Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2002 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Copyright: Allied Press Limited, 2002 Contact: http://www2.odt.co.nz Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/925 Author: Jason Baker-Sherman CANNABIS ONE WAY OF reducing the costliness of cannabis prohibition to society is to "decriminalise" cannabis use by issuing instant fines for minor offences, thus reducing the burden on the police and courts. Unfortunately, because decriminalisation is still a form of prohibition it has nearly all of the drawbacks of total prohibition plus a few more of its own creation as is evidenced by your article from the Sydney Morning Herald "Relaxed marijuana laws exploited" ( ODT , 25.1.02). Under decriminalisation, cannabis users are still punished and drug-tested, they and their houses are still searched, and any cannabis and/or equipment found is still confiscated. Recreational users still buy cannabis of unknown quality from an unregulated black market, and the black market gains access to that population. Furthermore, because of the vagaries of South Australia's decriminalisation laws, the supply of cannabis "relocated" from "Mr Big" to "Mr and Mrs Smalls" who in turn faced an increased risk of violent home invasion. Cultivators for personal use were fined while growing their plants but became criminals in terms of possession when they harvested them. The laws themselves also became a "political football" because they are easily changed to suit each government's whim. It is significant that the conservative Liberal government did not reinstate total prohibition but simply reduced decriminalisation to the bare minimum of one plant grown outdoors. Hopefully, our own Government will view South Australia's decriminalisation folly as a precautionary tale, and instead make meaningful law changes that tolerate cannabis use by adults and regulate the cannabis supply through suitable outlets thereby undermining the black market. Jason Baker-Sherman Dalmore - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom