Part One:
Legal Cannabis or Just a New Dealer?
We were witness to a rather strange news conference last Thursday (June 30) to announce the formation of a 'marijuana legalization task force'. What was advertised with great fanfare was actually big on hype and rhetoric but delivered very little in the way of substance. The four cabinet ministers sitting at the table looked a little confused and were very evasive about a number of issues they were questioned about, particularly whether personal cultivation would be part of the new system. They, at times, seemed to forget the answers they were supposed to give. Deer in the headlights comes to mind. Certainly not what one would expect from a group of politicians announcing an “important first step” in fulfilling a key election promise. It's almost as if they were hiding something. Hmmm.
So if our government is being less than truthful or forthcoming to it's citizens, naturally we should make every attempt to find out why. Let's take this opportunity to dig a little deeper into the facts so far, get to know who's who in the marijuana producer industry and who is positioned to benefit financially from a system that may be contemplating unjustifiably restricting the freedom of it's citizens to grow a legal plant.
For those unfamiliar with the current landscape in regards to cannabis in Canada, here are the basics: Health Canada doesn't think 'marihuana' is medicine and proudly declares this on their website like a badge of honour. Science, on the other hand, disagrees and so do the courts, so Health Canada was forced to let adults choose their own medicine. An estimated 20,000 patients, known as MMAR, retain the the right to grow their own medicine after another court win, while an unknown number of patients are legally required to buy from government licensed producers under the MMPR. 'Illegal' dispensaries are busy with patients who chose not to purchased over-price medicine of questionable quality, sight unseen from the LP's. The LP's want exclusive production rights and cannabis users just want our charter rights. There, clear as mud, right? Don't worry, it'll all become very clear.
If we go back to the implementation of the mmpr, the right to grow your own medicine or have someone do it for you was taken away in favour of so-called 'licensed producers' hand selected by government. Stephen Harper, PM at the time, introduced it with much enthusiasm as a multi-billion dollar, job creating industry. He seemed to be doing a great job at building investor interest in the budding cannabis growers and hopefuls. This, despite repeatedly reminding Canadians that ,in fact, marijuana is not a medicine. I found that a little odd, but then, he was an odd person...
Patients already enrolled in the MMAR filed suit against Health Canada to win back our right to grow and were successful, the government appealed and we won again. Of the four reasons Health Canada cited as reason to ban home gardens,.. fire, mould, home invasions and diversion to the black market, none were deemed as a justifiable reason to restrict our rights.
Along comes Justin Trudeau and the Liberal Party 'Sunny Ways', swept into power on a promise to legalize marijuana. Happy days are here...except, they didn't drop the appeal of our court win and now we are worried they won't honour the court decision and let us continue to grow. They must realize the terrible optics of continuing the seemingly never ending war against Canada's sick and poor, not to mention the millions upon millions of taxpayer dollars spent in the process. Justice Phelan gave August 24 as a date for government to have a new medical system in place and if it does not include the right to grow, the legal fight continues. Here's a fun fact for all you taxpayers, when the patients win a court case, and we almost always do, the taxpayer is on the hook for the whole thing. The real winners are the lawyers.
So, while they did not have an intelligent response to the question of cultivation, Bill Blair offered this little tidbit to clarify things “Unlike (growing) tomatoes, it is a substance that poses certain significant both social and health harms and risks to Canadians,” said Blair, noting “the science is overwhelmingly clear that marijuana is not a benign substance.”
Lets examine that statement. I'm not sure how much experience Mr. Blair may have with growing cannabis or tomatoes, but it is actually a very similar process...seed, dirt, water, harvest. Where he lost me is when he failed to elaborate on the “significant both social and health harms and risks to Canadians,”. Exactly what social or health harms will come from allowing an adult to grow a few plants? The courts have just ruled that home cultivation does not an pose unnecessary risk to the public or the grower. Unless Mr. Blair has uncovered new evidence in the last few months to support that claim, he is being less than honest and flogging a dead horse. Restricting legal growing will keep the prices artificially high, and cause the black market to continue to thrive. It will also boost revenue for the industry so closely connected to members of government. Limitingthe rights and freedoms of Canadians must be justified in a democracy, and this government appears ready to continue to bleed tax dollars to lawyers in an effort to restrict our freedoms in their quest to control the plant. “the science is overwhelmingly clear that marijuana is not a benign substance.” is a rather curious choice of words given that Health Canada has maintained for years that the lack of scientific study was the reasoning behind their 'marijuana is not an approved medicine' philosophy. As for it not being benign, I didn't realize that was something that would justify banning adults from participating. Alcohol and tobacco are both legal substances that are permitted to be produced by adults for their own consumption. Both of these substances are far from benign and in fact are the leading cause of death and disease. I haven't heard the stories of children being harmed because of it and there certainly has been no intervention from Health Canada or government. If home production of an adult substance is inherently dangerous, you would expect a blanket ban. You would be hard-pressed to find a marijuana related death, so why then the extra focus solely on growing cannabis? To find the answer to that, we need to look at who will profit from such restrictions. Why would the Liberal government risk public backlash to benefit a tiny group of growers? This is where the separation between government and the industry poised to get exclusive cultivation rights gets real blurry. It appears many of our politicians and civil servants have used their time in government to secure senior level employment with the LP's. It's almost like they anticipated the government would restrict grow rights...or they orchestrated it to position themselves to benefit from the exclusivity?