Pubdate: Thu, 24 Feb 2011 Source: Northumberland News (CN ON) Copyright: 2011 by Metroland Printing, Publishing & Distributing, Ltd. Contact: http://www.northumberlandnews.com/opinion/submitletter Website: http://www.northumberlandnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2373 Author: Wayne P. Phillips CONSERVATIVE BILL ON CANNABIS ABSURD To the editor: Re: 'Canadians back tougher sentences for drug dealers: Norlock', The Independent, Feb 17, 2011. Northumberland-Quinte West MP Rick Norlock is wrong. Canadians don't support his government's efforts to get tough on drug traffickers by making minimum sentences mandatory. Bill S-10 will only serve to exasperate the existing problems inherent to cannabis prohibition. Cannabis prohibition was intended to circumvent the flow of cannabis - -- it did not. Instead, cannabis, thanks to its prohibition, became a tool for growing gang culture. With gang culture came violence, increased crime, more cannabis (and drugs, in general) and increasing levels of strategic sophistication aimed at thwarting enforcement. Cannabis is front and centre in a prohibition scheme that continues to provide an environment conducive for the growing of gang culture. Science validates this (see The Vienna Declaration http://www.viennadeclaration.com/ and The International Centre for Science in Drug Policy (ICSDP) http://www.icsdp.org/ The idea that Bill S-10 will safeguard Canadians and strike a blow at organized crime by going after street dealers and low-level cannabis producers is absurd; as such, it should be viewed as suspicious. Wayne P. Phillips, Communications Director, Educators for Sensible Drug Policy, Hamilton - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake