Pubdate: Fri, 07 Apr 2000 Date: 04/07/2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author: Stephen Finlay Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n399/a08.html The March 23 editorial, "Harsh pot sentence is the right direction", supporting harsh sentences for marijuana growers might have made sense -- if the laws did. I am a conventional middle- aged father who has never used drugs and who drives the kids to music lessons. You wouldn't expect this kind of person to argue for marijuana legalization. But I do, because prohibition is helping criminals and hurting the rest of us. As alcohol prohibition did in the 1920s, marijuana prohibition is now promoting crime, doing nothing to reduce drug use and wasting public money. We are blindly refusing to learn from the past. Now as then, making a drug illegal gives criminals a monopoly over the product and enforces that monopoly aggressively. Just as the alcohol monopoly financed Al Capone, the drug monopoly is financing the Hell's Angels today. Those who support tough drug laws are, in economic reality, organized crime's best friends. The editorial cites violent home invasions and unsafe electrical wiring. But it is obvious that grow houses contain too much cash and have jerry-rigged wiring for only one reason: The crop is illegal. Producers of legal crops do not need to avoid banks and conceal kilowatts. If prohibition actually did reduce drug usage, it would have that benefit at least. Chemical alterations damage the brain and I expect my children to avoid drugs for their own good. But now, as in the 1920s, prohibition does not reduce usage or availability. Instead, it inflates drug prices, thus increasing the incentive to sell aggressively. We should have stopped wasting money on the drug war long ago. The resources which we devote to protecting the gangs' drug monopoly are desperately needed elsewhere. When we pursue marijuana growers while letting fraud artists go free, our legal priorities are not merely mistaken: They are insane. Stephen Finlay, North Vancouver