17
Aug/09
0

Why it’s time to end the war on drugs…

The Financial Times of London, U.K. – like most financial newspapers – is not generally regarded as a progressive paper.  It is, however, regarded as one of the most influential journals in the world.    Thus it is very noteworthy that the Financial Times recently published an article entitled Why it’s time to end the war on drugs.

The article notes that 2009 is becoming a watershed year in terms of a growing global recognition that drug policy reform is much needed, or as the article observes, “there is growing sense that reform is possible and increasingly urgent”.

Financial Times cover

What is drug policy reform all about?  As the Financial Times article accurately points out:  “The argument is not that drug use is A Good Thing. It is that the collateral damage caused by the so-called war on drugs has now reached catastrophic proportions.”

Of course there are many agencies that have a vested interest in the current war-on-drugs status-quo, such as the police, prisons, courts, and most significantly, the Cartels. Opponents of drug legalization often point to the Cartels, arguing that they won’t go away just because drugs are legalized. That might be true, but whose making the legalization case on the basis of abolishing the Cartels as a primary reason anyways? The fact that the Cartels might continue to operate is not a reason, in and of itself, to say the legalization case is without merit. Of interest is the question “What Will the Cartels Do After Drugs are Legal?” and it is addressed in an article at Stop the Drug War website.

Filed under: News
1
Aug/09
0

Victoria without needle exchange for 14 months

Victoria, the second largest city in B.C., has been without a fixed site needle exchange for 14 months.  That’s absolutely outrageous.

In a province where a judge ruled the inSite safer injection site was a fundamental legal right for injectors, somehow a needle exchange was allowed to close simply because “stupid” neighbours didn’t want it operating in their neighbourhood.

Needle Exchange fit kits

Victoria’s user group, SOLID, has been running a guerrilla exchange within the no-harm reduction zone where the fixed needle exchange used to be.  SOLID members patrol the streets with back packs providing clean syringes and doing clean up of the area for discarded used needles.

Finally it appears that Victoria may be getting a fixed needle exchange again:
Victoria News – Needle exchange location eyed

Another of those it’s about time situations.