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UK: Comment: Just say no to echinacea

John O'Farrell

The Guardian

Friday 23 Jan 2004

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The war on drugs has taken a dramatic new turn. Yesterday, before the
world's media, a peace treaty was signed between the British government and
cannabis. Hardliners had insisted that there should have been no talks with
cannabis supporters until all joints had been put beyond use, until they
had laid down their bongs and stopped giggling. But secret negotiations had
been under way for some time. The government said it would downgrade the
drug from class B to C and discourage police officers from automatically
arresting people for possession, while the cannabis delegation said that
the carpet was so red, it was like really, really red.

There have been some concessions from drug takers. They have promised not
to sit in the corner at parties taking far too long to roll a joint while
they bore everyone about who really killed JFK. They have undertaken to
stop ripping up the mini-cab cards that were pinned up by the telephone.
And they have finally admitted that T-shirts featuring a marijuana leaf
under a sign saying "Keep Off the Grass" are not really all that funny.

Users of cannabis have been complaining for some time that they were being
pointlessly targeted and also that it was much harder to make joints on CD
cases than on album covers. But a more lenient approach has been emerging
in the last decade. The House of Commons is now populated with a generation
of politicians who will have smoked cannabis though still have to pretend
they don't condone its use. "Cannabis remains illegal..." said one Home
Office minister. "It is well known that repeated use of this drug can
affect your ... um ... thingy ... What was I saying?"

This liberalisation comes at the same time that stricter limits are being
placed on the smoking of tobacco in public places. Soon you will overhear
people on trains saying: "Excuse me would you put that cigarette out
please!" "It's not a cigarette, it's a joint." "Oh terribly sorry, do carry
on ..." Restaurants will be divided into "smoking", "non-smoking" and "Hey,
squat down and like, skin up".

Now cannabis will be placed on the same level as prescription drugs, with
the result that hundreds of people will rush to their doctor's surgery
saying: "I'm going to the Glastonbury festival at the weekend, and I
wondered if you could prescribe me something to help me relax?" Maybe Rizla
could even begin making king-size cigarette papers specifically for rolling
joints. No, that would be too obvious, no one would go that far just yet.

Until recently, 90% of all arrests for possession of drugs were for
cannabis. At last our bobbies will have time for more important tasks, such
as using their highly sophisticated methods for searching out drug dealers
by pulling over any black man driving a nice car.

The idea of freeing up the police from the front line of the drugs war is
being extended. Rave venues have recently been fitted with "speed cameras"
to take photos of anyone out of their head on speed. What the dancers may
have thought was a strobe light was in fact the double flash of a police
camera recording them dancing suspiciously quickly.

It is the more pernicious drugs that the police should be concentrating on.
I don't mean heroin or cocaine or ecstasy, I mean the real social menace:
echinacea and arnica and all the herbal remedies that are sold at great
expense and don't do anything whatsoever.

All over Britain traumatised children are being forced to take fish oil
while the callous pushers in the health food shop buy another gold-studded
collar for their rottweilers and laugh at the gullibility of the liberal
middle classes. "Wanna score some more St John's wort man? It'll cost you,
brother, this is good shit, I ain't cutting in no low-grade marigold."
Armed police burst in. "This is a raid! Hand over your royal jelly!"

But everyone agreed that cannabis was overdue for downgrading. Everyone,
that is, except Michael Howard. The leader of the opposition couldn't have
made himself look any more out of touch if he called it "pot". A previous
Conservative attempt to appear to be tough on cannabis backfired when half
a dozen members of the shadow cabinet admitted that they had smoked it
(though not presumably all at the same Tory cheese-and-wine do). Howard
refuses to answer this particular question, but if he can't remember, well,
enough said.

The leader of the opposition has even announced that his Conservative
government would reverse the downgrading of cannabis. So he actually thinks
he's going to be prime minister, does he? I don't know what Michael Howard
has been smoking, but it must be pretty powerful stuff.



 

 

 

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