MOST AUSTRALIANS WANT MARIJUANA DECRIMINALISEDThe Australian, Mon, 01 Nov 1999, page 10 About three quarters of Australians support decriminalising possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use, a Newspoll has found. Life Education Australia executive director Terry Metherell said the poll, conducted last weekend, showed support for fines instead of criminal records in minor marijuana offences was strong across all age groups. It was strongest among people aged 25-34 (84 per cent) and weakest among those over 50 (66 per cent). "Married respondents or those with children or in full or part-time work were more likely to favour the use of fines than respondents who were unmarried, without children or not in the workforce," Dr Metherell said. White collar employees were significantly more likely to support the use of fines over criminal records than blue collar employees (81 per cent versus 66 per cent). Similarly, those in high income earning households were significantly more likely to support fines than those in low income earning households (81 per cent versus 63 per cent). " Australians appear to strongly support the decriminalisation of a small amount of marijuana for personal use, as has occurred in South Australia, the ACT and Northern Territory," Dr Metherell said. "Current moves toward cautioning and diversion for young and first offenders in minor marijuana cases in Victoria and New South Wales are also likely to have widespread public support." The Newspoll also found most Australians favoured treating drug offenders rather than sentencing them to prison. Seventy per cent of those surveyed supported
treatment for those caught in possession of illegal drugs while 22 per
cent favoured prison. "The message for governments is that
Australians are caring and want to help people with drug problems, especially
young and first time offenders," Dr Metherell said. WHAT DOES OUR PRIME MINISTER THINK?From a radio Interview with Neil Mitchell on 3AW (5 November 1999) " I do [not] agree with the legalisation of marijuana. I see no merit at all and I think it ignores the overwhelming evidence that marijuana is not only very harmful in itself but can produce a craving for hard drug use and ultimately hard drug addiction. But the case against marijuana itself is much stronger now to what it was 20 years ago. People just assumed that it was a harmless recreational drug 20 years ago." WHAT WE THINK!Overwhelming evidence of WHAT?!?! As we all know there is ABSOLUTELY NO EVIDENCE, that marijuana is very harmful or can produce a craving for hard drug use¹ nor is the case against marijuana much stronger now¹. This is ignorant drivel spouted on the theory that lying loudly enough, often enough and by supposedly informed people in public, will make the lie into a fact. WHAT DO YOU THINK?
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