the fabric of society hasn't been rent asunder, so is anybody who smokes dope confused as to whether it is now legal or not? I don't think so. What they may find confusing is why it was postponed from June last year until two days after the vote on top-up fees and one day after a report that made Tony Blair appear purer than the driven snow. So cannabis is now in the same league as Valium and anabolic steroids. Come on all you people with short-term memory loss - Valium and Librium plus the modern Prozac were found to be some of the most addictive drugs known to man. So-called therapeutic doses were found to cause long term dependence with stories of people usually women taking years to stop using them. Then there's steroids used by inadequate people who wish to build their bodies into something they weren't intended to be and along the way including something colloquially called "Roid Rage", this has figured in several murders and associated violence. I may be jumping the gun here, but I expect this to be offered as a mitigation in the defence of the person who shot those police officers on Boxing Day in Leeds. None of those drugs have been reclassified upwards. One wonders why. To return to cannabis, we are told by talking heads, most if not all of whom have never smoked or eaten it, of the great harm it will do. In my 36 years experience of it, I have found the only people it harms are those people who don't take it and wish to interfere in the lives of those who do. Our laws have led it to being controlled by organised criminal gangs who care nothing about the quality and often adulterate it to increase their profits. It's almost as if this is what the Government wants, instead of legalisation which would stop this dead in its tracks and would also stop a lot of gun and people traffickers as well. I doubt very much if it would lead to any great increase in usage in the long term. It think the only confusion will be because it has been left to the individual police officer involved whether to arrest or warn. There's a great deal of room for corruption here and I expect it to be changed eventually. After all, it isn't left to individual officers whether or not to arrest people driving over the limit where alcohol is concerned, but just imagine if it was. Also, as the use of cannabis is a lifestyle choice of the people involved then perhaps we should be treated as an ethnic minority just as people who choose to live in caravans rather than houses and call themselves travellers. M.J. Sankey Gentry Place Norwich - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom