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Cannabis ban is elitist. It should go: Tathagata Satpathy

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BJD chief whip in Lok Sabha Tathagata Satpathy recently admitted in a social media chat that he smoked pot (hashish and marijuana) in his younger days. To the pleasantly surprised Net audience, the four-time MP from Dhenkanal in Odisha even showed the way to legally score the stuff in his own state. The comments have since gone viral, earning Satpathy many fans for his candid admission and frank opinion on what he says is an unfairly stigmatized subject. In a conversation with Deeptiman Tiwary, he explains his opposition to the "elitist" ban on cannabis consumption in India and how given an opportunity he would stand up for its repeal in Parliament.

You've admitted that you have smoked pot.Now, that's a rare admission by an MP given that it's a statutory offence to do so.

I did it when I was young. I haven't smoked pot for some time now. But I neither regret it nor have any remorse about it. I also don't support the ban on cannabis consumption.

Why do you think cannabis consumption was criminalized? Was it wrong to do so and attach such stigma to its use?

Intoxication, in various forms, has been part of societies across the world. Shiva had some kind of `ras' and Christ's blood was wine. Since biblical times and even prior to that, including the Romans and South Americans, people have been using intoxicants. Whether it's part of Indian culture, I don't know. But it's definitely a way of life in India. In Odisha (where cannabis consumption is not illegal), people smoking chillum is a common sight. It is not something you make note of just as you don't notice someone drinking water or having tea. The only difference that I have experienced in life is whether you let an intoxicant overpower your life or you take it as a learning process, do something and then get out of it.

It has often been argued that it's not the substance that makes you an addict...

That's correct. It's not the substance but your character. People are addicted to sweets, salty food. It harms them as much.

Do you think in the late '80s when it was banned, we overreacted to a scare created by the US?

Yes, I agree.

Do you think it's hypocritical of the Indian state to allow consumption of alcohol but not cannabis? It has been argued that alcohol is more harmful than cannabis.

We are the US of the '50s and the '60s. We are wannabes. The thinking is that if you hold a wine glass people will consider you belong to the upper class. You roll a joint and people will call you `charsi'. It is an elitist bias. It was during Rajiv Gandhi's time that the Indian state was most elitist.A pilot married to a foreigner and forced into something he was not interested in.Indira Gandhi was not elitist in that manner. Cannabis suffered a ban because it was an intoxicant of the poor.

Should India revisit the ban?

While it should, I don't think it can. Unless there is some Act about medical us age of marijuana and then the civil soci ety creates some kind of pressure to in sert the word "recreational".And then we can also demand a change in the NDPS Act.

If some day a debate comes up on this issue in Parliament, would you stand up for decriminalization of cannabis?

Of course I will. I will seek the permission of my party president. I will try to con vince him of what I think and why I think so. Whether he agrees or not I can't pre dict. But if he is convinced, perhaps he will authorize me to officially support decriminalization of cannabis. After all, it is legal in our state.

Times View

Since 1985, when the ill-conceived NDPS Act was enacted, this is the first time an Indian lawmaker has shown the courage of conviction to speak out against th law and ask for legalizing use of cannabis -the plant from which marijuana (ganja), hashish (charas) and bhang are derived. The NDPS Act had outlawed a way of life in India by bracketing ganja and charas with killer drugs like smack and heroin and prescribing a minimum 10-year jail term for the sale or possession of these drugs. Government shops that sold ganja and charas shut down and the poor man's intoxicant was made illegal. Meantime, informal trade moved from these soft drugs to killer smack because while the punishment was the same, the profit margin for smack was 10 times higher than for ganja. And for the first time, we witnessed a drugs problem in India with the emergence of the desperate "smackiya".

Several MPs knew what was happening, argued against the Act in private, but none spoke out against it.Some of it was because of American pressure (the US was losing patience with their pot-smoking flower children), but mostly because soft drugs like marijuana and hashish didn't enjoy the respectability of alcohol with the upper classes. Since then, penalties for soft drugs have been made lesser than for hard drugs. But should there be a penalty at all on them? American research shows that marijuana is no more harmful to health than alcohol -in fact, some research suggests alcohol is worse. Several US states have legalized the medicinal use of marijuana and a growing number are legalizing it for recreational purposes too. And to think that it was India where marijuana and hashish were used as recreational drugs for as long as anyone can remember -our scriptures talk of Lord Shiva's fondness for it.

Last year, the NDPS Act was amended to allow the medicinal use of narcotic drugs. However, we should go further and allow the use of soft drugs like marijuana and hashish for recreational use. That would usher in a rational approach towards intoxicants, and set right a historical wrong.

Cannabis ban is elitist. It should go: Tathagata Satpathy - The Times of India
 
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My MLA from my District and a distant relative of mine....What he says is correct. We had a small ganja plant planted in our room near the earthen pot where we had our drinking water (at that time this was the way to cool water). My third room mate was a ganjod at that time and he did well in exams :woot:...may be the effect of ganja!!
 
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Bam Bam Bhole
tumblr_mls499iH2i1rtet1zo1_500.jpg
 
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yay... really not sure what the fuss is.. its not banned in India but very few actually smoke... compared to UK, where you can smell it everywhere.
 
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yay... really not sure what the fuss is.. its not banned in India but very few actually smoke... compared to UK, where you can smell it everywhere.
Really? very popular in Pakistan.
 
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BJD chief whip in Lok Sabha Tathagata Satpathy recently admitted in a social media chat that he smoked pot (hashish and marijuana) in his younger days. To the pleasantly surprised Net audience, the four-time MP from Dhenkanal in Odisha even showed the way to legally score the stuff in his own state. The comments have since gone viral, earning Satpathy many fans for his candid admission and frank opinion on what he says is an unfairly stigmatized subject. In a conversation with Deeptiman Tiwary, he explains his opposition to the "elitist" ban on cannabis consumption in India and how given an opportunity he would stand up for its repeal in Parliament.

You've admitted that you have smoked pot.Now, that's a rare admission by an MP given that it's a statutory offence to do so.

I did it when I was young. I haven't smoked pot for some time now. But I neither regret it nor have any remorse about it. I also don't support the ban on cannabis consumption.

Why do you think cannabis consumption was criminalized? Was it wrong to do so and attach such stigma to its use?

Intoxication, in various forms, has been part of societies across the world. Shiva had some kind of `ras' and Christ's blood was wine. Since biblical times and even prior to that, including the Romans and South Americans, people have been using intoxicants. Whether it's part of Indian culture, I don't know. But it's definitely a way of life in India. In Odisha (where cannabis consumption is not illegal), people smoking chillum is a common sight. It is not something you make note of just as you don't notice someone drinking water or having tea. The only difference that I have experienced in life is whether you let an intoxicant overpower your life or you take it as a learning process, do something and then get out of it.

It has often been argued that it's not the substance that makes you an addict...

That's correct. It's not the substance but your character. People are addicted to sweets, salty food. It harms them as much.

Do you think in the late '80s when it was banned, we overreacted to a scare created by the US?

Yes, I agree.

Do you think it's hypocritical of the Indian state to allow consumption of alcohol but not cannabis? It has been argued that alcohol is more harmful than cannabis.

We are the US of the '50s and the '60s. We are wannabes. The thinking is that if you hold a wine glass people will consider you belong to the upper class. You roll a joint and people will call you `charsi'. It is an elitist bias. It was during Rajiv Gandhi's time that the Indian state was most elitist.A pilot married to a foreigner and forced into something he was not interested in.Indira Gandhi was not elitist in that manner. Cannabis suffered a ban because it was an intoxicant of the poor.

Should India revisit the ban?

While it should, I don't think it can. Unless there is some Act about medical us age of marijuana and then the civil soci ety creates some kind of pressure to in sert the word "recreational".And then we can also demand a change in the NDPS Act.

If some day a debate comes up on this issue in Parliament, would you stand up for decriminalization of cannabis?

Of course I will. I will seek the permission of my party president. I will try to con vince him of what I think and why I think so. Whether he agrees or not I can't pre dict. But if he is convinced, perhaps he will authorize me to officially support decriminalization of cannabis. After all, it is legal in our state.

Times View

Since 1985, when the ill-conceived NDPS Act was enacted, this is the first time an Indian lawmaker has shown the courage of conviction to speak out against th law and ask for legalizing use of cannabis -the plant from which marijuana (ganja), hashish (charas) and bhang are derived. The NDPS Act had outlawed a way of life in India by bracketing ganja and charas with killer drugs like smack and heroin and prescribing a minimum 10-year jail term for the sale or possession of these drugs. Government shops that sold ganja and charas shut down and the poor man's intoxicant was made illegal. Meantime, informal trade moved from these soft drugs to killer smack because while the punishment was the same, the profit margin for smack was 10 times higher than for ganja. And for the first time, we witnessed a drugs problem in India with the emergence of the desperate "smackiya".

Several MPs knew what was happening, argued against the Act in private, but none spoke out against it.Some of it was because of American pressure (the US was losing patience with their pot-smoking flower children), but mostly because soft drugs like marijuana and hashish didn't enjoy the respectability of alcohol with the upper classes. Since then, penalties for soft drugs have been made lesser than for hard drugs. But should there be a penalty at all on them? American research shows that marijuana is no more harmful to health than alcohol -in fact, some research suggests alcohol is worse. Several US states have legalized the medicinal use of marijuana and a growing number are legalizing it for recreational purposes too. And to think that it was India where marijuana and hashish were used as recreational drugs for as long as anyone can remember -our scriptures talk of Lord Shiva's fondness for it.

Last year, the NDPS Act was amended to allow the medicinal use of narcotic drugs. However, we should go further and allow the use of soft drugs like marijuana and hashish for recreational use. That would usher in a rational approach towards intoxicants, and set right a historical wrong.

Cannabis ban is elitist. It should go: Tathagata Satpathy - The Times of India
Webby sir you made a mistake. The guy is from BJD, very different from BJP. :)
 
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It was actually not banned till the 80s, then Rajiv Gandhi banned it, heard due to U.S pressure with the "war on drugs".

The joint campaign: Should we not legalize recreational use of Cannabis? - News Stories, Latest News Headlines on Times of India

Since 1961, the US has been campaigning for a global law against all drugs, both hard and soft. Given that ganja, charas and bhang were a way of life in India, we opposed the drastic measure. But by the early '80s, American society was grappling with some drug problems and opinion had grown against the "excesses" of the hippie generation. In 1985, the Rajiv Gandhi government buckled under the pressure and enacted a law called the Narcotic Drugs & Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act.

It was a poor law that clubbed marijuana, hashish and bhang with hard drugs like smack, heroin, cocaine and crack, and banned them all. The minimum punishment for violation of the NDPS Act was 10 years of jail (it has since been relaxed and the crackdown on marijuana has eased somewhat). What happened as a result of this law was that almost overnight the entire trade shifted from peddling grass or charas to smack or worse. This was because while the risk was the same, profits from the hard-killer drugs were ten times higher.
Based of TOI, havent read more on this so not sure how much of this is true.
 
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Mmmm? Article claims consumption is not illegal in Orissa???????

Confused.
 
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Yes but who cares.


Yes but who cares?
I mean banning makes it cool... among college kids.. only people I know in India who smoked were an old relative... and one college friend who wanted to try everything.
 
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It was actually not banned till the 80s, then Rajiv Gandhi banned it, heard due to U.S pressure with the "war on drugs".



Based of TOI, havent read more on this so not sure how much of this is true.


This is VERY true. Cannabis or Marijuana was always legal and popular in India. It was widely used by both holy men, for medicinal use and for recreational use.

It was the US under the guidance of the Church which deemed such "uncivilized" and "barbaric"practices unfit for the "free world" and banned it in the US and then ran a world wide campaign to make it illegal all over the world. India fought back for a long time before Rajiv Gandhi demonstrated lack of spine.

Rajiv Gadhi was a wuss who bent like a pretzel under US pressure and made it illegal in India, same thing happened to India's nuclear ambition which was curtailed due to US pressure under Rajiv Gandhi :sick: I cannot think of a worst prime minister our Nation had to suffer.
 
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