home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky alt.drugs:21369 talk.politics.drugs:8232 alt.politics.libertarian:3895
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs,alt.politics.libertarian
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!mlfidler
- From: mlfidler@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu (Michael L Fidler Jr)
- Subject: a noble experiment
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.040917.544@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu>
- Sender: news@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: magnusug.magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
- Organization: The Ohio State University
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 04:09:17 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
-
-
-
- Yet Another Noble Experiment:
- Canada escalates the War On Drugs to include nicotine addicts
-
- By William H. Walker
-
- (reprinted by permission from _Claustrophobia_)
-
- Canada has just given us yet another example of the
- failure of Prohibition. The Canadian government has levied
- prohibitive taxes on nicotine addicts. According to the December
- issue of Forbes magazine, Federal and provincial taxes on a legal
- pack of cigarettes in Canada average $2.93. A legal pack of
- cigarettes now costs $5.26 in Vancouver. And what is is the
- result of this policy? Few Canadians are buying legal ciga-
- rettes. Overnight, a whole new industry has been criminalized.
- How are the nicotine users getting their fixes, according to
- Forbes?
- Mohawk smugglers (for instance) buy Canadian ciga-
- rettes in the US (untaxed by the Canadian government (to encour-
- age exports). Then they take them to their reservation on the
- New York- Ontario border and smuggle them into Canada, where they
- sell them (legally) to Canadian nicotine addicts for half the
- price of taxed smokes.
-
- The cigarette tax is also a major source of illicit
- revenue for foreign diplomats stationed in Canada. Last year
- they bought 557,000 cartons of duty-free cigarettes. Either they
- are illegally reselling millions of dollars worth, or there are a
- lot of high-tension negotiation going on in Canada.
- The consequences of forcing the nicotine trade
- underground are obvious. Organized crime will get bigger. There
- will be violence; people will get shot over cigarettes. In so
- far as prices are raised, addicts will be impoverished. Most
- ironic, government will lose tax revenue. And addicts will still
- smoke.
- What is less obvious is the harm caused by the
- heavily regulated recreational drug regime we have in the United
- States. We have little room to sneer at the Canadians. Our BATF
- and FDA prevent safer substitutes for many common drugs of abuse
- (including the number two killer, alcohol) from being sold by
- legitimate companies. Our DEA and local law enforcement devote
- billions of dollars to locking up users of drugs far less harmful
- than nicotine or alcohol. And as far as nicotine goes, an Ameri-
- can can buy cigarettes out of a vending machine, but needs a
- prescription for a relatively harmless nicotine patch.
- Still, it is tempting to speculate on the future of
- Nicotine Prohibition. Will the Canadian government build more
- prisons and crack down on nicotine pushers and users? Will nico-
- tine testing be mandatory in the workplace? Will cigarette
- prices go so high that users turn to crime to finance their
- habits? Will a more concentrated synthetic drug replace ciga-
- rettes? Will your RV be torn apart by Canadian customs agents if
- you cross our northern border? Will the US Government follow
- suit? Can Coffee Prohibition be far behind?
- Stay tuned....
-
- The preceding is an article from the January 1993 issue of
- Claustrophobia, an alternative political journal. For a sample
- issue, send a 29-cent stamp to: Claustrophobia, 400 N.High St.
- #137, Columbus, OH 43215. A one-year subscription is only $10.
-
-
-
-