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What does the legalisation of cannabis mean?

Dan Collins is here to tell us what the legalisation of cannabis DOESN’T mean

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Flora Fusion MCT CBD oil, favoured by athletes and ketonic dieters

Advocates like myself campaign for reform for the sick, sad and sore people who deserve better than the status quo

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At this very moment, someone somewhere is buying and/or consuming a legal cannabis product. Countries the world over are relaxing laws around the cannabis plant and its many products and sources indicate that the UK could be the next jurisdiction to free the weed, but what does that really mean?

Broadly speaking cannabis is still illegal in the UK, unless you can afford a private prescription in which case you can have your fill of legal medical cannabis products. Assuming you don’t have thousands of pounds to spend on private medical care every month, you still have the option of using CBD food supplements, the kind we sell in our Hemp shop on Great Junction Street. Out with these two options, any product with an appreciable THC content is still a controlled substance. Which means the vast majority of cannabis users in the UK are accessing their herbs through the black market.

For some, the illegality of cannabis is a deterrent, many people would not consider breaking the law for something as trivial as a good nights sleep or pain relief. However, roughly 10% of the population are regular cannabis users, and the efforts of the home office to shut down supply do not affect our appetite or our ability to ‘pick-up’. I’ve read that even a very successful bust by the police only sets back the supply chain by a couple of hours. It is clear that the status quo is not sustainable. For decades the UK government has dug its heels in and refused to move neither with the times, nor with the evidence. Meanwhile millions suffer, or at the very least are put in harms way by not having a legal, regulated system in which to purchase cannabis. Ahead of us lie many choices. One such is decriminalisation vs. legalisation. The former means that the individual user of a given drug will not face criminal charges, however the production and supply of said drug remains illegal. Decriminalisation has worked wonders in many countries, most notably Portugal, where plummeting rates of blood-borne diseases and overdoses associated with intravenous drug use is evident.

Decriminalalising drugs, has the biggest effect on the most vulnerable drug users and enables the state and social services to intervene in a positive way.

The legalisation of drugs goes further. In a legal system the entire supply chain is covered; it is permissible to produce, sell and consume the substance. Everything is taxed and regulated and treated much like coffee or alcohol with rules in place to protect the consumer, and assurances for investors and businesses interested in the market.

There are of course many legal cannabis markets around the world; some work better than others, some barely work at all. Rather than wax lyrical about the odds on of a legal cannabis market here in Edinburgh, I’d rather tell you what the legalisation of cannabis DOESN’T mean. Legal Cannabis does NOT mean mandatory cannabis. If weed were legal we wouldn’t be coerced by government mandate to consume it. Even in places with legal cannabis on offer, the number of users rarely exceeds 20-25% of the population. A reference point: 80% of people in Scotland consume alcohol, a drug which causes exponentially more harm to physical health, mental health, families and communities. Then factor in the burden on the NHS and Police. Legal Cannabis does NOT mean a free for all. We can put together a set of guidelines that allow for large-scale production and home growing alike. Regulations ensuring that products making it to market have an assured level of quality will help.

With a legal market we can regulate the potency of our cannabis and label them accordingly; no more grasping in the dark guessing the effect of your medicine by trying to decipher the exotic names that many cultivars are given. Finally, legal cannabis does NOT mean the end of western civilisation. People will still go to work, will continue to function much the as we do now. The economy will benefit to the tune of £BILLIONS in tax revenue, not to mention the investment and opportunities for people in our communities.

Cannabis is already a part of daily life for many and for the most part you would never notice. Take a look around you. How many people do you see? How many of them have used cannabis in the last week? How many have used it today? Does it really matter? If you don’t already consume cannabis, its legalisation will have very little direct impact on your life. It’s not for you that advocates like myself campaign for reform of our cannabis laws. It’s for the sick, sad and sore people who deserve so much better than the status quo. Regardless of how we legalise cannabis it is clear a change is coming, and I believe that change is best facilitated by those who understand the product and those who use it. Crucially we must come to accept that cannabis is an inevitable fact of life on earth, and it must be held in an open hand if we want to reduce harm and increase positive outcomes.

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