Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jan 2006 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Ian Gillespie, Free Press Columnist Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) THE RETURN OF SIR TALK-A-LOT It's Fast - And Noisy - When Activist Marc Emery Returns To His Roots. It's Friday morning, and Marc Emery is eating breakfast in a downtown hotel. At first, there's seems nothing noteworthy about this. Apart from the fact that the London native is quite possibly the world's leading marijuana activist -- a man who has been targeted for extradition by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and who has returned to his hometown to see a new play about his life -- there seems little out of the ordinary. Only later, after following Emery around the city for five hours, does it occur to me how extra-ordinary this moment is. Because right now, Emery is silent. * * * * After I join him at his breakfast table, Emery introduces me to his partner, Jodie Giesz-Ramsay. In addition to living together, the two Vancouverites co-ordinate the multi-pronged aspects of Emery's pro-pot empire: Cannabis Culture magazine, Pot TV (an online news service), the B.C. Marijuana Party, the B.C. Marijuana Party bookshop and a "vapour lounge" where patrons inhale the fruits of his efforts. Emery, who spews words like a blowtorch emits heat, launches into an excited ramble about the actor portraying him in a local play and how, according to a Free Press review, the last line of the play ("Oh God, I am so sick of being right all the time!") is so apt. "I am always right!" he says. Giesz-Ramsay nods. Then Emery slides into an animated rant about the unreliability of eyewitness accounts and how people constantly fall victim to their own self-deceptions. As he talks, his eggs and bacon sit on the plate, slowly going cold. * * * * In the lobby of CJBK radio on Wellington Road, Emery waits for an on-air interview with News Talk 1290 hosts Scott Kitching and Shauna Rae. As he waits, Emery explains how he's been invited to attend a weekend conference for activists in Toronto. He says he'll be meeting some of his supporters, including a Woodstock OPP officer who sent him a donation and complained that while police drug units boast budgets of increasing size, homicide divisions struggle to make ends meet. While he leafs through a glossy wedding magazine from a nearby table, Emery promises to say "something outrageous" during the opening minutes of the show to ensure lots of callers. * * * * During the hour-long live radio show, Emery explains how he is facing a sentence of 30 years to life in the United States for selling marijuana seeds to Americans through his mail-order Internet service. Last July, the thriving business was shut down by Vancouver police, acting at the request of U.S. authorities. Emery dismisses an on-air suggestion he's in it for personal gain, claiming to have given away about $4 million in profits to various radical political causes. "I used that money to subvert the democratic process," he says. "To get our people free from bondage and legalize marijuana." When asked to defend his prideful personality, Emery argues that anyone who's confident and trying to spread a message has to be arrogant. "But all that evades the central issue," he says. "Is what I'm saying true?" Strangely, for the first half of the radio show, there are no callers. Perhaps sensing this, Emery quips that, "If there weren't Nazis in Ottawa, what would I be doing?" * * * * After the radio bit, Emery admits that when he received the notice of extradition from U.S. authorities, "time froze." "I realized I'd finally got the battle I'd been waiting for," he says. "Now I'd have the final combat, because ultimately this battle will go on unless something really dramatic happens. "I've always believed that someone has to die in order to change these marijuana laws," he says. "So I've been a willing sacrifice to this cause. And I wasn't surprised. I've never been scared of it. . . . I'm looking forward to the confrontation." I suggest to Emery that his electric energy belies the classic stereotype of the lazy stoner. "We're stuck with the Cheech and Chong paradigm," he says. "A lot of people who we associate with productive, energetic lifestyles are not telling people they smoke marijuana." Once again, Emery insists the prohibition on pot is mainly an attack on alternative lifestyles. "Once we've smoked marijuana . . . we see everything as the fraud and phoney nature that it is," he says. "Governments need conformity and they need obedience, and marijuana fosters the exact opposite." * * * * Back at his former Richmond Street business, City Lights book shop, young employees stand around sheepishly as current co-owner Teresa Tarasewicz shows Emery around his old digs. Maybe they're not so much sheepish. Maybe it's more a case of nobody can get a word in edgewise. Emery walks amid the shelves, pointing out titles ("In 17 years, I never sold a single book by that guy"), analysing floor plans ("The porn has to be where the staff can see it, or customers steal stuff") and offering advice about online sales. Later, he recounts how he started his first business at age nine (he sold postage stamps by mail order), wrote his first letter to the editor at age 14 (he complained about the continuity of the Little Orphan Annie comic strip) and how someone once told him there are mainly four famous Londoners: Guy Lombardo, Slippery the Seal, former TV host Jenny Jones and him. "I outlasted Jenny Jones," he quips. "I'm not sure I'll outlast Guy Lombardo." * * * * It's mid-afternoon, and Emery is posing for pictures on the set of the play about his life. As he does, he talks about how greatly his late father influenced him. Alfred Emery, he says, always encouraged his son to forge ahead, follow his instincts and do what he had to do -- and then talk to him later about the results. "He was a great teacher without words," says Emery. As I wander out of the art gallery/theatre and onto Dundas Street, I hear Emery in the background. He's still talking. MARC EMERY IN LONDON - -1975 -- Opens City Lights, a used book store on Richmond Street. - - Begins three-year fight against London Downtown Business Association for extracting mandatory fees from all core shops for beautification programs. - - 1984 -- Campaigns against London's bid to host the 1991 Pan American Games, saying the city will lose millions. - - Founds the Freedom Party of Ontario. - - 1990 -- Rents Museum London for first pro-pot rally. - - 1991 -- Defies the province's Sunday shopping laws, spending time in jail, and campaigns against London's bylaw prohibiting sidewalk signs. - - 1992 -- Convicted for selling copies of 2 Live Crew rap music video, which was deemed obscene by the courts. - - 1992 -- Sells City Lights, moves to Sumatra. - - 1993 -- Moves back to Canada and establishes his pot empire in Vancouver, including founding the Cannabis Culture magazine, opening several pot and hemp-related enterprises -- evolving from mail-order to Internet ventures -- and appearing on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1998. - - Tangles with U.S. drug officials, attending a $500-a-table Vancouver speaking engagement for John Walters, Washington's drug czar. - - 2003 -- Smokes marijuana cigarette in front of London police headquarters on Dundas Street. - - Has also: hired a "parking meter Santa Claus" to put coins in expired or soon-to-be expired meters to fend off tow trucks, attacked smoking bylaws, unions and strikes, taxes and socialized medicine, and condemned the school system as "prisons for children" and taught his two sons at home. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom