Pubdate: Thu, 07 Aug 2014 Source: View Magazine (Hamilton, CN ON) Copyright: 2014 View Magazine Contact: http://www.viewmag.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2393 Author: Willy Noiles Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) EMERY SEEKS 'POLITICAL REVENGE' British Columbia marijuana activist Marc Emery is vowing "political revenge" on the federal Conservative government for allowing him to be extradited to the U.S. where he's just finished serving almost five years for selling marijuana seeds by mail. Emory - who will soon be returning to Canada from the Louisiana prison where he was most recently incarcerated - is coming home at a time when even the Conservatives' only polling shows the vast majority of Canadians favour legalization or decriminalization of marijuana. "The whole thing is nonsense," he told CBC News last week. "I should never have been turned over to the U.S. government. My own government betrayed me and I'm going to wreak an appropriate amount of political revenge when I get home and campaign against the Conservative government." While it's not clear how much of an impact his personal mission will have, if a recent poll commissioned by the Department of Justice is any indication, a majority of Canadians are on his side on the issue. The so-called "Prince of Pot" was sentenced to five years in American prison in 2010 after being found guilty of conspiracy to manufacture marijuana by selling seeds through a mail order business in which he sent seeds across the border. He tried to appeal that sentence in Canada but the Conservative government allowed him to be extradited. In an Ipsos-Reid poll conducted in January and February and only released in mid-July after the Toronto Star filed a freedom of information request, 70 per cent of Canadians favour legalization or decriminalization of marijuana. The poll, which the Star noted had been "kept secret by the Conservatives for months," 37.3 per cent of Canadians believe marijuana should be legalized - a position taken by Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau - while 33.4 per cent said it should be decriminalized - a position currently held by the NDP under Thomas Mulcair. Only 13.7 per cent said that the country's pot laws should remain the same. A slightly smaller percentage, 12 per cent, believe Canada's pot laws should be strengthened. The poll, which also included questions about the public's position on prostitution, cost taxpayers $175,000. Details from the prostitution questions were publicly released in June, prior to Justice Minister Peter MacKay's tabling of new legislation on the matter. But the marijuana aspect of the poll was only posted online last Wednesday, although the Star published the results when they obtained them a couple weeks ago. Although the government tried their best to keep Canadians in the dark about how out of touch they are when it comes to the issue of pot laws, the poll results aren't all that different from ones released in 2013 and 2012. A 2012 survey by Ipsos-Reid found 66 percent of Canadians approved of decriminalization. And a Forum Research poll conducted last summer found just under 70 per cent favour legalization or decriminalization with 36 per cent supporting legalization and taxation and 34 per cent in favour or decriminalization. Only 15 per cent (or one in seven) wanted the laws left as they are. The Forum Research poll also found support for legalization or decriminalization is highest amount the youngest (75 percent) and the Boomers (55 to 64 years - 72 percent), the upper middle-class ($60,000 to $100,000 - 74 percent). Those least likely to support decriminalization or legalization include Generation X (35 to 44 years - 63 percent), lower income earners (le! ss than $20,000 - - 57 percent), Bloc voters (56 percent), the least educated (57 percent), Protestant Christians (61 percent) and those who describe their ethnicity as Canadian (64 percent) and Francophone (65 percent). Liberal supporters are more likely to be in the pro-pot camp (76 percent) than are New Democrats (72 percent) or especially Conservatives (61 percent). (A separate poll found that Libertarian supporters who have voted Conservative in recent elections are turning away from the party over its hard line on pot. It's not really known how many Libertarians have voted Conservative in recent years but this columnist's guess is that in those tight races where the Conservatives got lucky in 2011 - there were enough of those victories in tight races to form a majority - the Liberals or New Democrats could come out on top next election.) The Forum poll results run contrary to the commonly held assumptions that pot supporters tend to be from lower economic c! lasses and aren't as educated; in fact, the exact opposite ap! pears to be the case. That poll also looked at Trudeau's admission that he had smoked marijuana as an MP and his stance it should be legalized. It found only 21 percent were less likely to vote Liberal because of Trudeau's stance while 14 percent say it would make them more likely to vote Liberal. Conservative supporters were most likely to say they'll be less likely to vote Liberal (47 percent) while Liberal and New Democrat supporters were less likely to state this (7 and 14 percent respectively.) Those who support full legalization say this would make them more likely to vote Liberal (22 percent). "Justin Trudeau is ahead of the zeitgeist on this issue, and the government's disapproval of his position is a strength he can play to in the coming months," Forum President Lorne Bozinoff stated in August 2013. "Decriminalization or legalization has majority support right across the country, even among Conservative voters, and there appears to be little downside to this issue for hi! m." "Most of Canada and most of the United States favours legalization and this is going to come to pass," Emery told CBC. Despite these results, the Conservative government remains steadfast in their opposition to loosening pot laws. And they've made Trudeau's stance a focus of their political attacks, trying to spin it as a desire to feed drugs to children. In a recent Conservative print ad, they state, "Trudeau's agenda would make it easier for kids to get and spoke marijuana. The Liberals want to make smoking marijuana a normal everyday activity for Canadians. The Conservative Government wants to stop kids from using marijuana. That's why we enacted tough new laws against selling marijuana near our schools and moved to end grow-ops in residential neighbourhoods." And when the Ottawa Citizen asked MacKay about the poll, his spokesman tried to change the channel by saying Trudeau would "fully legalize recreational marijuana, which would make it easier for kids! to buy and smoke in their neighbourhoods, like cigarettes today." There's something almost laughable about the Conservatives' attacks on Trudeau. It's almost in the same category as the provincial Conservatives' attempts to paint former provincial Liberal Leader Dalton McGuinty as a "reptilian kitten" killer in 2003. The Liberals, for their part, have said that legalizing pot would give the government more control over who is obtaining it, much like alcohol, or even cigarettes. Not mentioned is how much the federal treasury could bring in in taxation, much as happened in Washington and Oregon. Even the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police formally asked the federal government in 2013 to allow officers the option of ticketing for marijuana possession, rather than ignoring the offender or dragging them into the court system. "It must be recognized... that under the current legislation the only enforcement option for police, when confronted with simple possession of cannabis, is either to turn a blind eye or lay charges. The latter ensures a lengthy and difficult process which, if proven guilty, results in a criminal conviction and criminal record," Association President Chief Const. Jim Chu said at the time. The Globe and Mail found the number of charges being laid against drug dealers is decreasing in Canada as forces struggle with a seeming lack of zeal in cracking down. And while there were more people found in possession of marijuana last year over the previous year, the Globe reports there were fewer charges. "Police are less enthusiastic abo! ut (enforcing the controlled substances legislation) now than they were 10 years ago," Simon Fraser University criminologist Rob Gordon told that newspaper. "It is particularly true in the case of what may be defined as soft-end drugs." While the government's drive to shift production of medical marijuana from the patient to larger companies has been stayed by the courts pending a full hearing - likely in the new year - those few companies who've already been granted permits to grow are investing in improving the level of acceptance of marijuana as a health aid by offering extensive information packets to doctors capable of prescribing marijuana as a medicine and even lobbying doctors directly. In June, a Quebec hospital became the first in Canada to officially allow the use of cannabis inside its institution. And although medicinal use of marijuana is a separate issue from the recreational use of it, it has definitely softened the public's perception of the plant. How can pot be so terrible when it's already being used as a medical aid, they wonder. Unless the Conservatives start to soften their position on marijuana, Emery could very well get his wish of "political revenge." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom