Pubdate: Wed, 24 Aug 2005 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Pat Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) POT ISSUE THE 'PERFECT STORM' Camping with family recently, a faint whiff of sweet something floats across the fresh Kootenay air. "Smells like weed," says the 14-year-old nephew. "How do you know what weed smells like?" I ask. It's a trick question, one my mother had tried out on me some 30 years earlier. To know the smell of the demon herb was to be guilty by mere proximity. Not anymore. "Dude, we live in Vancouver," he says. Translation: you can't grow up in this city-however squaresville a Daddy-O you might be -and remain oblivious to the aroma of what may as well be the province's official leaf. I too grew up in Vancouver, but when I was his age, pot was something smoked furtively behind school portables. With rare, and seemingly arbitrary police enforcement of existing pot laws, Vancouverites can now be found toking in the most indiscreet locations. It is, like gay people holding hands, something that gains attention only from passing turnip trucks. Decriminalizing or legalizing pot may be more popular than the ward system. But the thing about marijuana reform is that, while most people see pot as no worse than booze, most voters don't care enough about it one way or the other to make it a litmus issue on voting day. The Marijuana Party, with its surprisingly comprehensive and arguably quite right-wing policies, is never going to form a government. But when push comes to shove, Canadians inevitably settle for reasonable compromise. The Marc Emery case, in which Canada appears complicit with the United States in bringing to "justice" Vancouver's most prominent potrepreneur, may bring this still-peripheral issue to the front burner of Canadian politics. That was certainly the aim of Emery's cohorts, who popped up everywhere I went last week-protesting Justice Minister Irwin Cotler and buttonholing NDP leader Jack Layton to act on pot reform. Canadians might not be sure we want legalized pot. But most of us would consider a long sentence in an American prison outrageously excessive for a crime most of us consider as serious as a double martini. What voters will get agitated over, though, is cavalier or arbitrary government actions they deem excessive. If one of our local celebs (Emery may be no Rob Feenie, but he is a local character with a certain notoriety...) ends up in a foreign jail for a crime most Canadians would decriminalize, it may provide the impetus for criminal reform. For pot activists, this may be a perfect storm. We are facing civic elections in a dozen weeks and a federal election soon after. Criminal matters are federal affairs but, as the existing drug policy indicates, the city can exercise de facto decriminalization if they talk nice to the feds. That and the fact that a lot of pot smokers may not appreciate the nuance of constitutional division of responsibilities means attitudes to pot could play a role in a close civic election, followed closely by a close federal election. All but the most deluded Canadian recognizes that we've lost the battle for economic independence. Our best hope now may be to eke out a little niche for ourselves doing things to reassure ourselves we still have the power to at least nip the heels of America over soft drugs or gay marriage or other comparatively insignificant issues that nevertheless seem to inflame American outrage. If the Emery case, which is at its heart an issue of American extraterritoriality, drags out long enough to coincide with one or more elections, Canadians may be moved to show some independent-mindedness. Pot may prove the sleeper issue of the coming campaigns. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman