• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

Drug war absurdity: Australian edition

bit_pattern

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
Oct 17, 2008
Messages
8,128
http://blogs.crikey.com.au/worldisnotenough/2014/02/14/drug-war-absurdity-australian-edition/

Drug war absurdity: Australian edition
CHARLES RICHARDSON | FEB 14, 2014 4:54PM

A government backbencher gives a backhanded endorsement of marijuana legalisation, giving Labor the cue to go out of its way to endorse prohibition.

After a long period with little movement either way, there’s not much doubt now that the momentum is running against drug prohibition. The legalisation of the marijuana industry in Uruguay, which I wrote about a couple of months ago, is just one sign of the increasing prominence and respectability of the anti-prohibitionist position.

In a column yesterday at politics.co.uk, Ian Dunt asked “Are we witnessing the tipping point in the drug debate?” As far as Britain goes, he thinks the answer may be “yes”: “The force of the pro-reform argument is now so strong it is rare to hear anyone argue against it. And in fact hardly anyone outside the Home Office or tabloid columnists ever does.”

Australia, however, lags behind. Just how far behind was demonstrated this week by a federal Liberal National Party backbencher from central Queensland, George Christensen, who – in the words of the ABC’s headline* – “supports legalising marijuana and removing taxes on tobacco.”

As you can easily confirm by reading the story, the general tenor of Christensen’s remarks was anti-marijuana. His theme was that marijuana is more dangerous than tobacco (a position not currently supported by evidence, to say the least), and that restrictions on the latter are misguided.

I wouldn’t count on it remaining visible for long, but the post last Monday on his Facebook page reposted a graphic from someone named Emily Miller, with her comment that “Obama hails [pharmacy chain] CVS for stopping selling tobacco products but has no trouble with smoking marijuana. This photo from Drug Free America shows the damage to the lungs of smoking pot vs tobacco.” The graphic, a very unpleasant representation of a pair of lungs, claims “Marijuana deposits four times more tar in the lungs than tobacco.”

That prompted a robust discussion on the page, and perhaps as something of an afterthought, Christensen made the following comment:

not that I agree that this is a reason to ban pot but what gives me the irrits is the double standards over restricting smoking vs a relaxed attitude to pot. My preference would be both to be legal with a lot of the taxes and restrictions removed.

Well, there’s certainly a double standard, but I don’t think it runs the way Christensen seems to think. Tobacco smokers face excise taxes, some legal restrictions and (sometimes) a degree of social ostracism. Marijuana smokers face complete legal prohibition, the threat of criminal prosecution, fines and jail, and the need to source their drug from the criminal underworld.

Growers and traders in marijuana face the likelihood of long prison sentences. The worst that seems to face the tobacco industry, whose product is more deadly by several orders of magnitude, is that politicians might stop taking their money.

Christensen’s libertarian attitude, such as it is, deserves support, and I hope he withstands the forces from the government that will be brought to bear on him to make him recant. But it would be unwise to follow too much of his advice about drugs, or to think he’s coming from a position favorable to marijuana users.

Yet some people just can’t help themselves. Labor’s shadow health minister Catherine King, as quoted in the ABC report, said that tobacco and marijuana “are clearly not the same thing [!] and Mr Christensen should know better.” She “called on Prime Minister Tony Abbott to reassure the community that the Coalition was not planning to decriminalise cannabis use.”

So Christensen, who at best has made a misleading comparison, is attacked for the amount of common sense that he did display – in effect, for not being even more misleading than he was.

I’ve no doubt that Abbott will give King the reassurance that she seeks. And so the madness continues.
 
People in the future are seriously going to look back at this time in history and have in-depth university classes on how fucked up drug prohibition used to be...the whole world (practically) had alcohol and tobacco as legal...while weed was illegal...what a fucking joke.
 
I completely agree omni what an ass backwards time it has beennthings are changing tho and some day this whole prohibition bs will be put to rest. Hopefully for all substances because until that's the case it will just continue on.
 
Australia's extreme right wing fanatics are taking the country back centuries. The other major party is centre-right and doesn't deserve to get in either. Our population is facing a crisis because of uneducated voters voting against their own interests because dey tk rr jerbz, stahp de boatz etc.
 
People in the future are seriously going to look back at this time in history and have in-depth university classes on how fucked up drug prohibition used to be...the whole world (practically) had alcohol and tobacco as legal...while weed was illegal...what a fucking joke.

That is exactly my line of thought. In fact I had to check you User ID to make sure it wasn't me who typed out that statement :)

You know what this madness reminds me of, you know those movies that are based in the future that have these crazy futuristic laws that are invasive...this is just madness.
 
Shame it's going to take along time before anything really changes it seems. But I do hope we some change, especially with places in the US moving forward and Uruguay. Maybe 10 odd years and we might see some change.
 
People in the future are seriously going to look back at this time in history and have in-depth university classes on how fucked up drug prohibition used to be...the whole world (practically) had alcohol and tobacco as legal...while weed was illegal...what a fucking joke.

To borrow a line from a documentary I recently saw, I really do see this present time in history (war on drugs) as "a holocaust in slow motion."

It's incredibly silly, but even more so tragic to witness this century-long international conflict which is all about whether an adult should have the uncontested right to consume any psychotropic plant or substance (s)he wishes to - regardless of the reason (as long as doing so is not expressly and/or deliberately meant to physically harm another human being).

However complex the reasoning of drug prohibitionists may be - nothing I've heard, seen, read, felt, or experienced in some other way justifies the absolute animosity with which society generally treats us, or the unending harshness with which we are systematically punished.
 
Top