THE MEDIA DEBATE 2004
THE ISSUE: CANNABIS IN CANADA
COMPLETE TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
Pot : Legalize Vs
Prosecute: With So Many Canadians Smoking And Growing It, Is A Ban Practical? Canadians will today consume roughly 2,100 kilograms of
marijuana... By the end of the year, three million of us, according to a recent study by the
Senate, will have smoked, eaten or otherwise inhaled almost 770,000 kilograms of the stuff --
impressive numbers considering that marijuana use is a federal crime ... police and industry
insiders estimate about 215,000 growers across the country produce more than 2.6 million kilograms
of cannabis each year.
Everyone is calling for a national debate, the arguments for and
against cannabis prohibition are
headline fodder almost every day, but how are we to know exactly where
the debate is at?
Print media provides an easy record of expressed sentiments as it gets
played out in the public
eye. The private accounts are more likely to be found on websites, in
forum posts, newsgroups and
maillists within the cannabis community.
This project began, and was first assembled, as other Year in Reviews
on this site, but started to
take many different forms as the task of assembling so much material
into a coherent picture
became overwhelming at times, but eventually a sense of order
emerged. So the format is different
this year, with the intention of having greater flexibility to reflect
a more complete picture, and easier reference. Some headlines have a sentence quoted, and a very few have [a comment in brackets] and more may be added as time permits, but the main goal was the debate itself.
After sifting through 6, 343 Canadian drug policy articles for 2004, it
was obvious The Trouble
With Interesting Headlines, is they relate far more to selling papers than telling the truth. The repetition
of some headlines, topics and other reefer madness over the years is certainly not a
figment of anyone's
imagination.
http://www.mapinc.org/find
Title search
- Up In Smoke
Found 200+
- Going to Pot
Found
115
- Reefer Madness
Found 200+
Crystal meth, oxycontin, or 'hillbilly heroin'
and ecstasy were also
headline grabbers and we are told they are as much a 'menace' to society as grow ops, but
all are outside the scope of
this review, which explains the absence of articles about them,
although the related hemp industry
is featured whenever it has managed to make some headway despite
oppressive regulation.
I was caught off guard by the abundance of material to review in a very short period, which means equally
important voices have not been adequately covered - the public who weigh in through letters
to the editors. Editors know
the scope of the letter writers
efforts make them a force
to be reckoned with, so more letters will be added as time
permits. All the more prepared for next time, too. All in all, almost every
angle and argument from journalists is presented, all sides weigh in to
some extent, and the jury
has been back in with a verdict for a long time
2003 SUMMARY
The implications of the Supreme Court decision on December 23, 2003,
are still reverberating
throughout the land, as the 6-3 ruling quashed a constitutional
challenge that has left all
cannabis consumers abandoned by the same Charter rights other Canadians
have. Tokin'
Justice was obscured by a Marijuana
Smokescreen and only proves that
the US
Gets Its Way Again along
with the christian right vanguard pushing up from the south, Focus Applauds
Marijuana Ruling. Only a
whisper in 2004, but will persistently try and permeate more and more
in the coming years through
Canadian media outlets. Fox News anyone? Predictably, Drug Offenses
Up In 2003
Some
Questions For British
Columbians leave other niggling loose ends from 2003, "Six days after
the shocking raids on the legislature, citizens still have been told
next to nothing about the RCMP
actions that have shaken the province's political life to its
core. Here are 27 unanswered
questions:
How closely linked is the drug investigation
led by federal prosecutor Robert
Prior to the investigation led by special prosecutor William Berardino?
- What if anything is the
link between drugs, organized or commercial crime to staff in the
B.C. legislature? - To the
federal Liberal party?"
When the media caught wind that Neighbours Told
To Keep Quiet About Grow-Op
Raid, speculation continued that the Government
Can't Stay Quiet Forever, but by
the end of 2004 we are still waiting for answers. Perhaps in 2005? 2006?
The media's reflective mood on 2003's Rights
And Wrongs concludes the Year Ends With
Weed, Whacko And
Whacked "However, I will say that millions
of marijuana smokers are
perplexed by the court's reasoning that imposing criminal punishment is
an effective and rational
way to protect people from ill-defined and speculative health risks."
and was The
End Of The Cool Era .
INTRODUCTION TO 2004
Now on to the harsher new reality that is taking hold, as we watch
those freedom loving days
slipping away into nostalgic stuff of bygone times as they ratch up the propaganda,
rhetoric and fear to scaling new heights, thanks in large part, to the media.
With the exception of a few holdouts:
Legal Pot
Murder on
Justice: T.O.'s Top Cop Toronto Police Chief Julian Fantino likened
decriminalizing marijuana
to legalizing murder yesterday as he rejected arguments that legal pot
would cut down on organized
crime operations now growing it. "I guess we can legalize murder too
and then we won't have a
murder case." We can't go that way,
most of the 1930's reefer madness that made a natural, non-toxic
plant look like it came
from the devil himself, has mercifully been retired by most
writers and thinkers. They know
cannabis has too much history which easily destroys the propaganda and
myths, so along with the
prohibition-related consequences they hype as cannabis crime,
they needed to sell the public
some new reefer madness that had no history so they could invent the
dangers to suit their ends.
This is the predominate news theme of 2004 - the grow op.
Ingeniously, in this upgraded version, it's, "THE PLACE where this
non-toxic plant is grown that is really bad, and it is grown by really
bad guys that the public
needs protecting from". Welcome to Reefer Madness 2.0. The
quick movements and very
hard work of politicians, police and business buddies, quickly created
a perception that grow ops
are the biggest threat to public safety, even spawning a new acronym, "marijuana grow
operations" (MGO) and of
course, the best solution of regulation, is really not the answer.
Other alarming themes that are emerging more and more, are the loss of
privacy and the loss of
voice. Some even see nothing wrong with taking our voice away
altogether if we disagree with
the status quo, as this highlights,
The headlines and articles speak for themselves, so without further ado...
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