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Drug Watch International WHY
CANNABIS MUST REMAIN ILLEGAL Cannabis is
a narcotic drug, which means it is a substance that is damaging to health and
habit forming. (Swiss Association of Doctors Against Drugs) There has been mounting pressure in recent times to “re classify,” decriminalise, or legalise cannabis. Sources include the UK based Police Federation (no connection to the Police), Paul McCartney (ex Beatle and along with his late wife Linda, also a cannabis user), Anita Roddick (Body Shop selling Hemp products), Richard Branson (Virgin Megastores who admitted that he would sell the products in his shops), and the American multi-billionaire George Soros, who claims to have invested in excess of 90m US Dollars (Soros on Soros) in the campaign. He recently handed over 1m US Dollars to the UK campaign. In Ireland there are similar self-interest groups. The UK Government is presently capitulating to this
pressure under Mr. Blair's leadership. It
seems there is no energy for this debate coming from the Conservative Party. As if there is not enough confusion around the issue, these
people will argue for decriminalisation as an option in the face of
resistance. They say that this is
not the same as legalisation. This
sounds plausible, but it is blatantly false. The term decriminalisation means to
bring the drug problem out of the scope of penal (criminal) law.
Law enforcement would then no longer be provided for the export, import,
manufacture, distribution, sale, possession or use of drugs. Society would, as a
result, have no law or lever to direct addicts towards treatment or to suppress
trafficking. Legalisation means that the government would have to
arrange a more or less free distribution of drugs (as for tobacco and alcohol
products). These facts must raise the question, what kind of society do we want? Do we want teachers, nurses, doctors, public service drivers, airline pilots etc., etc., stupefied while on duty? Lloyds of London will not insure people who are narcotic dependent. How do we check? If cannabis is legalised/decriminalised, who will be
responsible for the quality and strength of the drug? Will there be any age restrictions? How will the drug prices be set?
Where will they be sold? Will
there be State drugstores, or will drugs be available through your local
supermarket? Will certain groups
with sensitive professions be governed by special restrictions?
Are there to be any kind of restrictions at all?
These questions are never answered by the drug legalisation lobby.
The most smuggled drugs on the black market are cigarettes, yet they are
legal. Together with alcohol, they
account for more deaths and diseases than the illegal substances.
Because of their legality they are socially acceptable and readily
available and cannot be kept away from teenagers, the “underage” population. WHAT IS CANNABIS? This so-called soft drug is a toxic narcotic (UN
1961 Single Convention Amended in 1972).
It has no medical benefits (see www.eurad.com...Research).
A single joint is composed of more than 400 different chemicals, all of
them toxic. On combustion these
multiply into about 2,000 equally poisonous chemicals.
Cannabis is different from alcohol, heroin or other drugs because it is fat-soluble.
This causes it to be absorbed into the brain and other fatty organs of
the body where it is stored for months in both the chronic and so-called
recreational user, resulting in the person becoming stupefied.
It is only very slowly released from the body, which explains the absence
of severe withdrawals. This lulls
the person into believing that he or she is not addicted.
While in the body the toxins are attacking every cell, system, and organ
present, with the brain sustaining the most damage, as it is one-third fat. People with asthma, epilepsy, heart problems, depression,
or mental illness are especially at risk. Medical
studies in Sweden have shown marijuana to trigger latent schizophrenia, an
incurable mental illness. The
tragedy of cannabis is that the harm is so subtle that it is not realised by the
user or his/her family until it is too late.
Frequently, it is only when a young person has been apprehended by the
police and judicial system for anti-social behaviour that his or her cannabis
addiction is discovered. Police
intervention can be a life saving exercise in all its forms. The chemicals in cannabis adversely affect the central
nervous system, cardiovascular, respiratory, and immune systems.
Foetal damage is incurred in pregnant women, and a rare form of leukemia
can be caused in infants. Cannabis is a highly carcinogenic drug.
American studies have shown cellular damage to the lungs of cannabis
smokers, who smoke two joints of cannabis a day, to be as harmful as the damage
caused by 28 tobacco cigarettes. Since
the 1970's, more than 12,000 scientific studies have been conducted on cannabis. None of them give it a clean bill of health.
