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Apologetics

Reclassification of Cannabis


Facts

Biblical arguments

The Bible teaches that drunkenness is wrong. “Do not get drunk on wine” (Ephesians 5:18). Jesus Christ refused stupefying drugs immediately before he was crucified (Mark 15:23). Intoxication and loss of control are intrinsic to drugs in a way that is not true of alcohol, and the Bible repeatedly condemns intoxication when it addresses drunkenness.

When intoxicated, people lose control. This can lead to wrong actions and irresponsible behaviour. Substance abuse leads to problems in health, relationships and work. Dependence on drugs compounds these problems.

Christians are instructed to “Be self-controlled and alert” (1 Peter 5:8). The law at present restrains drug taking because it is dangerous and acts as a necessary constraint for the good of all society. Christians must therefore take a stand as it becomes ever more fashionable to argue for the legalisation of all drugs.

Key arguments

Reclassifying cannabis sends out the wrong message that taking cannabis is OK. In 2005 the Secretary of the United Nations’ International Narcotics Control Board criticised the UK Government’s decision to reclassify cannabis for this reason.5 In 2006 the Executive Director of United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime also implicitly criticised the UK for reclassifying cannabis. He warned cannabis was now considerably more potent and that “it was a mistake to dismiss it as a ‘soft’ and relatively harmless drug…Policy reversals leave young people confused as to just how dangerous cannabis is.”6

Although advocates of reclassification said that cannabis was not being legalised, the effect is virtually the same. Abstruse arguments about whether it is technically decriminalised are lost on young people. Following publicity about the Government’s plans, the Department for Education and Skills was forced to issue guidance, reminding pupils that cannabis possession would remain illegal.7

Cannabis is far too dangerous to be classified as class C, alongside sleeping pills (e.g. Diazepam or Temazepam). Cannabis is a very harmful mind-altering drug. It causes schizophrenia, cancer and is responsible for a rising proportion of road deaths.

Cannabis acts as a gateway drug to harder illicit drugs. There is evidence that because cannabis and harder drugs, such as heroin and cocaine, have similar effects on the brain, cannabis may act as a gateway to those harder drugs. A study from New Zealand in 2000 found that heavy cannabis users were 59 times more likely than non-users to take other illicit drugs, such as ecstasy and LSD.8

The Police Federation of England and Wales was fiercely opposed to reclassifying cannabis, believing cannabis to be the number one illicit gateway drug.9

The Government argued reclassification was needed to put out a more effective message about the relative harm of cannabis. Yet the previous law was clear. Cocaine and heroin were class A, with cannabis as class B. There already was a clear distinction.

The Government also argued reclassification was needed to focus police time on class A drugs. Yet the police already concentred on class A drugs. Furthermore, as cannabis acts as a gateway drug, if more people take cannabis, more people will go on to take harder drugs. This approach is totally self-defeating.

The controversial cannabis pilot scheme run by Lambeth police which mirrored reclassification, led to open drug dealing on the streets of Brixton. The scheme resulted in a huge escalation of hard drug use and dealing.M10

In November 2004 police figures showed the number of people found carrying cannabis in London had risen 29% since reclassification came into effect in January.11