Pubdate: Tue, 11 May 2010 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/comment/letters/write/ Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Mindelle Jacobs, Qmi Agency Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery EMERY'S CAUSE GOING UP IN SMOKE Supporters of Marc Emery may be outraged that the so-called Prince of Pot faces imminent extradition to the U.S., but you've got to wonder if Emery isn't secretly pleased. The Vancouver-based pro-marijuana activist deliberately poked Uncle Sam in the eye by selling marijuana seeds over the Internet - practically daring the U.S. authorities to go after him. They did and Emery could be behind bars in the U.S. within days, now that Justice Minister Rob Nicholson has given the green light for his extradition. "I'm proud of what I've done and I have no regrets," Emery told reporters Monday before surrendering to sheriffs in Vancouver. This doesn't sound like a man who's particularly unhappy about the way things turned out. Emery's been yearning to be a martyr for the cause for years and it looks like he'll finally get his wish. Compared to Americans nabbed in drug cases, he's pretty lucky. The Prince of Pot faces a mere five years in jail in exchange for pleading guilty. Americans involved in such drug-related endeavours can spend decades in jail. The great irony is that Canadian authorities have known about Emery's seed-selling business for a long time and have, for the most part, ignored it. Emery has sent marijuana seeds to MPs, paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes and has generally been as in-your-face as possible about pressing for the legalization of pot. "I wish I could have done more to piss the U.S. government off," he said in 2008. Even though Emery brought this on his own head, it's worth noting that Nicholson is shipping the Prince of Pot off to the U.S. for behaviour that Canada didn't seem bothered about. Health Canada even recommended that medical pot patients contact Emery for a source of supply, says Eugene Oscapella, of the Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy. "It's hardly a surprise with this government," Oscapella says of Emery's pending extradition. "Am I shocked? No. Am I appalled? Yes." Canada won't be paying the bill to incarcerate Emery, mind you, unless he's eventually transferred back to a Canadian jail. The bad news is Canadian taxpayers will be paying a lot more to incarcerate people if the Conservatives' latest attempt to bring in mandatory sentences for various drug crimes passes. People growing as few as six pot plants, for instance, face at least six months in jail - or a minimum of nine months in jail if they're tenants. "Are you going to get the major traffickers? No," says Oscapella, who teaches a criminology course on drug policy at the University of Ottawa. Every year, he surveys his students about drug use and 85% of the students in his last class reported having used illegal drugs. "So our government has decided that it wants to continue to criminalize 85% of the population of university students I teach," says Oscapella. "These are the privileged in society so they're not going to be the kids picked up in the drug sweeps if they're on campus," he adds. "But if they're in the wrong place at the wrong time or their skin's the wrong colour, they're going to get picked up and we're going to add billions to the cost of incarceration." Watch more of your taxes go to the unwinnable war on drugs while traffickers get wealthier. Meanwhile, California, America's most populous state, is poised for a fall vote on whether to legalize the adult use and cultivation of pot. That should create quite a buzz. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake