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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Pot Laws Are Useless, Senate Says
Title:Canada: Pot Laws Are Useless, Senate Says
Published On:2002-05-03
Source:Province, The (CN BC)
Fetched On:2008-08-30 16:11:43
POT LAWS ARE USELESS, SENATE SAYS

Best Research Indicates Marijuana Use Isn't Really That Bad For You

OTTAWA -- Efforts to prevent marijuana use are having little impact, and
young Canadians are toking up in greater numbers than ever, says a Senate
report.

An estimated 30 to 50 per cent of people 15 to 24 years old have used
cannabis despite its illegality, says the report released yesterday by the
Senate committee on illegal drugs.

"When you examine cannabis usage among youth, you realize that public
policy has absolutely no effect," Sen. Pierre Claude Nolin, committee
chairman, said.

"The psychology of adolescents seems to take no account of the rules of law."

After studying the pros and cons of pot use for 14 months, the committee
also concludes that scientific evidence suggests marijuana isn't a
so-called gateway drug that leads to the use of harder drugs.

The discussion paper, intended to guide public consultation on the
marijuana issues, indicates that millions of dollars in public money being
spent to combat pot is wasted.

The arguments in the paper are far from new -- many were made in the Le
Dain report of 1973.

Yet the federal government has been reluctant to change the law and Health
Minister Anne McLellan has backtracked from a plan to give severely ill
patients access to government-grown marijuana.

There's a widespread perception that the federal government is reluctant to
decriminalize pot because of opposition from the U.S., which remains
committed to prohibition.

The Nolin committee raises that issue in a questionnaire it will submit to
participants in consultations planned for six Canadian communities in
coming weeks.

"If Canada was to adopt a different, more liberal approach to cannabis,
should it take into account the reaction of the U.S.A.?" the questionnaire
asks. "What would the reaction likely be?"

The discussion paper offers no recommendation on whether the law should be
changed. That will come in its final report in August. But Nolin has said
he personally favours decriminalization.

Other findings in the paper, based on extensive hearings and research over
the past year:

- - Cannabis is a psychoactive substance and it's better not to use it. It
may have some negative effects on the health of individuals, but
considering the patterns of use, these effects are relatively benign.

- - Pharmacological studies of cannabis have not found any element that
predisposes users to more potent drugs.

- - Pot doesn't increase aggressiveness or anti-social behaviour, nor induce
users to commit crimes.

- - Definitive conclusions can't be drawn from available evidence about how
cannabis affects driving abilities, although it may lead to increased risk
at high doses or combined with alcohol.

- - Cannabis use doesn't hurt academic performance.

"Studies tend to indicate that problem young cannabis users are also
problem alcohol users, manifesting other risk-taking behaviour. These are
therefore symptoms of other underlying problems rather than causes."

The annual cost of fighting illegal drugs, for federal agencies alone, is
estimated at $500 million. Each year, more than 30,000 Canadians are
charged with simple possession of marijuana.

Two weeks ago, the Liberals killed off a private member's bill from
Alliance MP Keith Martin that proposed decriminalizing marijuana
possession, prompting Martin, a doctor, to lift the Parliamentary mace in
protest.
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