In the world of Real Politic,
something is finally making complete sense.
It is that no government anywhere is prepared to end the prohibition of
drugs until the USA
is prepared to do so because the potential cost to that government is far too
high. There are real threats in place to
keep the prohibition airtight. I also
think that the momentum of the situation is such that the President is unable
to end the prohibition.
The only relief out there is that
the noisy supporters of prohibition are thinning out and becoming quiet.
It is also clear that the
arguments for a end to prohibition and the implementation of a regulatory
regime linked to medical oversight have long since won the day. I have repeated them here and though I wish
the problem would go away, I know that that is impossible and thus support
tight regulation.
I go further than that as I support
a more rigorous intervention
PM says legalizing marijuana would cause us ‘a lot of trouble at the
border with the United
States ’
Stephen Harper defended his government's policy on maintaining
Canada's prohibition of marijuana, this week.
In an interview with a consortium of ethnic media in Vancouver , the prime minister stated his government
has no intention of legalizing the drug and that doing so would cause us
"a lot of trouble at the border with the United States ."
"I don't want to say they would seal the border. But I think it
would inhibit our trade generally because they're certainly not going to make
that move in the United States," Harper said, according to the Filipino Post.
"I think as a cross-border phenomenon this would cause Canada
a lot of difficulty."
Last week, four former Vancouver mayors each signed an open letter urging politicians to consider
legalization and regulation of pot, saying those policies will increase taxes
to government, remove illicit profits that lead to gang violence, and
eliminate costly legal proceedings.
Harper disagrees.
"Look, I know the drug trade is a frustration. I know it fuels a
lot of criminal activity, he said.
"But I think people, anybody is fooling themselves if they think that
somehow the drug trade would become a nice business if it were legalized."
Despite the seemingly growing chorus of voices calling for an end to pot
prohibition, the government is moving ahead with even tougher legislation
to increase penalties for those who traffic drugs.
"This government doesn't favour the legalization of drugs,"
said the prime minister.
"Drugs are not bad because they're illegal. They're illegal
because they are bad. They are corrosive to society. They're part of worldwide
criminal and sometimes even terrorism networks and they do terrible things to
people."
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