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Serpo
12th October 2010, 04:33 PM
Cannabis should be sold in shops alongside beer and cigarettes, doctors' journal says
Cannabis should be sold in shops alongside alcohol and cigarettes, a leading doctors’ journal has said.


By Christopher Hope, Whitehall Editor
Published: 7:00PM BST 11 Oct 2010
Cannabis 'can cause psychosis in healthy people'
An editorial in the British Medical Journal suggested that the sale of cannabis should be licensed like cigarettes because banning it had not worked.

An editorial in the British Medical Journal suggested that the sale of cannabis should be licensed like alcohol because banning it had not worked.

Banning cannabis had increased drug-related violence because enforcement made “the illicit market a richer prize for criminal groups to fight over”.


An 18-fold increase in the anti-drugs budget in the US to $18billion between 1981 and 2002 had failed to stem the market for the drug.

In fact cannabis related drugs arrests in the US increased from 350,000 in 1990 to more than 800,000 a year by 2006, with seizures quintupling to 1.1million kilogrammes.

The editorial, written by Professor Robin Room of Melbourne University, said: “In some places, state controlled instruments - such as licensing regimes, inspectors, and sales outlets run by the Government - are still in place for alcohol and these could be extended to cover cannabis.”

Prof Room suggested that state-run off licences from Canada and some Nordic countries could provide “workable and well controlled retail outlets for cannabis”.

Prof Room suggested the current ban on cannabis could come to alcohol prohibition, which was adopted by 11 countries between 1914 and 1920.

Eventually it was replaced with “restrictive regulatory regimes, which restrained alcohol consumption and problems related to alcohol until these constraints were eroded by the neo-liberal free market ideologies of recent decades”.

The editorial concluded: “The challenge for researchers and policy analysts now is to flesh out the details of effective regulatory regimes, as was done at the brink of repeal of US alcohol prohibition.”

Campaigners criticised the editorial. Mary Brett, a retired biology teacher, said: “The whole truth about the damaging effects of cannabis, especially to our children with their still-developing brains, has never been properly publicised.

“The message received by children were it to be legalised would be, ‘It can't be too bad or the Government wouldn't have done this’.

“I know - I taught biology to teenage boys for 30 years. So usage will inevitably go up - it always does when laws are relaxed.

“Why add to the misery caused by our existing two legal drugs, alcohol and tobacco?”

Earlier this year, Fiona Godlee, an editor of the Journal, which is run by the British Medical Association, endorsed an article by Steve Rolles, head of research at Transform, the drugs foundation, which called for an end to the war on drugs and its replacement by a legal system of regulation.

Dr Godlee said: “Rolles calls on us to envisage an alternative to the hopelessly failed war on drugs. He says, and I agree, that we must regulate drug use, not criminalise it.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/8056292/Cannabis-should-be-sold-in-shops-alongside-beer-and-cigarettes-doctors-journal-says.html

Awoke
12th October 2010, 05:22 PM
Cannabis should be sold in shops alongside beer and cigarettes, doctors' journal says
Cannabis should be sold in shops alongside alcohol and cigarettes, a leading doctors’ journal has said.


I agree. Just IMHO. I don't even smoke the stuff either.

Olmstein
12th October 2010, 06:03 PM
Imagine how many cops, attorneys, judges, jailers, etc that would be unemployed if weed were legalized. Imagine how much money would be taken from criminals and put into the pockets of legitimate businesses.

It's such a good idea, it will never happen.

Apparition
12th October 2010, 06:32 PM
Imagine how many cops, attorneys, judges, jailers, etc that would be unemployed if weed were legalized. Imagine how much money would be taken from criminals and put into the pockets of legitimate businesses.

It's such a good idea, it will never happen.

Don't forget about how much power the politicians and their cronies would stand to lose.

silversurfer
12th October 2010, 07:17 PM
http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/faultlines/2010/09/2010930122157461130.html

Cannabis is California's number one cash crop. This fall, voters will decide whether or not to fully legalise the drug and transform US drug policy.

The implications are huge if it passes. It will have a profound effect on the state's struggling economy, the overburdened criminal justice system and even the raging drug war in neighbouring Mexico that has claimed nearly 30,000 lives.

In the meantime, no politicians running for statewide office are supporting the measure. What does that say about the politics of cannabis?

On this episode of Fault Lines, Josh Rushing travels deep inside the world of cannabis in California to explore the implications for the economy, politicians and the criminal justice system. What will it mean if the state votes to legalise it?

video at link

Silver Rocket Bitches!
12th October 2010, 09:03 PM
Think about how cannabis, renamed marijuana to create association with dirty Mexicans, has only been illegal for less than 70 years. Just because it's all we've ever known doesn't mean it will inevitably be that way in the future.

We can already see how 13 states have allowed cannabis for medicinal reasons. Some states have decriminalized. Change does not happen overnight and it's clear that pot laws are trending slowly towards repeal.

The problem is, with a benevolent substance like cannabis, you aren't going to have a catalyst like the St Valentines Day type massacre. Though the ongoings in the Mexico drug war are surely doing their best.

jaybone
13th October 2010, 06:32 AM
If States start really getting behind the 10th Amendment movement, then it may happen.
No way the fed.gov is going to give up this cash cow unless local authorities stop cooperating with their enforcement actions.

iOWNme
13th October 2010, 07:32 AM
Cannabis should be grown for free, and used responsibly by adults.

Legalization = TAX


If you let the government enter the field of Rights, you can bet those Rights will be converted into Privileges.


Liberty = the RESTRICTION of government from even entering the field. (Either you have the power, or they do)


Most people will BEG their government to enter the field.