Pubdate: Tue, 02 Apr 2002 Source: Dominion, The (New Zealand) Copyright: 2002 The Dominion Contact: http://www.dominion.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/128 Author: David Currie Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v02/n485/a01.html?11427 CANNABIS IS NOT SUCH A BAD THING SIR, -- I thought your editorial of March 12 was a bit over the top in its denigration of cannabis. Evidence shows cannabis is not nearly as bad as you make out. Many families have had toddlers who have eaten noxious substances and required medical help. Five and a half cases a year involving cannabis in the North Island is not a shattering problem. If cannabis were legal, this sort of problem would be easier to deal with. For a start, parents would not feel hesitant at telling doctors if cannabis were involved. Also, the law could make it compulsory for strong cannabis preparations to be kept in child-proof containers. I thought it laughable that coroner Garry Evans seemed to blame a recent fatal car crash on a cannabis cigarette smoked earlier by the driver. Accidents are caused by bad drivers, not cannabis cigarettes: good drivers always wait a sufficient time after consuming alcohol or other drugs so they can drive safely. Only a very low percentage of fatal accidents are caused by drivers who have earlier smoked cannabis. The majority are caused by drug-free drivers and those who have consumed copious amounts of alcohol. A glance at Dutch statistics shows that having a liberal cannabis law has not caused the level of cannabis use there to rise above that in countries which have retained repressive laws. Also, the level of crime and hard drug use is much lower in Holland than in countries with less liberal drug laws. What is the point of punishing people if this has no effect in reducing use of cannabis? I look forward to the day when writers of The Dominion editorials will have seen the light and realise both the futility of prohibition and the good sense of legalisation. D. R. CURRIE Petone - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom