Don Brash and Foot 'n Mouth Disease
Don Brash and Foot 'n Mouth Disease
As much as this country may dislike foot and mouth disease, simply banning it would achieve nothing. It has to be managed,
Former
Treasurer now ACT leader, Don Brash, in front of a former
Police Minister, Auckland Mayor and fellow candidate for the
House of Representatives Hon John Banks, has seriously
proposed a realignment of pot policy and
reality.
Legal regulation is management of what ever
problems , perceived or real, that may manifest, including
ensuring that resources are targeted, problems addressed,
harms measured, responses balanced, evidence collated and
due processes seen to be transparent and ethical. Drug
Prohibition satisfies none of these criteria.
We are a
country possessed by a paradigm.
While Don Brash
answered this question in Christchurch with a 'categorical
no' last election, it is economically and philosophically
progressive and sensitive to a core election issue that Don
responds now.
I honour the fact he has dug himself out
of a hole, for there is nothing in ACT's principals that
supports flogging a dead horse. He wasn't the first ACT MP
to address drugs. When Clifford Wallace Thornton Jr was
guested at ACT's CHCH 2003 end of year rave up
(efficacy-online.org) MP Rodney Hide said "I agree with
everything that man has said". He also said, "I'd legalise
all drugs tomorrow" in response to a question from the floor
in Christchurch during ACT's leadership quest. It didnt harm
his chances,
MP Stephen Franks later wrote variously
on ACT's website on the cannabis issue and memorably said
"just because something is legal, doesn't make it
laudable".
One thing for sure, if ACT is to be a
coalition partner, this issue will not die easily. And they
will not loose votes for it this time either, any more than
Greens or Labour (whose caucus was the first in the world to
decriminalise and legally regulate recreational psychoactive
soft drugs under the UN Convention's compliant Misuse of
Drugs Act 1975) led and launched by then social conservative
and established drug czar, Hon Jim Anderton. It became law
the day John Key became Right and Honourable. The rest of
the world was watching then and it will be watching
now.
National is on notice. Peter Dunne's United
Future is on the outside on this one as is his standing as
Associate Health Minister for Drug Policy.
One thing
for sure this spring election, no Parliament is serious
about fixing the alcohol problem unless it is prepared to
deal with the neighbouring intoxicants.
So who should
get the credit for that 'curly one'
?
ends