Scientists and medical experts warn that the term “soft” has no
medical, scientific, or pharmacological basis.
New cultivation methods by the Dutch (Hydroponics) have resulted in
cannabis being many times stronger than the so-called “hard” drugs. There is not a shred of evidence to support the theory of
medical benefits. The American
Medical Association, Cancer Society, and the MS Society among others (see
wwweurad.com....Research) have gone on record to state that they do not support
these spurious claims. Crude
cannabis does not have the medical benefits the legalizers state.
Physicians should no more lend support to the use of a drug that had to
be smoked by a patient whose immune system is already impaired than they would
prescribe cigarettes to a patient suffering from stress or obesity. APOPTOSIS Decreases in sperm production and increases in abnormal
forms caused by THC have been recently attributed to a biological phenomenon
known as "apoptosis" of the cell.
Apoptosis is the process of programmed cell death occurring over hours
and days, in successive stages, resulting in the fragmentation of DNA and the
disintegration of the cell. It is a
fundamental process emphasized in the first report on the human genome (2001).
Apoptosis is controlled by an important cluster (home box) of genes,
which order the self-destruction, or suicide of the cell. (Nahas) An incorrect assumption of some scientists was that
recreational usage of cannabis would not produce apoptosis.
They failed to take into account the distribution of THC throughout the
body and it's lengthy storage in fat depots and subsequent slow release in the
same active form as when first ingested. After
a single cannabis cigarette, 50% of its THC is stored in fat depots for five
days. It will take 30 days for it's
complete elimination. If one smokes
one joint every two days, one will store ten times more than the initial dose of
THC after ten days and 30 times more after 30 days.
Such amounts have been scientifically proven to induce apoptosis of sperm
cells and of lymphocytes. (Nahas) PSEUDO ARGUEMENTS IN FAVOUR Armchair Generals will go on to argue that it is wrong to
criminalise cannabis users. However,
just like larceny, smuggling, or murder, cannabis use and dealing (whether to
support the personal habit or not) is prohibited for good reason.
We might as well argue that mugging or larceny should be legalised
because it involves too much paperwork, is taking up too much of police time,
and clogging up the court system. It is argued that the money saved could be spent on
apprehending the big dealers and providing more treatment facilities. They
conveniently forget that although alcohol and cigarettes are taxed to the hilt,
the taxes gathered do not cover the cost of their medical treatment.
Nor is appropriate policing provided. Another argument put forward is that State controlled and
taxed sale of drugs would unseat the International Mafia.
Where is the evidence for this?
For example, in 1988, The Netherlands had three organised crime groups,
but by 1993 that number had risen to 93. (Source:
Dutch National Committee on Prevention) The Mafia are only interested in making money.
When drugs are no longer illegal, they will move into the legitimate
market. Because of the addictive
nature of cannabis, the Mafia would have access to a growing market as with
alcohol and cigarettes. They can also “undercut” the legal suppliers and provide
a stronger variety without it being challenged.
Who will police the underage market? In the Netherlands, where de facto decriminalisation is
practised (the Dutch Government calls it separation of the market), there has
been a 49 percent rise in registered cannabis addicts between 1991-93.
In 1988, there were three organised crime groups in that country.
By 1993, there were 93. Seventy-three
percent of Dutch people think that their drug laws are too tolerant. Cannabis use among students in Holland has increased by 250
percent since 1984. (Source:
K.F.Gunning MD. Drug Legalisation, Harm Reduction and Drug Policy).
Shootings have increased by 4 percent, car thefts by 6 percent and
hold-ups by 69 percent. (Gunning) The
consequences of these lax policies prove clearly that, far from freeing up the
judicial system, they are grinding the system to a halt.
The murder rate in Amsterdam is greater than Newark in New Jersey, a city
of similar size. Recent figures
released by the Brixton Police in the UK show a rise in crime since the local
police chief took it upon himself to reclassify cannabis possession for personal
use as a misdemeanour. The argument that legalisation will mean that addicts will
no longer have to commit crimes in order to obtain money for drugs was put to
the test in the 1960's in Sweden. During
that time the Swedish Government decided to “medicalise” their drug problem.
However, an evaluation of the legal prescription of narcotics in Sweden
demonstrated that criminality increased despite the fact that narcotics (i.e.
cannabis) were then freely available. Similarly,
The Netherlands gained the reputation of the crime capital of Europe in 1990. Many train, plane, and road fatalities are directly
associated with the use of cannabis. Hospital
A&E Departments report treating many such victims.( Source: Drug Watch
International) In Ireland, many
brutal murders and violent acts, as well as road fatalities, are directly
attributed to cannabis use among
the factors. UNITED NATIONS CONVENTIONS ON
NARCOTICS AND THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD Since 1961, cannabis has been included in the U.N. Single Convention (Amended in 1972) on Narcotic Drugs. It is also included in Article 33 of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child. These Conventions have been ratified by 150 countries. Can they all be wrong? The reason for the inclusion of cannabis was the evidence
of the damage being caused to the individual and to society by the use of this
poisonous and addictive intoxicant. During the past century, physicians and public health officials from countries where cannabis and hashish had been widely used reported on the damaging effects of these drugs on their people and their society. These reports, based on close observation but without the benefit of biochemistry, were at the origin of the U.N. Single Convention of 1960, held in New York City. The U.N. Convention is a mandate from the people of the
world to achieve a global interdiction of drugs of abuse in order to protect
public health and safeguard man. These
Conventions were unanimously adopted by all U.N. member nations. Laws of interdiction against cannabis are enforced in Sweden and Scandinavia with firmness, but according to seriousness of individual offences. In Sweden, it is against the law to ingest cannabis or other illegal drugs. Sweden has the best rates of success against drug abuse in Europe. Prevention, intervention and treatment are priorities. The parent movement is very strong and effective in that country. At the other end of the scale, the Netherlands has long
opted for the decriminalisation of cannabis, and now their open coffee shops are
controlled by criminal organisations that supply a variety of drugs through the “back door.”
Illegal drug traffic in The Netherlands accounts for close to 1 percent
of its Gross National Product. As a
result of being contaminated by it's neighbour with drug trafficking, the
Belgium Government has now decriminalised
cannabis. THE RIGHTS OF THE ORDINARY CITIZEN To suggest changing the law is to advocate chemical warfare
on our most vulnerable citizens — our youngsters and the socially and
emotionally deprived, who seek it out as a means of escapism.
In the United States, children who smoke cannabis are 85 times more
likely to use cocaine than those who do not use cannabis. Sick people are being manipulated as guinea pigs to promote
medical pot. To change the laws
will not change the proven medical and scientific facts on cannabis.
It will not alter its toxicity. Cannabis users do not have the right to destabilise
democracy. The majority of citizens
do not want cannabis laws weakened. Democracy
means that one cannot do as one may like always, but must subject him/herself to
limitations for the collective good. If the judicial system is being overloaded with cannabis
cases and the police are complaining about the paperwork, then we should be
looking at special courts that will direct these people towards treatment in the
case of non-violent offences. Treatment
must be readily available, especially in the case of young teenagers, to avert
serious addiction and cannabis psychoses. Support
must be offered to parents and schools. Police
Juvenile Diversion Programmes should be strengthened.
This will have a knock on effect in reducing road accidents that occur as
a result of cannabis stupification. The opposite to all of these humane approaches would be to
develop a banana republic. The fat-soluble smoke in cannabis damages the brain,
respiratory tract, immune system and the unborn foetus.
Users cause damage to society through family breakdown, road accidents,
and violent acts. WHEN ARE THE UNITED NATIONS GOING
TO SIT UP AND DEFEND THEIR CONVENTIONS ON NARCOTICS AND THE RIGHTS OF CHILDREN? Grainne Kenny Woman
of Europe Award – Médaille de Maire de Strasbourg – Médaille de Maire de
Paris – Swedish Parent Award Lord Mayor’s Award Dublin - Drug Watch USA
International Delegate for Ireland EURAD’s
delegates and affiliates are in Europe, the USA, Canada, South America, New
Zealand, and Australia. EURAD holds consultative status with the Council of
Europe, Strasbourg. EURAD is a member of the NGO Committee on Narcotic Drugs
at the UN Office, Vienna. Reg. No. Stichting EURAD S-155759, Chamber of
Commerce, The Hague, The Netherlands.
This page was last updated on January 12, 2002 |