Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2014 Source: Wausau Daily Herald (WI) Copyright: 2014 Wausau Daily Herald Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/zFWcSrzy Website: http://www.wausaudailyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1321 Author: Keith Uhlig PRO-POT EVENT ATTRACTS DIVERSE GROUP WAUSAU - If you have a stereotype in mind about who wants to change marijuana prohibition laws, the meeting held Saturday afternoon at the Marathon County Public Library likely would have broken it. The Northern Wisconsin chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws held its Talking Hemp and Cannabis Tour event there, a two-hour event that was part political action movement, part economic development sales pitch and an all-out rebuke of the political and legal system that has declared the so-called war on drugs. "Prohibition is not stopping anything," said Rich Martin, 46, of Neenah, the past executive director of the Northern Wisconsin chapter of NORML. He spoke about the advantages of hemp, the benefits of medical marijuana and the benefits of the legalization of the recreational use of pot. "Prohibition is ruining peoples' lives," he said. "We're doing all kinds of things (to stop drug use), but it gets worse and worse." A better drug policy would be to "control, regulate and educate," Martin said. "How do we keep people off drugs? Education. Not propaganda." Martin's words resonated with a diverse crowd of nearly 30 people, who included middle-aged people keenly interested in medical marijuana use, young men and women who clearly enjoyed the idea of legalized recreational use and others from a range of ages and backgrounds who think legalization of marijuana and hemp would be beneficial. "I don't think anybody has the right to tell us what we can do and can't do with our bodies," said Ken Amundsen, 66, of Wausau, a retired city bus driver. Amundsen, who said he served in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War, said he's a member of NORML and will encourage others to join the group, even if he doesn't think the legalization of marijuana will come anytime soon in Wisconsin. "We're not a progressive state anymore," Amundsen said. "We're a rubber stamp for the Tea Party. And the Democrats don't have the guts to squawk about it." Erica Zernia, 32, of Rhinelander brought her son to the event. Her main goal, she said, was to work to legalize hemp, cousin of cannabis that does not get people high. Instead, hemp can be used to make clothes, building materials and food. "Hemp is a beautiful thing," Zernia said. "It could create so many jobs." This is the first time the Northern Wisconsin chapter of NORML has held meetings in the Wausau area in order to raise its profile and influence, said Gene Check, 57, of Stevens Point, the current executive director of the chapter. "Right now we're trying to educate the public," Check said. "Legalizing hemp, that's a no-brainer." Check said public opinion is also swaying in a pro-pot direction, especially within the context of legalization in Colorado and Washington state. Several polls have shown that the majority of Americans believe that pot should be legal, he said, and the group is working to capitalize on and bolster that trend. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom