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Cannabis doesn't lead to hard drugs

Alun Buffry

Letters, Evening News, Norwich

Tuesday 11 Jun 2002

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Norwich coroner William Armstrong seems adamant that cannabis use is a
"gateway" to hard drug use.

This is despite evidence to the contrary from both the Home Affairs Committee
and the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs reports, and the opinion of
almost every expert in the field (A gateway to harder drugs?, EN, 7 June)

Most people who use heroin "started" on cannabis.

Well, actually they probably "started" on alcohol, or even drugs from the
doctor, or maybe even getting giddy as a child. Most armed robbers "started"
on water pistols. However, most children who used water pistols never became
armed robbers. Likewise most cannabis users do not slip into hard drug
addiction.

At last the Government is beginning to dismiss completely the so-called gateway
theory and at last they are beginning to recognise that treatment is better
than punishment.

The sooner that it realises that legalisation of cannabis would help break the
link between it and hard drugs, the better for all of us.

Legalisation of cultivation of cannabis at home would be an incredible
beneficial step.

The gateway is the profit-motivation created by prohibition.

Some of the dealers who sell hard drugs may well tempt their customers by also
offering cannabis. Some of those customers may experiment; some may get
addicted; some may even die.

That is the cost of prohibition and the dreadful stance that has thrown all
these substances into the same basket.

Alun Buffry
Legalise Cannabis Alliance
PO Box 198
Norwich


 

 

 

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