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The Great Canadian Flip Off...an article by James Bender
Elections Canada Website : Information - Who's running - How to Vote...Everything you need to know...
Yahoo! Thank for your support...It's Official... Jim Bender is the Oxford Rep for The Marijuana Party of Canada
It was tough, right down to the wire, the electoral office was not very helpful about verifying your signatures, but through our persistence and your support, we got in right @ the last minute. Read more on this story
Let's Roll
On December 23, 2003, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Parliament has the constitutional right to prohibit cannabis possession using the criminal law. Therefore, it is no longer relevant to use the courts to try and change this country’s unjust laws. From now on, cannabis activists will have to get their act together on the POLITICAL scene.
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Fraser Institute Legalize marijuana and tax it, study saysJune 9 2004 CTV.ca News Staff While the Fraser Institute has released a report calling for marijuana's legalization, it now says it doesn't endorse the report's views. A headline on a press release quoted the right-wing think tank as saying pot should be legalized so governments could tax the revenue. However, the institute later said that was wrong and the report only reflected the view of its author, Steve Easton, a senior fellow at the Fraser Institute. Easton, an economics professor at B.C.'s Simon Fraser University, estimated that legalizing and taxing marijuana could infuse $2 billion in revenue into federal coffers. He it was time the government profited from marijuana sales rather than organized crime rings. "If we treat marijuana like any other commodity we can tax it, regulate it, and use the resources the industry generates rather than continue a war against consumption and production that has long since been lost," he said in a news release. "Unless we wish to continue the transfer of these billions from this lucrative endeavor to organized crime, the current policy on prohibition should be changed. Not only would we deprive some very unsavoury groups of a profound source of easy money, but also resources currently spent on marijuana enforcement would be available for other activities." The study estimates that there are about 17,500 marijuana growing operations in British Columbia alone, but only 13 per cent of offenders are charged and a majority (55 per cent) of those convicted receive no jail time. "It seems to me a far better use of our resources is to use those resources to make it legal, tax it in an appropriate way and, to the extent it causes certain kinds of social problems, then we can deal with that as part of the revenue," he said. Prime Minister Paul Martin said last week that if the Liberals are re-elected, he plans to reintroduce legislation decriminalizing the possession of less than 15 grams of pot. That means offenders would be fined rather than receiving criminal convictions. Previous decriminalization legislation died last month when Parliament was dissolved for the federal election campaign. The Fraser Institute says some 23 per cent of Canadians have admitted to using marijuana. Opponents of looser marijuana laws say it could promote usage of harder drugs.
For an In Depth Look @ the Platform... Visit the Marijuana Party of Canada Web Site
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