Posted on 01/03/2003 9:58:54 AM PST by MrLeRoy
Half of Canadians want the federal government to decriminalize possession of marijuana, and support for relaxed laws is not confined to the young.
The new survey comes at a time when Justice Minister Martin Cauchon says he is going to remove simple marijuana possession from the Criminal Code, but his boss, Prime Minister Jean Chr?tien, isn't sure.
"It certainly says that we are a relatively liberal society on this issue," said Toronto pollster Michael Sullivan.
The U.S. has also warned against decriminalization, saying Canada should get over its "reefer madness" if it doesn't want to face the wrath of its largest trading partner.
The survey of 1,400 adult Canadians showed 50 per cent either strongly or somewhat support decriminalization, while 47 per cent are somewhat or strongly opposed.
The poll was conducted in early November for Maclean's magazine, Global TV and Southam News by the Strategic Counsel, a Toronto-based polling firm. The results are considered accurate to within 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.
The survey showed 53 per cent of Canadians under 40 support looser laws, while 48 per cent of people aged 40 and older want to see marijuana decriminalized.
Mr. Sullivan said there was less of an age gap than there is on other social issues, such as gay marriage and gay adoption.
"I guess we should think that marijuana smoking in general started in the 1960s so a lot of people now who are 40 plus are people who may have tried marijuana in the 60s," he said.
The survey also revealed men are more likely than women to favour relaxed laws and support is strongest among people with money. Fifty-three per cent of men said the government should act, compared to 48 per cent of women.
The findings are different than they are for most social issues, in which women tend to be more liberal than men, Mr. Sullivan said.
Support for looser laws also increased with income. Of those earning more than $100,000, 59 per cent want marijuana decriminalized. The pollsters speculated support is driven by education and affordability.
But the pollsters warned the government should proceed with caution because the results show almost half of Canadians oppose any law changes.
"This isn't 70 or 80 per cent saying let's do it, but it certainly suggests that this is something that should be vigorously debated and as you get more information, let's see where people stand on it," said Mr. Sullivan.
The poll results show British Columbia leads the pack of supporters, with 56 per cent in favour. Support in Ontario registered at 51 per cent, while 48 per cent of Albertans and Quebecers reported favouring looser laws. Support was lowest in Saskatchewan and Atlantic Canada, at 46 per cent in favour.
The Strategic Council did not ask Canadians whether they support legalization of marijuana. Rather the survey dealt with decriminalization, which would still make possession illegal, but people caught would be given a fine akin to a parking ticket rather than saddled with a criminal record.
But Mr. Sullivan suspects many of those surveyed did not distinguish between decriminalization and legalization.
Mr. Cauchon has rejected legalization, which was recommended by a Senate committee last summer, saying society still wants some sort of punishment for marijuana smokers.
So you do give some credence to ethics---good! And the War On Some Drugs is stealing money from all and liberty from many (those jailed) to give psychological comfort to pseudo-moralists.
Let's change the subject to anything except more logical reasoning to keep marijuana illegal.
That's not an answer---it's merely the claim that those who disagree with you are idiots. What are the reasons for your opposition to legalization?
or because I'm religious.
So am I, and I support legalization.
Liar.
Your mindset proves exactly correct the people who argue that once a right is lost, it's lost forever.
Can you point out any instances where this isn't true save the populace "taking to the rooftops"? I hate to be the party bumming cynic but I'm not holding my breath...
And by all means, we must keep the subject confined to the potential benefits of maintinting prohibition, and not broach the subject of the means used, or look at the consequences of what accepting those means are.
Why is that---because it's illegal, like you claimed? Then how do you explain the stats for heroin, coke, crack, etc. Because they're legal?
I'd rather mock them as they so richly deserve.
Rephrase, please. I have no idea what you're requesting.
"Marijuana is less harmful than alcohol, so why isn't it legal. You favor alcohol being legal, don't you? Then why not marijuana?"
I take it back. Make that second grade.
In America only, or is the whole world in play?
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