Pubdate: Thu, 15 Sep 2005 Source: Medicine Hat News (CN AB) Copyright: 2005 Alberta Newspaper Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.medicinehatnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1833 Author: Chris Buors Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) CANADA'S PRISONS DON'T COMPARE TO CLUB MED Re: Our Posh Prisons, Our Opinions, Sept. 9, C4 I would like to see editorial writer Alisha Sims justify drug prohibition before she rants on about incentives not to market drugs again. Drug prohibition is immoral because the policy does not measure up to a single one of the cardinal virtues of temperance, prudence, justice and fortitude. Wanting your way so badly that you would willingly harm another person is vainglory defined. Meting out criminal records for the vice of drugs is vainglorious. As owner and operator of the Manitoba Compassion Club I went to jail for six months for producing and distributing cannabis to the ill. Let me assure Ms. Sims jail is not exactly Club Med. Jail dehumanizes people. Jail always has a highly tense atmosphere where violence could break out at any moment over the most trivial of actions. One is always mentally on patrol in jail rather than getting the peaceful night sleep Ms. Sims imagines. You are, after all, residing with very violent people who settle their differences without calling the cops. The more important question to ask is what are convicted drug merchants to do once released? For instance, in 1997, I was a locomotive engineer for CN Rail before I was arrested with a cannabis garden. I refused drug treatment, or the degradation of peeing in the bottle so my 20-year career was over. I am now unemployable in my chosen field because of my political activism. I do not seek other employment because I will not contribute one single cent in income tax until Canada ends the injustice of drug prohibition. You will not be using my money to persecute scapegoats to benefit politicians. Now that I have been to jail, I no longer fear my masters. It will be me earning money on the black market or the taxpayers can spend $50,000 a year keeping me in jail. Jail is after all, the proper place for a moral man in a country with immoral laws. Chris Buors President Marijuana Party of Manitoba Winnipeg, Man. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman