cannabisnews.com: Biggest Shake-Up of Britains Drug Laws in 30 Years





Biggest Shake-Up of Britains Drug Laws in 30 Years
Posted by CN Staff on January 29, 2004 at 19:04:44 PT
For Immediate Release
Source: Common Dreams 
Washington -- In what CNN called “the biggest shake-up of Britain's drug laws in 30 years,” a new marijuana policy will take effect today in the UK, disallowing most people in possession of small quantities of cannabis to be arrested. A January 26 Daily Telegraph/YouGov Poll found that the reform had widespread public support. The poll, one of the United Kingdom’s largest ever investigations into public attitudes on drugs, found that a majority of those surveyed not only supported the new law, but were in favor either of complete decriminalization or legalization of marijuana. The British public also dismissed many of the U.S. government’s arguments made against marijuana: that it is a gateway drug that leads to “harder” drugs, that it is seriously addictive, and that marijuana users are violent criminals.
Specific poll results include: 52% of respondents support the new legislation disallowing arrests for most cases of cannabis possession 51% believe that marijuana should be either decriminalized (28%) or legalized (23%) 87% do not believe that marijuana creates a craving for harder drugs Marijuana ranks 8th in terms of perceived addictiveness, behind tobacco, alcohol, and coffee “We hope that U.S. politicians will learn from their British counterparts,” said Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance. “As our closest allies start to recover from the failure of cannabis prohibition, we look more and more like a friend in serious denial.”Today’s legal change, which will place Britain in the majority of Western European nations in easing marijuana laws, will be achieved by re-classifying cannabis from a class “B” to a class “C” drug. Instead of arrest – and possibly jail – most people found in possession of small quantities of marijuana will be given a warning, a caution or a summons to court. The government action followed recommendations of a parliamentary committee in May 2002, and a 2001 report by the Police Foundation last year, which concluded that the penalties for marijuana possession in Britain— the harshest in Europe—did more damage than the drug itself, by wasting police resources and saddling otherwise law-abiding citizens with a criminal record.Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to enforce and even step up their failed marijuana policy, spending more and more taxpayer money on policies that don’t work. This weekend, for example, the Office of National Drug Control Policy will unveil a new pair of costly television ads that target teenage marijuana use during the Superbowl and Survivor: All Stars. This media blitz is part of the ONDCP’s $150 million taxpayer-funded media budget. Previous ads compared American marijuana users to terrorists. “Roughly 700,000 Americans are busted on marijuana charges every year, almost all of which are for possession alone,” continued Nadelmann. “They can even lose their jobs or student loans or access to public housing. Alcohol prohibition did more harm than good. The same is true for marijuana prohibition.” The British public rejected key elements of the ONDCP’s alarmist rhetoric in the Daily Telegraph/YouGov Poll. Conducted by one of Britain’s most respected pollsters, the poll included more than 2,500 participants. It found that the majority of respondents thought of cannabis as less addictive than legal drugs like coffee, alcohol, and cigarettes. The majority (74%) also did not think that cannabis users were a lot more likely to use hard drugs. If a cannabis user also used hard drugs, the vast majority of respondents (83%) felt that it was not a result of cannabis creating a craving for harder drugs, but that they did so because “cannabis users find themselves part of a ‘drug culture’ with dealers pushing both hard and soft drugs.” They also didn’t think of drugs as making addicts mentally unstable and therefore likely to commit crimes; any crime they associated with drugs they saw as the result of addicts stealing to get money to buy them. In the U.S., marijuana, along with heroin and LSD, is classified as a “Schedule I” drug, despite substantial evidence that it is less harmful than tobacco or alcohol. The majority of western European countries -- including Switzerland, Spain, Belgium and Portugal -- have eliminated criminal penalties for cannabis possession, consumption, or both. In The Netherlands, sale of small quantities of cannabis is permitted in coffee shops. Switzerland has proposed a law that allows for the regulated sale and production of cannabis, putting the country on the cutting edge of reform in Europe.Complete Title: "Biggest Shake-Up of Britain's Drug Laws in 30 Years" Goes Into Effect Today!! Contact:  Drug Policy Alliance - http://www.drugpolicy.org/Tony Newman, 212-613-8026Elizabeth Mendez Berry, 212-613-8036 Source: Common Dreams (ME)Published: January 29, 2004Copyright: 2004 Common DreamsContact: editor commondreams.org Website: http://www.commondreams.org/Related Articles & Web Site:Advisory Council On The Misuse of Drugshttp://freedomtoexhale.com/reschedule.pdf The Case for Small Home Growers http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18249.shtmlVoters Want Even Softer Line on Cannabis http://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18220.shtml Blunkett's Softer Line on Cannabis Not Enoughhttp://cannabisnews.com/news/thread18218.shtml
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Comment #3 posted by FoM on January 30, 2004 at 16:16:30 PT
British Journal of Psychiatry (2004) 184: 110-117
Causal association between cannabis and psychosis: examination of the evidence Copyright: 2004 The Royal College of Psychiatrists http://bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/content/abstract/184/2/110
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Comment #2 posted by kaptinemo on January 30, 2004 at 08:27:11 PT:
Good thing nobody took me up on my bet
I'd be crying the blues now. I thought the Canucks would beat us all to the punch...but, generally, the farther you are from Uncle's reach, the saner your national policies are. I am glad for the Brits, and hope you Canucks reading this put Mr. Martin on notice that you live a lot closer to him than Johnny Pee does, and it's not a good idea to tick off your own countrymen in favor of an overbearing (but economically dependent) neighbor.A major chunk of the prohib wall fell today with an almost silent crash, muffled by the lack of major media coverage in the US...but that's about to change when travellers from here going to the UK see what's happened and report back on their return that the sky has not fallen. A prediction: I expect to see (tolerated, if not fully legal, just like in A-dam) cannabis cafes in Britain within 2 years.It's getting closer...closer...closer...Johnny Pee must be having a fit of apoplexy right now...
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Comment #1 posted by jvthc on January 29, 2004 at 20:50:59 PT:
All this time I thought Canada would move first...
Didn't you?All the while I read news I read about Canadian's considering decriminalization, the Canadian Senate's report (a gift of sanity to the world), and the previous Minister's push, but to no avail. The U.S. threatened Canada with border clogging, warnings about "protecting Americans" from the most potent B.C. Bud, while we hardly heard a single word about our English cousins? move, except that it was a decided switch. I wonder if that has anything to do with who supported Iraq. No; what could that have to do with protecting people from weed, eh?I read that police still intend to arrest, but then if their law states they are limited to handing out fines, warnings or court summons, what are they really empowered to do?So, here we see America, prosecuting against medical marijuana usage as if these patients should be punished for seeking releif, even if they WERE mistaken, while most of Europe, UK now included, is moving beyond what Canada was planning. Now we have a lot more than Amsterdam to identify by way of comparison. Will we witness a time when most of the civilized world refuses to punish pot smokers, or re-publish the false claims, where America stands alone with the likes of Thailand, North Korea or nations of the Middle East in punishing marijuana smokers mercelessly?Then, too, what of the U.N.? How can the U.N. still post the same harsh stand as the U.S. if most of Europe is already declining that direction? Oh, right ? they?re not a democratic organization; I forgot.
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