Pubdate: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 Source: View Magazine (Hamilton, CN ON) Copyright: 2004 View Magazine Contact: http://www.viewmag.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2393 Author: Terry Ott Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmjcn.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) PROPRIETORS PROMOTE POT PEACE "Call out the instigator, because there's something in the air." - --Thunderclap Newman As improbable as it may seem for around these parts, the Up In Smoke cannabis cafe at 227 King St. E is still open for business. Despite almost daily visits from the local and federal narcs resulting in several high profile arrests--including 76-year-old Jean Cooper--and the confiscation of a lone, live marijuana plant with extreme prejudice, the two-month-old store soldiers on. In fact, the police may have unwittingly encouraged public sympathy towards the cafe with the arrest of Ms. Cooper, as well as energizing local potheads to rally, loudly. Up in Smoke co-owners, Chris Goodwin and Ryan Clark have organized an event to be held Nov. 4, in front of the John Sopinka Court House, starring major marijuana movement mouth-piece Marc Emery. Emery, who has been called Canada's "prince of pot," operates a marijuana seed business, and recently spent time in the joint in Winnipeg for his ganja crusade. In fact, Mr. Emery was so busy preaching pot that he failed to respond by deadline to multiple e-mail requests for comment. But, in a blistering press release issued by the Up in Smoke and Hamilton Compassion Society, the message for the Nov. 4 rally is crystal clear. "Responding to the heavy-handed tactics of the Hamilton police, who harassed a 76-year-old woman (Jean Cooper) who was responsibly using marijuana peacefully at the Up in Smoke cafe, and may have ruined a 25-year-old McMaster student's life (also busted by the Hammer coppers) the Hamilton Compassion Society and Up in Smoke announce a protest and community forum in Hamilton. "With over 1,000 people in our 'database,' we are going to have the biggest and loudest protest this city has ever seen," promise the doobie brothers and sisters UIS co-owner Ryan Clark said in an interview that the cafe is continuing its effort to be certified as an authorized medial marijuana supplier, but conceded that such a move would require "our landlord's signature to satisfy the government's three-tier system connecting growers, suppliers (and retailers)." Realistically, it may take UIS a year or longer--if in fact they are successful--to get government certification as a compassion society, allowing the store to dispense marijuana to legally entitled medical marijuana users. Clark also said the cafe was "gradually being renovated with a proper food menu in development," which is to include veggie fare and, eventually, marijuana food products. "Pot peace is needed to end Hamilton's terrible War on Drugs that sees an elderly woman relaxing in the confines of an adult establishment going to the hospital, not from ingesting her medicine (in this case reefer) but from fear," proclaims an UIS missive. According to Clark, at least one of the police officers who regularly visits the cafe said that the last View story on Up In Smoke was "pretty funny," although I'm fairly sure the cop did not mean that in a humorous or engaging way. The problem as I see it for Clark and Goodwin is that, as I already noted in a previous dispatch, this city is not Toronto and certainly not Vancouver. Even newly minted Ward 2 councilor Bob Bratina, a Baby Boomer and therefore no temperance man himself, said he thought that Up in Smoke may be a little too "in the face" of the authorities, being located right downtown, and less than a stoner's throw from the Hamilton police central station. Still, Ryan, who ends all of his written communications now with the lawyerly "without prejudice," (which means theoretically he can not be sued for libel for anything he says) is unbowed. "Our message to the police: stop harassing our customers and patients. We're here, we're high, get used to it," vows Clark. I think the police will be watching the rally closely, and not in the way you might first think. Historically, the police in this city mostly respond to crime that causes the majority of citizens to be offended, because that group is where the cops get the most bang for their funded buck. If a large number of everyday citizens--read taxpaying, municipal voting, middle classers--turn up at the UIS rally Nov. 4, basically saying the local medicinal pot palace should not be a high-priority law enforcement target, then most likely the cops will forget about it, or at least place it well down the list of vice- and avarice- related targets. On the other hand, if the rally is sparsely attended, or otherwise just made up of local and out of town hardcore reefer freaks, then the cops will be able to retort, "See? This is not something accepted by the mainstream." But Clark and Goodwin appear to have laid down the gauntlet, and excuse the mixed metaphor, but we all will have to wait to see where the wave breaks. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek