5/8/10

Pot gives great big hope to tobacco barons

Are potheads and their supporters stooges of Big Tobaccos or what? With more and more people quitting smoking or not starting, Big Tobaccos' smoke profits have been gradually going up in smoke. But now guess who are coming to the Big Rescue? Potheads and their supporters, in clamoring for legalization!  

  "Just in time to throw a lifeline to we, Big Tobaccos!  Thank you, guardian angels!  Maybe in the future, when we BT dominate and monopolize the pot industries (again), we'll give you some discount coupons to hook you to our products even more! -- best wishes from BT, your big, friendly cigarette/potarette makers."

The anarchy of a legalized pot world

Forget about buying "potarettes" from government/convenience stores.  Anyone and his dog could easily set up a mini or maxi pot grow-op in their house/condo/yard (impractical with tobacco) to make their own cheaper, more powerful joints, and sell the excess for profits.  Grow-ops damage houses, breed molds, cause fire hazards, and which criminals would exploit big time after legalization.

Besides above, read the following articles (or any cigarette article) and substitue the word "cigarettes" or "tobacco" with the word "pot"--revealing an anarchic, legalized pot world inevitably many times worst in many areas:

China tobacco firms accused of targeting children 

Big Tobacco's Next Target: Women and Children in Poorer Countries...

Tobacco companies target young women

Passive Smoking (secondhand Smoke) Linked To Psychiatric Distress And Illness

Illegal tobacco market growing

Supreme Court to hear tobacco liability appeals

U.S. gene study reveals toll of heavy smoking

Tobacco troubles: Law enforcement has not kept up with the illegal trade in cheap cigarettes 

Up in smoke: Indonesian child-teen smokers rising

5/3/10

"Give addicts hope, not drugs"

Copy Sweden's success, not Vancouver's failure

(The following letter was published in the Letters section of NP):
Give addicts hope, not drugs
National Post, Published: May 03, 2010
Re: Conservatives Should Get Weak On Drugs, Evan Wood, April 26.

Evan Wood appears to overlook the reality of the drug problem. He asserts that prohibitions against the nonmedical use of drugs are futile and only increase crime and violence. This has not been the experience of other countries such as Sweden. According to a 2006 report of the UN Office of Drugs and Crime, Sweden has among Europe's lowest rates of crime, disease, medical and social problems stemming from drug addiction. This is due to the fact that Sweden employs a program of compulsory drug treatment for addicts. This success is similar to that achieved by drug courts in Canada. These courts ensure that addicts undergo treatment and rehabilitation as an alternative to a conviction and court record.

Giving an addict hope, rather than the despair offered by liberalized drug laws, is a far more humane and civilized approach to addiction. That is, instead of allowing the addict to deepen his/her addiction which leads to his inevitable and unenviable death, the addict is given an opportunity to regain health and well-being by being rid of the terrors of addiction.

C. Gwendolyn Landolt,
Drug Prevention Network of Canada, Richmond Hill, Ont.