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NEWS: 18/02/10 'Cannabis easier to buy than pizza'

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lil angel15

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Cannabis easier to buy than pizza, drug expert Dr Alex Wodak says
February 18, 2010 3:30PM


CANNABIS is easier to buy than a pizza, says a drug expert, so why not legalise and tax it to benefit everyone?

Dr Alex Wodak, the director of the Alcohol and Drug Service at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital, says cannabis will soon be Australia's smoke of choice.

"In a few years time, we'll have more Australians smoking cannabis than we have smoking tobacco and by default that market is largely taken over by criminals,'' Dr Wodak said.

"Having a black market of that size is not good for anybody and inevitably big black markets can only survive if there's significant police corruption.''

Dr Wodak delivered the keynote address at the Australian Drug Law and a Civil Society symposium at the Lismore campus of Southern Cross University today.

He also heads the Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation.

"At the moment, we have no control over cannabis at all because the trade is run by criminals,'' he said from Lismore.

"By taxing and regulating it, we would start to have some influence over the way people use cannabis.

"Overall, the aim should be to try and reduce the harm.''

Cannabis prohibition was expensive and ineffective, Dr Wodak said, with surveys showing up to 2.5 million Australians will smoke cannabis in 2010.

"It's easier for most Australians to purchase cannabis than to buy a pizza - it's a readily available substance,'' he said.

Dr Wodak said legalising cannabis and regulating it could be carried out similar to what happens in the alcohol and tobacco industries.

"We could have warning labels on packets, we could have age restrictions - we could also have help-seeking information if you're trying to cut down or stop,'' he said.

Dr Wodak said research had shown punishing people for possessing cannabis does not inhibit their desire to keep using the drug.

"We've proved that we've stimulated a huge black market for cannabis in Australia by prohibition,'' he said.

He quoted polls in the United States showing support for legalising cannabis had climbed from 12 per cent in 1969 to 44 per cent in 2009.

"I think the minute that politicians start to see that 51 per cent of the population is supporting the taxation and regulation of cannabis, they'll take 10 seconds to work out that's what they want too,'' Dr Wodak said.

He also expects a legal international trade in cannabis to develop one day, but acknowledged making cannabis a legal drug in Australia and overseas will happen incrementally.


News.com.au
 
This seems like a small step foward? :)

Funny.. I usually like to couple the two substances.. pizza and weed.
 
Stupid title for the article and stupid claim for Dr Wodack to make, while I find cannabis is very easy to get I have had to make more than one phonecall on a good many occasions and it often was not delivered to my address. Comparing it to ordering a pizza is absurd.

I like the point that he is trying to put accross but this article was far too short to give a truly meaningful and convincing argument for cannabis legalisation.
 
Hmm like the idea of the article but my pizza place has never ran out of pizzas. Donno where that stupid concept came from. Weed is the most used drug in the world of course its available and easy to get.
 
i can actually score weed from one of my local pizza shops. Never quality but when everyone else is dry...
 
Well no one disagree's with the jist of the article just that the journo is shit.
 
Hate these sensationalising headlines...

"It's easier for most Australians to purchase cannabis than to buy a pizza - it's a readily available substance,'' he said.

Although I usually hate sensationalist headlines too, the journalist was right in making that the headline. If I'd interviewed someone on that topic and they'd said something similar, I'd have made it the headline too.

Obviously it is a totally ludicrous thing to say.
 
With the number of pizza delivery drivers we used to feed a bucket to it's little wonder it was so hard to get a pizza later that night ;)
 
Although I usually hate sensationalist headlines too, the journalist was right in making that the headline. If I'd interviewed someone on that topic and they'd said something similar, I'd have made it the headline too.

Obviously it is a totally ludicrous thing to say.
True but I'm sure the doctor used it as a figure of speech so to say by relating buying cannabis to something most people have access to which is pizza. The journalist just took it out of its intended context.
 
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