Day Seven: Nandor completes week of silent shame
Tuesday, 26 July 2005
Day Seven: Nandor completes week of silent shame; voters will get the message loud and clear - Greens equal drugs
Seven days of silence from the Greens' Nandor Tanczos on key scientific findings damning cannabis use has spoken volumes, United Future leader Peter Dunne today said at the end of a week of daily presenting a series of studies to Tanczos and seeking a response from him.
"And it is fitting that the week is complete the day after an election date is set because, thanks to Nandor, the voters now know one thing - the Greens equal drugs.
"They stand for ultimate legalisation of cannabis; they stand for opposing P being a Class A drug.
"They stand for refusing to even engage the latest research on cannabis; they stand for refusing to acknowledge the damage it does to our young, the damage it wreaks on our families.
"As all parties hit the election trail, New Zealanders will know that a vote for the Greens is a vote for the drugs culture - and I don't believe for one minute that that is what the average New Zealander wants," Mr Dunne said.
"And no, Nandor, your silence does not get you off the hook. With your stance in the face of all evidence, you remain New Zealand's most irresponsible politician and I will continue to point out the sheer moral and intellectual dishonesty of your personal crusade to legalise cannabis.
"So today, I again present a series of studies and questions and I ask Nandor Tanczos to respond:
"If he is going to construct a Member's Bill with one goal and one goal only, to makes drugs more acceptable, then it is time for him to front up and answer some tough questions.
"I want the Greens - these weird people who promote psychoactive drugs and yet are horrified by a GE spud - to actually have the integrity to face up to the evidence that says that cannabis is anything but a harmless drug.
"I want Nandor to address issues like the Swedish study that shows that cannabis use in those under 18 increases the rate of schizophrenia by 600 percent, and trebles the risk of general mental illness.
"I want Nandor to tell New Zealanders why he thinks it is a good idea to legalise this drug when Professor Robin Murray of London's Institute of Psychiatry reports that some 90% of his patients showing a first episode of psychosis smoke cannabis?
And while he's at it, he can comment on these studies:
* A University of Maastricht study confirming anecdotal evidence that cannabis use can treble the risk of mental illness, and confirming that cannabis causes serious psychotic disorders in people with no history of mental illness * A Karonlinska Institute (Sweden) 15-year longitudinal study of some 50,000 military conscripts that showed that the higher the consumption of cannabis in adolescence, the greater the risk of schizophrenia. * A 15-year study of 1920 Americans which showed the cannabis use increased the rate of major depression by 400%
Or perhaps, if he wants something closer to home, he could talk to Dr Anne Walsh, the Hawke's Bay Clinical Director of Mental Health, who revealed last year that most of the patients in the Hawke's Bay mental health unit suffering severe psychiatric illness were cannabis users.
"Or would he prefer to comment on this year's Canterbury University study that shows that daily cannabis use almost doubles the risk of psychotic illness?"
"Let me make it very clear. The cannabis of today is far stronger than that of the 60s, 70s and 80s. It is a serious psychoactive drug and it is being actively promoted by the Greens.
"And I make one last point on the Greens and drugs: They were the only party that opposed the drug P being made a Class A drug. I think that about says it all.
"They are the pro-drug party and, as such, they are dangerous to the health and well-being of young New Zealanders; they are destructive of families," Mr Dunne said.
ENDS