Otago Daily Times

‘Fitz’ on the case for legalisati­on

- CHRIS TROTTER Chris Trotter is a political commentato­r.

JIMMY McGovern’s “Fitz” is a marvellous character. Played by the irrepressi­ble Robbie Coltrane, Fitz is an anarchist, a hedonist, and a forensic psychiatri­st of genius who is seconded to the Greater Manchester Police to get inside the minds of offenders their detectives cannot catch.

Fitz is all the more compelling as a character for being a deeply flawed human being. Though thoroughly aware of his addictions, he makes no real effort to overcome them.

Perhaps his most serious compulsion is truthtelli­ng. When asked why he drinks, smokes and gambles to excess, he replies, with uncompromi­sing honesty: “Because I like it!”

When someone asked me recently how I would have handled the campaign in favour of legalising cannabis, I immediatel­y thought of “Fitz”.

The hero of McGovern’s television series Cracker would have taken a very different approach to the careful promoters of the realworld “Yes” campaign.

Fitz would, of course, have rattled off all the evidence in favour of legalisati­on in a single, supremely detailed, multiclaus­al sentence. (McGovern, as a writer, excels at writing these, and Coltrane, as an actor, is even better at delivering them.) But that would not have been the end of it — not by a very long chalk.

Fitz would have saved the real passion for his followup remarks — beginning with the enormous level of hypocrisy surroundin­g the whole issue of intoxicant­s.

In his commanding Lanarkshir­e accent, he’d talk about the billions of dollars’ worth of profits cranked out by the perfectly legal manufactur­ers, distributo­rs and retailers of alcohol. Describing, in horrendous detail, the bloody carnage he’s witnessed, and the emotional devastatio­n he’s come facetoface with, on account of booze. He’d talk about the way the reality of alcohol’s destructiv­eness is only permitted to travel so far before being silenced by the glib unrealitie­s of the liquor industry’s lobbyists.

Pivoting to the draft legislatio­n setting out the comprehens­ive regulation of cannabis use, the legislatio­n we are being asked to answer “Yes” or “No” to in the referendum, Fitz would invite us to imagine how the liquor industry might respond if it was required to abide by the same rules.

A limited number of outlets across the country. Strict limitation­s on potency. No advertisin­g whatsoever. Monopolisa­tion of the market forbidden. Restrictio­n of the product to persons over the age of 20 years.

“How do you think the booze barons would react to that?” Fitz would ask. “Why can’t we impose on them the same controls over the production and distributi­on of alcohol that we are demanding from the growers of cannabis?”

As a psychiatri­st, Fitz would, of course, be well aware of the effects of heavy and prolonged cannabis use on young people afflicted by a variety of mental illnesses. Well aware, because, of course, he’s dealing with these kids every day.

“Prohibitio­n doesn’t prevent these youngsters from using the drug,” he’d tell us, intruding his impressive bulk into our personal space to emphasise the point. ‘‘It just makes them less likely to get help until they fall foul of the law and the courts send them to me.”

Pausing only to flick his cigarette ash into his empty beer glass, Fitz would continue. “And the millions of dollars raised in taxes on legalised cannabis would allow more people like me to be trained to help these kids. Which makes a damn sight more sense than giving them a criminal record and locking them up in prison!”

All of this would, naturally, be leading us towards Fitz’s moment of truth. The recitation of the clinical data. The stinging rebuke of our society’s ingrained hypocrisy in regard to alcohol and tobacco. (The latter, perfectly legal, product kills 5000plus New Zealanders annually!) The utter failure of cannabis prohibitio­n to prevent mental illness. These are just the hors d’oeuvres of Fitz’s rhetorical feast.

In the climactic sequence, Fitz would stub out his cigarette, and fix us with that hard look Robbie Coltrane does so well.

“Shall I tell you the real reason to legalise cannabis? Because all the stuff I’ve told you, while true, isn’t enough. You should legalise cannabis because you’d like it. No, actually, you’d love it! Cannabis makes food taste better. It turns music into magic. It suppresses pain and nausea naturally. And, it transforms sex into a holy sensory sacrament. So, go on, what are you waiting for? Just say YES!”

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? What would Fitz do? Robbie Coltrane is pictured filming the Cracker television series.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES What would Fitz do? Robbie Coltrane is pictured filming the Cracker television series.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand