Pubdate: Fri, 11 Sep 2009 Source: Niagara This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 Metroland Printing, Publishing and Distributing Contact: http://www.niagarathisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3733 Author: Matthew M. Elrod FINANCIAL ARGUMENT FOR LEGALIZING MARIJUANA Seemingly pleased with a 69-kilogram cannabis bust at the Queenston-Lewiston Bridge, Minister of Public Safety, Peter Van Loan remarked, "Seizures such as this are a clear sign that our efforts to fight organized crime and keep illegal drugs out of our communities are working." ("Officers commended for largest marijuana seizure ever at Queenston-Lewiston border," Sept. 4) One might as easily interpret seizures such as these as continuing failure. Teens consistently report that cannabis is easier to obtain than beer. More teens have tried cannabis than tobacco. Annual Canadian cannabis production is estimated at between 1,399 and 3,498 metric tonnes. About 50 tonnes were seized in 2007, less than five per cent, or less than traffickers would have paid in taxes if cannabis were legally regulated. Annual outdoor eradication efforts drive growers indoors. As with wolves and their prey, police predation culls out the least "organized" traffickers. Grow operations are getting bigger and growers are becoming more sophisticated. Large busts may cause other distribution networks to compete, sometimes violently, for the unmet demand, or they may create openings for new, more robust, distribution networks. If all goes as planned, the value of cannabis rises. When the value of cannabis rises, the incentive to grow and traffic rises. Consumers substitute other drugs, primarily alcohol, causing domestic abuse, emergency room episodes, traffic accidents and all the social costs associated with alcohol to rise as well. Further, the effort to interdict and eradicate cannabis diverts finite resources away from the investigation and prevention of other crimes; rape, murder, theft, etc. Studies have shown that communities that increase relative spending on drug law enforcement experience higher levels of crime and violence. Given that "This government recognizes that illicit drugs are the foundation of organized crime in this country," would it not make sense to undermine their foundation by legally regulating cannabis? Respectfully, Matthew M. Elrod Victoria, BC - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake