Pubdate: Wed, 03 Dec 2003 Source: Vancouver Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Vancouver Magazine Contact: http://www.vanmag.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3171 UH-OH. OUR AMBASSADOR'S IN JAIL. Being a city and not (yet) a city-state, Vancouver doesn't officially send ambassadors to foreign lands. Unofficially though, we have lots-former Vancouverites who move to other places and thus represent our burg to the wider world. Michael J. Fox comes to mind, but don't forget another Vancouver gift to the movies: Tommy Chong. The Canadian half of the Cheech & Chong comedy team may have grown up in Calgary, but his professional career started here-and even included a stint with Motown recording artists Bobby Taylor and the Vancouvers. Not to mention the fact that his trademark stoner humour is a sales pitch for Vancouver's number one home-grown industry. When he and Cheech Marin began starring in a series of dope-addled films, Chong became a rare example of Vancouver going to Hollywood instead of the other way around. Tommy Chong: Vancouver's ambassador to California. So I guess it's not a good sign when they send your ambassador to the penitentiary. Last October, Chong began a nine-month sentence in California's Corcoran federal institution. Admittedly Cheech & Chong movies such as Up in Smoke and The Corsican Brothers will never be considered cinematic classics. But if they put you in jail for that, Sylvester Stallone would already be on Death Row. No, Chong's crime was something much deadlier in the eyes of American authorities-the 66-year-old comedian was convicted of selling glass pipes on the Internet. All across California, children will be able to sleep safely tonight. Obviously there's no love lost between Hollywood North and Governor Arnold's California. But the truth is, Tommy Chong's fate shines a real light on at least one key aspect of our relationship to the United States-our respective attitudes to illegal drugs. Philosophically the international border is getting wider and wider. President Bush's drug czar John Walters recently attacked Canada for "going the wrong way" on drug policy. To say the least, our approaches differ. While Vancouver police turn a blind eye to simple pot possession, and IV drug users make use of a safe injection site near Main and Hastings, the Americans demonstrate their idea of proper drug policy: sentencing senior citizens to hard time for selling bongs. Apparently, in the Bush era you don't even have to carry pot to get busted. All you need are weapons of grass consumption. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman