Pubdate: Wed, 30 Apr 2008 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) CAPRI WANTS CLOCK TURNED BACK It's a rare moment when you find Marc Emery and the Vancouver Police Department in agreement. But that's exactly what has happened in the fallout after the latest annual marijuana smoke-in on the lawns of the Vancouver Art Gallery. It took none other than our municipal scold, NPA Coun. Kim Capri, to bring these two together. And in doing so she has given us all further insight into what Project Civil City is all about. The annual rally of pot advocates gathering at the Vancouver Art Gallery has taken place for a decade. Emery, the self-proclaimed Prince of Pot, is the organizer and he dutifully gets permission from the gallery and a permit from the city that this year cost $1,500. Emery says there has never been a complaint about the event from people who turn up to see it. And he adds, if you really want to see chaos, try the Granville entertainment district on weekend nights when drunks roam the street looking for fights. VPD spokesman Tim Fanning agrees that the rally, which this year attracted more than 6,000 people at its height, is monitored and managed by the police and relatively trouble free. But Capri told reporters she finds this celebration of cannabis culture and calls for legalization of pot "disturbing and unacceptable." (She apparently had nothing to say about her boss, Mayor Sam Sullivan, and his history of buying heroin for junkies and giving a crack addict money so he could smoke the drug in Sullivan's van. Talk about disturbing and unacceptable.) But people puffing on pot is quite another matter for our leading lady of law and order. She wants the cops to have a stronger presence at these events. This demand has led Fanning to ask: "What are we supposed to do? Arrest 6,000 pot smokers?" The last time the Vancouver cops charged into a crowd of dope smokers was in the summer of 1971. They were spurred on by hippy-hating Mayor Tom "Terrific" Campbell, who in turn was heated up by the rants against the evils of the weed and degenerate youth by hard drinking, chain-smoking iconic radio talk-show host Jack Webster. Cops on horseback cracked skulls and made arrests in what came to be known as the Gastown Riot. A lot of smoke has passed through the old hookah since then. But judging from her comments, Capri would have us go back to those days and have us ignore how times and attitudes have changed. Canadian politicians are now, more often, calling for the legalization of pot. And anyone would tell you the drugs Jack Webster and Tom Terrific regularly consumed--alcohol and tobacco--are responsible for far more damage than the stuff being sucked back on the art gallery lawn. For Capri to equate that annual event with the "open drug market" at Hastings and Main is disingenuous in the extreme. Her idea of a civil city is a place where everyone sits facing forward with hands folded on their laps and their legs crossed at the ankles, and where homeless people are swept off the streets by private security guards, panhandlers are busted and laws are obeyed even when they are stupid. Capri may be in a minority, but she is not alone. She is joined in her crusade by B.C. Chamber of Commerce president John Winter. He told the Province editorial board the cops should have thumped those dope smokers: "In a perfect world the police would have dealt with them with some severity." To Winter's dismay, "the police don't have the support of the community," to go in and bust heads. Fortunately the cops are well aware of that and so is Marc Emery. Contempt for the laws that make marijuana possession a criminal offence is obviously widespread. Until those laws change, the police have found a civil way of dealing with that problem. Capri's solution would have us increase enforcement which would be anything but civil. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom