Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 Source: here (CN NB) Copyright: 2004, here publishing inc. Contact: http://www.heresj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2989 Author: Mark Leger Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/cannabis+cafe Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/allen+merritt THE GREATEST 'LIBERAL' CITY IN THE EAST My picks for 'pioneers of the year': the Cannabis Cafe and the gay pride parade organizers. A "liberal" current swept through Saint John last year that, from a distance, would have eluded even the focused gaze of our new Pioneer Man. Imagine: It's last January, 2003 and you're asked to predict what will happen in Saint John in the year to come. Who among us would have said the following events would take place? .The opening of the Cannabis Cafe in Saint John, the first one in Canada outside Vancouver, with positive coverage from local media outlets and little protest from the general public. . A gay pride parade that would draw thousands of supporters and only a handful of protestors. There are many of us who believe that Saint John is more liberal than most locals and outsiders think, but not that liberal. It took some "pioneering" people to prove that our vision of a more open-minded Saint John was more than wishful thinking. For this reason, I have chosen the Cannabis Cafe and the organizers of last year's gay pride parade to be my "pioneers of the year." Granted, I'm taking liberties with Enterprise Saint John's concept of pioneering. For the purposes of the growth strategy, pioneering is meant primarily in the entrepreneurial sense. "Immigrants by choice or circumstance, our founders and builders were entrepreneurs by nature for generations...It is then our pioneer culture that we must endorse, encourage and promote as it is essential to our growth-oriented brand," the report states. Still, there is a cultural, as well as economic, dimension to this report. Pioneer Man is a symbol of the city's entrepreneurial spirit, but he also represents a clear break from the Loyalist Man, who had come to represent the city's conservative, close-minded image, at home and across the country. The Pioneer Man is meant to project an inclusive, dynamic image, one that speaks about the spirit of the entire community, not just the spirit of its entrepreneurs. The operators of the Cannabis Cafe - Jim and Lynn Wood - are cultural and entrepreneurial pioneers, but the cafe is a success mainly because it's at the forefront of the fight to legalize marijuana and make it an accepted part of mainstream Canadian society. A few people were arrested in the weeks after the cafe opened. One of them, Allen Merritt, made his fight against the charges a public one and deserves "pioneer" status too for furthering the community debate about this issue. Despite these high-profile arrests, the Cannabis Cafe is still operating, and has no fear of the police; in fact they relocated from King St. to Canterbury St., across the street from the community police station. Gay pride organizers had a better than expected reaction from the community, too. I'd been told that people in the gay community had been reluctant in the past to stage a public event like a parade because they feared the community at large shared MP Elsie Wayne's disdain for them and would show up in droves to stage an angry protest. Both gay rights and decriminalization of marijuana have been hotly debated across the country in the last year. What makes Saint John a pioneer is that it is a little city with big city attitudes about these issues. People assume liberal values about things like gay rights are rooted mainly in large cities like Vancouver, Montreal and Toronto. Smaller places - especially traditionally conservative ones like Saint John - are thought to be immune to the value shifts taking place in large urban centres. This is why I thought it appropriate that Saint John became host to a cannabis cafe before places like Montreal and Toronto. We showed the country that liberal values were taking root in small-town Canada, as well. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin