Pubdate: Sat, 15 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: Larry Cornies Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery MARC EMERY'S PET CAUSE IS MARC EMERY "I regard going to jail as a very pivotal time in my life . . . because it hardens you. It makes you realize the consequences of when you exercise your freedom. You see, if you wanted to be a free man in Canada, you would spend most of your time in jail." . Marc Scott Emery, in 1987 With a stroke of his pen, federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson this week opened a new chapter in the quixotic life of Vancouver-based Marc Emery, the former Londoner dubbed the "Prince of Pot" for his marijuana activism. The Harper government decided Emery would be extradited to the United States to begin serving a five-year sentence -- the result of a plea bargain on charges that might otherwise have kept him there for 20 -- for selling marijuana seeds to American customers via the Internet. Whether his time in a U.S. penitentiary will again be a "pivotal" time in his life and whether he still regards incarceration as an exercise in freedom are open questions. Eventually, we'll no doubt be treated to his answers. Emery has always has been a polarizing figure, partly because of the causes he undertook but partly also because of his ability to garner public attention by shifting the spotlight off issues and onto himself. Soon after he left high school to take over a bookshop, he picked a fight with London's downtown business association over an improvement tax that amounted to little more than $30. It would be the start of a staccato political career over three decades that would see him test his appeal among voters at all levels of government, with no fewer than five political parties. Emery opposed London's nascent bid to host the 1991 Pan American Games, arguing the city shouldn't be in the business of running games. He opened his shop in defiance of Sunday shopping laws (for which he spent four days in jail) shortly before Sunday shopping in Ontario became legal. He protested provincial obscenity laws by selling banned music by rappers 2 Live Crew. He dared police to arrest him by selling grow-op books and lighting up a supersized joint in front of London's police headquarters. When he sensed the public spotlight in London was beginning to fade, he moved his family to India and then Indonesia in search of broader minds and new adventures. Two years later he returned to Canada, eventually making Vancouver his base of operations, selling seeds and cannabis paraphernalia and continuing his marijuana-legalization efforts. In 30 years in journalism, I've met many mavericks, gadflies and devotees to a range of political and social causes. Emery, to his credit, has forced us think seriously about a variety of issues: the limits of personal freedom, censorship and the decriminalization of marijuana, as examples. But his circular logic, self-contradiction and sophomoric self-aggrandizement have been weak points. At about the same time as Emery was raising his profile in London, I was in regular contact with a husband and wife who were ardent peace activists in Colorado. They took turns entering the perimeter of a nuclear-weapons manufacturing facility outside Denver. Each time, they'd be arrested. Each time, they'd be sent to jail. They timed their activities so that one of them was always home to look after their children. Above all, they tried to keep public attention on the issue of nuclear proliferation, not themselves. Whether or not you agreed with their actions, they communicated a powerful integrity. That's what Emery seemed to lack. He swung wildly across the political spectrum. He failed, at times, to do important research on issues. His ego frequently got in the way of informed discussion. He mocked O Canada for its "complete and utter idiocy," renounced it as "a fraud," and yet regularly took shelter under the nation's flag. He's seeking that again by wanting to serve his sentence here. Now that he has achieved the kind of political martyrdom he'd long sought for the sake of the cannabis cause, his supporters are planning national and international "Free Marc Emery" protests for a week from today. He is bright, articulate and committed. But the overriding perception is that the most important cause in the mind of Marc Emery is Marc Emery. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake