Pubdate: Tue, 23 Mar 2010 Source: Abbotsford News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Abbotsford News Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/BkAJKrUD Website: http://www.abbynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1155 Note: No author mentioned REAPING WHAT YOU SHOW HAS CONSEQUENCES Whether you agree or not with the decision to extradite Marc Emery to the U.S. to face marijuana distribution charges, it must be recognized that Emery knew what he was doing. He didn't call himself the Prince of Pot for nothing, and the millions he made selling marijuana seeds, particularly to American consumers, make it clear that financial success can be achieved at all levels of the business. The guys who flog the hydroponic chemicals that promote growth in the propagation of BC Bud, or who sell the grow lights have, along with Emery, managed to amass small fortunes without needing to step into the more dangerous side of the marijuana business. But no matter how you describe their roles, they are all complicit. Emery clearly understood that the end product of his sales was an illegal substance, regardless of what purpose it was grown. We're not talking Johnny Appleseed here. Just like scrap dealers who are aware the coils of copper wire, the brass plaques from community monuments and the aluminum railings they buy are stolen. Yet they, like Emery and the grow products sellers, protest their innocence because "they didn't know." The mighty dollar is a great incentive to overlook the seedy side of any business. The Canadian justice and legal system is so tied into rights and freedoms that few, if any, of these quasi-illegal, or downright illegal, activities ever reach the courts, and even more rarely result in meaningful convictions. Perhaps that is why Emery has been thrown to the U.S. wolves, because the chances of him being convicted here were slim. Even if he faced a Canadian court, and was convicted, prison time received would probably be spent supervising the jail's gardening activities. Selling seeds, after all, isn't necessarily a crime, though you can be sure Emery knew that his customers weren't looking for a great crop of zucchinis, which from my own experience grow with an incredible zest. In fact, if you could smoke zukes, I'd be a millionaire too because a just handful of plants can generate enough product to supply a small army. The point, however, is that The Prince of Pot was aware that what he was doing had illegal consequence, just as prominent British Columbians knew in the early part of the last century that running booze south of the line was against the law too. But they did it, amassed fortunes and many became scions of society because of the wealth they accumulated. Their argument, or justification as I'm sure they put it, was that prohibition was a religiously driven failure, and what was the harm in people having a drink or two. I'm guessing, from the widespread use of marijuana which has invaded all levels of society, that eventually it will fall into the same acceptance as alcohol. But to eliminate the criminality that is pervasive today, particularly on the Lower Mainland, its legalization must be throughout North America. To have marijuana, and the grow-gurus like Marc Emery, as acceptable as a martini will take an incredible change of philosophy in the United States, and until that day the huge financial toll on its repression will continue. Never ending, however, will be the enormous human cost that cocaine, heroin and other addictive and deadly narcotics inflict on society. Because if pot seed sellers can get away with it, then the next "hero" of the fight against drug prohibition will be the guy who is "innocently" selling poppy seeds. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D