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UK: Cannabis comedown

Zoe Williams

The Guardian

Tuesday 29 Mar 2005

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Some statistics don't do anybody any favours, and here's one of them. Since
it was reclassified from class B to class C at the beginning of last year,
cannabis has lost its lustre, especially for the young.

This is bad news for those lobbying to reverse the classification. It's bad
news for people selling the drug, who are now caught in the classic Tory
conundrum - if you don't attract new blood, all your supporters will
eventually die. It's not even terribly good news for marijuana lovers,
since nobody likes to see their poison of choice consigned to the dustbin
of drug history.

Matthew Atha, director of the Independent Drugs Monitoring Unit, noted that
the change in the law had had no effect at all. In fact, though, since the
increase in regular users dropped to 0.5% last year, down from 45% in 1998,
I'd say the legislation has had a very marked impact. It has made everyone
lose interest. You might just as well have dressed this drug up in a sailor
suit and sent it on tour with Geri Halliwell. It just isn't cool anymore.

An intelligent observer of youth behaviour in relation to government
initiatives would be able to deduce the following: people below 25, say,
are counter-suggestible. I chose that 25 figure totally at random, and
since I'm still quite counter-suggestible and don't intend to change
radically in the next couple of years, I'm going to amend it up to 35.

Thus, if you tell them things are dangerous, they will do them, and if you
shrug and say "actually, it doesn't seem to do too much harm", they will do
something else. Whole swaths of aberrant behaviour could be addressed with
this in mind. Obesity, smoking, drinking, fighting, snowboarding and
joyriding would all become terribly passe if the government were to become
their advocates, particularly if prominent members of the government were
to lead by example and take up dangerous activities in a high-profile way.
I rather fancy Alastair Campbell for this job.

Failing that, they could always start by decriminalising all drugs. There
seem to be three main strands of argument for the criminal status of
psychoactive substances. First, they're bad for people. Whenever anyone
suggests slackening the laws against dope, for instance, the antis are
immediately full of statistics about how very much worse are its effects
than simply making everyone feel a bit foggy and forget to turn off the
heating when they go to bed.

You'd think that by now we'd have devised ourselves a sliding scale for
legality based not on the damage you do to yourself, but the damage you do
to others. Regular smoking would therefore be a class A (for its efficacy
as a long-distance carcinogen), alcohol would be class B (it makes people
fight and drive badly), heroin and crack would be class C (they make people
steal things), cocaine would be class D, along with PlayStations and an
interest in sport (they make people very tedious) and dope would weigh in
somewhere closer to the bottom of the alphabet (it sometimes makes people
quite quiet), unless mixed with tobacco, in which case it would scooch back
up to A.

The second argument is that, the laxer the penalties, the more people will
do something. This might work with speeding (in cars, not on amphetamines).
But it does not seem to work with drugs. It's possible that people only do
drugs at all because the anti-authoritarian impulse behind law-breaking
attracts them, but they are too decent to mug. That would be quite hard to
prove, though.

Thirdly, there is the contention that people shouldn't take illegal drugs
because they thereby keep buoyant an industry based on the most scandalous
exploitation - a position given new expression since the release of the
Oscar-nominated film Maria Full of Grace, which shows the horrifying
realities of being a drug mule.

But, clearly, the only reason drug overlords can treat their mules so badly
is that they're unregulated, and they're only unregulated because the
product itself is illegal. And frankly, even industries that are regulated
don't seem to be able to ensure that the workers at the bottom of their
foodchain are treated an awful lot better.

These are all arguments that were rehearsed an awful lot a decade ago, but
the debate seems to be steadily receding back to "Shall we or shan't we put
people in prison for having the odd joint?". It's hard to say how that
happened. Possibly, the first pioneers for legalised drug use have smoked
too much dope and lost interest. And if that's the case, we can look
forward to the next generation, registering almost no uptake of a dope
habit, being very radical indeed.

zoe_williams@ntlworld.com

 

 

 

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