Pubdate: Fri, 15 Aug 2014 Source: Barrie Examiner (CN ON) Copyright: 2014, Barrie Examiner Contact: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/letters Website: http://www.thebarrieexaminer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2317 Author: Greg Van Moorsel Page: 12 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) EMERY'S HIGH HOPES A POLITICAL DOWNER? Marc Emery may think of himself as a marijuana messiah, leading the long-suffering to deliverance from pot laws they believe unfairly punish them and restrict their freedom to smoke up. No stranger to ego, Emery may even believe he's the chosen cannabis crusader. But Canada's self-styled "Prince of Pot" - just released from a U.S. prison, after doing 4 1/2 years for selling marijuana seeds into the U.S. from Vancouver - makes a poor martyr for the kind of electoral backlash he imagines he will now inspire against the federal Conservative government he vilifies. No sooner was the B.C. man back across the border from Detroit, than he was vowing vengeance against the Tories. Prime Minister Stephen Harper, he called a "tyrant." It's now Emery's mission to deliver votes to the Liberals led by Justin Trudeau, who supports legalizing marijuana. Emery's wife, Jodie Emery, a fellow traveller on the crusade, wants to run for the Grits in Vancouver. Tellingly, there was no Liberal advance party among the small circus of fans, and clouds of pot smoke, that greeted Emery as he held his first court on Canadian soil in years. No wonder. For starters, while Emery is good at manufacturing his own publicity, once famously firing up a joint on the steps of the police station in London, Ont., where he ran a used book shop, and boasting how often he's been arrested, it's not at all clear he'd be an asset to any mainstream political party. Further, while Canada has traditionally been more lenient than the U.S. on pot offenders, it's not clear voters here are prepared to go as far as to legalize weed, even if large numbers don't believe offenders should be saddled with criminal records for possession of small amounts. Marijuana, after all, remains a controlled narcotic and there are no illegal factory grow-ops raising only small amounts of the stuff. Finally, if Emery's anti-Tory push dovetailed with popular thinking, surely the obvious beneficiary - the Marijuana Party - would have done better than the scant 1,756 votes it won in the 2011 federal election. Often, where there's political smoke, there's fire. Here, there's only more smoke - irritating, but ineffectual. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom