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Letter: Attitudes to ganja should be

Stephen F Smith

Jamaica Gleaner

Tuesday 15 Jan 2008

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I read the opinion of Dr. St. Aubyn Bartlett and while I respect his
opinion, feel it necessary to disagree with the severity of his
conclusions. Ganja or weed, as it is commonly called, absolutely does
have the negative effect of lethargy and seems to interfere with the
ambitions of young people who use the herb excessively. This being said,
we have to examine the big picture as there are several factors that
come to bear with the herb's ability to achieve the following:

1) Gainfully employed young people who need a paycheck do not seem to be
as affected as the unemployed and hopeless (as in lack of real hope for
gainful occupation or training).

2) The continued ludicrous criminalisation of use of a naturally
occurring plant psychologically drives youth to the side of rebellion
given existing frustration with society's inadequate response to their
needs.

3) Weed, despite being punishable by law, does far less damage to
society than alcohol whose acceptance remains as a result of its
taxability and greater use by the 'higher' levels of our society. After
all, ministers and MPs don't sit around and smoke weed, they smoke fine
cigars and drink single-malt scotch.

4) The high (or 'focus') easily achieved by $50 worth of weed is only
matched by a $200+ expenditure on alcohol in most people and recovery to
function effectively is far more efficient from the former.

5) Weed will be overly attractive to the young as long as it is
identified as illegal, radical and rebellious, thus the removal of those
connotations will effectively reduce the use of ganja by the most
susceptible.

I believe the time is here for all of us to take a serious look at the
challenges faced by the country and what can and cannot be changed in
the Jamaican society.

The biggest challenge we face today is crime and in much the same manner
and tone that our police commissioner announced the possible closing of
some police substations in order to concentrate effort to the real task
at hand, I strongly suggest we stop wasting the time of the police and
the courts with the persecution of ganja smoking.

The perception that if ganja is legalised, America will 'cut us off',
needs to change. America either is already bigger than that or needs to
grow up. America is recognising that it has already lost its 'war on
drugs' and intelligent people worldwide know that the drugs we need to
worry about are prescription drugs that our needy cannot afford and that
kill us a little quicker anyway.

Ganja, weed, marijuana, cannabis or herb needs to be recognised, if not
embraced, as a part of the fabric of Jamaican life. All the prosecution
and persecution in the world will not stop or even stem its use.

This herb has fantastic curative properties but we focus on the small
detrimental effect it has on the young while denying our own failures
and that of our Government to provide hope and opportunity for the said
young people.

We are on the cusp of a new day in Jamaica and I hope that the whole
ganja situation will be favourably revisited.

I am, etc.,

STEPHEN F. SMITH
stavsig@gmail.com
74 Logwood Avenue
Black River, St. Elizabeth
Via Go-Jamaica

http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20080115/letters/letters1.html


 

 

 

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