Warning: mysql_fetch_assoc() expects parameter 1 to be resource, boolean given in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php on line 5

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 546

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 547

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\include\functions\visitors.php:5) in D:\Websites\rave.ca\website\index.php on line 548
CN ON: OPED: Legalize The Sale Of Drugs - Rave.ca
Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
Anonymous
New Account
Forgot Password
News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: OPED: Legalize The Sale Of Drugs
Title:CN ON: OPED: Legalize The Sale Of Drugs
Published On:2005-12-01
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 22:25:47
LEGALIZE THE SALE OF DRUGS

Once again Toronto is rocked by a murder committed with a gun fired by a youth.

Once again we hear statements from politicians saying that new
measures must be taken to diminish this new wave of violence.

Once again the police union pleads its case for more officers to join
the force.

Once again alarms go off in the communities most affected by this barbarity.

Once again mothers are in despair, feeling powerless, asking
themselves where they went wrong.

Once again, educators propose a return to segregated schools as a
long-term solution.

And, once again, the people directly concerned say very little out of
fear of being the next victims in this ongoing bloodbath.

But has any leader dared to say clearly that one of the main reasons
for all of these killings is the criminalization of drugs?

Of course not. No one mentions this because, in this age of political
correctness, no one dares to face sobering truths. Everyone preders
to speak from a perspective that is less painful for listeners.

But isn't it about time we asked ourselves as a society if it is
worthwhile to maintain the absurd policy of criminalizing drugs?

Is it worth continuing with the wall of silence trying to hide
something that is an obvious fact?

Have any of us seen a murder in Canada caused by people trying to
battle it out for the control of the alcohol or tobacco business?

Behind this recent wave of violence, the hand of the drug underworld
is visible. The drug market, with its immense and inflated profits,
always will represent a means of escape for those people society has
left behind.

And it is a hypocritical society that, on one hand, condemns the
murder of its younger members while, on the other, maintains the
status quo by not coming up with serious alternatives to solve the problem.

It is very likely that, with the community's assistance, some of the
individuals responsible for the recent shootings could be captured
and brought to justice, because the same community that produces the
dead also knows where the murderers are. It's also likely that
someday the police will show us the faces of the perpetrators of the
current wave of violence, but that will not get to the root of the problem.

It simply will extinguish the people's wrath for a while. Amnesia
will return to our newspapers and our newscasts until new actors
appear on the stage, new youngsters made into men by force, willing
to put their lives in jeopardy for a piece of paradise here on Earth,
for the joys of consumerism that their families are unable to provide.

The politicians will go back to blaming each other, the mothers will
continue to blame themselves and the educators will rethink
alternatives to solve a problem that has only one definite solution.

Enough hypocrisy, enough temporary solutions. It's time for a
definite solution: The legalization of the sale and consumption of
drugs -- with strict controls by the state. This would finish the
gangs and their wicked influence over our most vulnerable citizens.

How long will we remain blind to this reality?

This is the only way to get to the root of the problems caused by the
criminalization of drugs.

I grew up in one of the poorest neighbourhoods of one of the world's
most violent cities, where three of my school friends were murdered,
along with one of my teachers and one of my childhood friends.

Years later, I became a prosecutor and my job consisted of putting
killers through the judicial system. You could say that I know this
story from both sides: I was a victim of marginalization and attended
too many funerals without understanding why we were killing each other.

I had the enormous advantage of realizing before it was too late that
easy money was nothing but a mirage and took charge of my education
as the only way out of a lost childhood.

In the two years that I was a prosecutor, I was assigned to
investigate at least 40 homicides and was a helpless witness to the
moral degradation of my society. I don't want my Canada to look like
the country I left behind.

We still have time to straighten our treacherous path, no more
Band-Aid solutions, no more "exhaustive investigations" and no more
politically correct answers.

It is time to question the roots of this violence.

And despite the lack of social services, despite the budget cuts of
the 1990s, despite the negative role models -- despite all of this --
there is above all the stupidest policy human beings have ever
devised, the most absurd decision ever made by politicians all around
the world: the criminalization of drugs.
Member Comments
No member comments available...