Pubdate: Fri, 18 Sep 2009 Source: Imprint (CN ON Edu) Copyright: Imprint Publications 2009. Contact: http://imprint.uwaterloo.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2693 Author: Ryan Webb Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) "PRINCE OF POT" ADDRESSES PUBLIC During the brief period between the end of the Spring exam session and the beginning of fall semester, Kitchener-Waterloo is decidedly quieter. So when an international drug fugitive drew a crowd of supporters and passersby at Kitchener City Hall on Monday, August 24 Imprint wanted to find out why he was attracting a crowd. The focal point was Marc Emery, self-proclaimed "Prince of Pot," founder of the British Columbia Marijuana Party, and former publisher of Cannabis Culture magazine, in Kitchener as part of a countrywide "Farewell Tour" that had him visiting nearly 30 cities, from Fort Nelson, BC to St. John's, NL. Emery has been Canada's most vocal advocate for liberalizing its illegal drug laws for nearly two decades now, ever present in the national press and having even drawn attention from CNN and CBS' 60 Minutes. Perhaps then, it will come as no surprise to many readers that Emery is set to begin serving a five-year prison sentence next week for drug related offences. The circumstances of Emery's arrest and pending conviction are not as straightforward. It would seem that after two decades of being a thorn in the side of Canadian policy makers, Emery chose to poke the United States in the eye, and, unsurprisingly, American authorities turned out to be much less forgiving. In 2005, they arrested him while he was in Nova Scotia for a Hemp-themed festival to face a variety of criminal charges in the United States. The arrest came despite Emery not having visited the U.S., and tacit acceptance of his Vancouver business practices from municipal and provincial authorities. However, Emery made the mistake of sending marijuana seeds from his business to undercover US Drug Enforcement Agency agents. A native of London, Ontario, Emery has a long history of opposing Canada's legal orthodoxy. Beginning in the early 1980s he became active in libertarian politics within this province, first running for the House of Commons in London East under the banner of the Libertarian Party of Canada and later as the co-founder of the Freedom Party of Ontario, which remains active to the present day. His early forays into electoral politics were clear failures, and foreshadowed the outcome of Emery's future runs for political office, but they would serve as a model for his advocacy in future years. It was by combining his marginalized political views with seemingly innate entrepreneurial skills that Emery had a lasting effect. As an adolescent, he dropped out of high school and opened a book store in London using profits he accumulated selling comic books out of his parents' home. City Light Book Store - a veritable institution comparable to Words Worth Books in Waterloo - continues to operate under different proprietorship. Through City Lights, Emery stood up against legal regulations that seem completely unfathomable today. In 1988, he spent his first four days in prison. Oddly, it was after being convicted of selling his books on Sundays beginning in mid-1986 (at the time retail businesses were banned from operating on the Christian Sabbath). Four years later, in 1992 he was convicted of selling copies of the hip-hop group 2 Live Crew's Me So Horny music video, which had been deemed offensive by Canadian authorities and banned. Emery recalls how the bailiff gave a monotoned reading of the lyrics as part of the evidence provided in court: "I'm a freak in heat, a dog without warning. I have an appetite for sex, cause me so horny." "No wonder I was convicted," Emery muses. Despite that conviction, Emery continued to sell the album. Due to the public spectacle created by Emery along with the precedent set in the 1992 R. v. Butler decision of Canada's Supreme Court, obscenity convictions have become exceedingly rare in this country. For better or worse then, MuchMusic's current playlist would look a whole lot different if it were not for Emery's politicized entrepreneurship. The "Prince of Pot" earned his moniker after moving to Vancouver in 1994 and shifting the focus of his form of "revolutionary retail" to a new issue that, at least officially, remains as controversial today as it was at the time. Although he used similar tactics, as he had in the 1980s, what he calls "principled, purposeful lawbreaking," Emery's marijuana reform agenda met with even stiffer opposition. In 1996 and 1998 his Hemp BC store was raided by police and his stock was seized. However, he continued to reopen the business and escaped any prolonged jail sentences. The pillar of Emery's unlikely business empire quickly became a mail-order marijuana seed business that he ran out of his Hemp BC headquarters and advertised in the magazine he also began publishing in 1994, Cannabis Culture. Emery's seed business apparently garnered little notice from authorities, and competiton soon sprung up in "Vansterdam" and elsewhere in Canada. Larry Campbell, a former RCMP drug squad officer who also happened to be the mayor of Vancouver between 2002 and 2005, appeared to offer his blessings for the operation as part of his "harm reduction" approach towards drug use. Campbell's mandate included the establishment of "safe injection" sites for intravenous drug users in his city's infamous downtown eastside neighbourhood. Emery also welcomed the of leader the New Democratic Party, Jack Layton, into his internet broadcast studio prior to the 2003 election season. Layton has since distanced himself from Emery, but his colleague, MP Libby Davis, has continued to give passing support to Emery's position despite his 2005 arrest. This reporter had recently seen a documentary on CBC Newsworld that profiled Emery's case, so when word came that he was making an appearance in Kitchener as part of his pre-extradition tour, I was immediately intrigued. How exactly would one of the world's most prolific marijuana advocates bid farewell to his supporters? The documentary had showed him in Vancouver smoking copious marijuana cigarettes along with hundreds of supporters. Surely the air would be thick with a narcotic haze at City Hall, and members of the Waterloo Region Police Service would be present in full force to ensure that illicit substances would not be consumed on public property. Despite hopes of high drama breaking the slow pace of the intersession, the actual scene was more subdued. The audience remained near 100 for the two hours Emery spoke. I witnessed some people come with business at City Hall stop and listen to Emery's rhetoric. The bulk of the crowd was younger and seemed favourable to Emery's message. City Hall was clearly less favourable, having an employee come post signs around that assured stragglers that Emery's opinion was "not necessarily" that of Kitchener. Two police officers, one male and one female, looked on from the sidewalk, bemused, apparently surprised by the subject matter being amplified over the city's public address system. They appeared to joke with one another, and happily returned a greeting when approached. An illicit odour filled the air intermittently, but most onlookers seemed satisfied simply taking in the speech. Police officers appeared to continue their patrol as usual, unfazed, it seemed, by the fumes. However, a well-built, straight-faced observer wielded a DV camera from a perch overlooking the proceedings. Call it paranoia, but this guy seemed like an odd fit in this eclectic crowd. Surely, a high school dropout and marijuana activist - even one regarded as regal - would not have oratory skills that could compare to the professional lecturers a university student comes to expect. This assumption also proved mostly false. Emery proved to be a convincing and lucid speaker; his casual, yet informative style was easy to listen to and kept many of those present for two straight hours. Emery's talk made clear how he is a gifted self-promoter, giving a talk that was at once an autobiography and a political call to action. However, some of the claims he made seemed incredulous. For example, he was adamant that smoking marijuana prevented the onset of Alzheimer's Disease in nearly all cases. Further, he stated that marijuana consumption was anti-carcinogenic. These are bold claims, and as Carl Sagan would say, they require bold evidence. None was provided, and credible sources consulted for this report give an opposite assessment of marijuana's potential carcinogenicity. Radical political beliefs can be defended philosophically, but health claims must be supported with empirical evidence. Although some preliminary studies are showing promise for some benefits of marijuana use, none of these studies come close to backing up Emery's claims. Clearly, the adverse physical and mental health effects of marijuana use are deemed to be greater than the moral repercussions of having labourers work on Sundays or making sexually suggestive rap music available on the open market. If these health promoting claims could be verified it would flip this notion on its head. Research proceeds slowly, according to Emery, because the drug schedule ensures that acquiring research cannabis legitimately is more difficult than finding it on the black market. Despite 15 years of Emery's activism, Canada's laws have proven less elastic in regards to marijuana prohibition than they were for Sunday shopping or musical obscenity. Despite pockets of tacit acceptance just under the surface, the laws remain as strict as ever for possession and distribution of marijuana. Moreover, the Conservative minority government has introduced legislation Bill C-15, that would introduce mandatory minimum sentences for manufacturing marijuana. It goes without saying perhaps, that Emery has come out strongly against this proposed legislation. As Emery left I had to ask how he planned on dealing with five years in an American prison. He told me had not yet considered it, and he would take things as they came. He plans to run as a candidate in the next BC provincial election from behind bars, under the banner of the party he continues to lead. He had only decided on one thing for certain: he would take the down time to learn French and Spanish. The latter because he would be spending five years in a prison for non-citizens, mainly illegal immigrants, and the former because he hoped to gain a bigger audience in Quebec. Although Emery is clearly facing a low point in his personal crusade, after his sentence it looks certain that he is planning to seek a new high. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake