Pubdate: Thu, 21 Aug 2014 Source: Fort McMurray Today (CN AB) Copyright: 2014 Fort McMurray Today Contact: http://www.fortmcmurraytoday.com/letters Website: http://www.fortmcmurraytoday.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1012 Author: Larry Cornies Page: 4 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?196 (Emery, Marc) POT'S POSTER BOY IS (SIGH) BACK You have to give Marc Emery credit: After more than four years in a U.S. prison, he can still draw a crowd. Better yet (from his point of view), he can still wrangle the news media. The "Prince of Pot," as journalists and his disciples have dubbed him, has certainly earned that nickname. A native of London, Ont., he has spent most of his adult life championing the cause of cannabis policy reform. He lit joints on the steps of police stations and city halls across the country. He sold marijuana seeds, home-grow books, bongs and other paraphernalia from storefronts in at least two provinces, encouraging others across Canada to do the same. He launched a cannabis-themed magazine. He founded a legal assistance centre for those seeking to challenge existing drug laws. He started Pot-TV, a video channel devoted to marijuana culture and politics. Emery has been in jail numerous times, has inspired films, documentaries and stage plays, and has run in elections at the municipal, provincial and federal levels under the banners of at least five different parties. He continues to lead the British Columbia Marijuana Party. And it was in B.C. where Emery found his greatest successes, both in terms of running his marijuana-related businesses and in his political influence, nationally and internationally. From his West Coast base of operations, Emery funnelled hundreds of thousands of dollars from his profits to pro-pot initiatives in several U.S. states, as well as a handful of countries overseas, even as he kept pressure on Canadian politicians and law enforcement to liberalize the country's pot laws. There can be no doubt that, over the course of three decades, Emery played an important (even leading) role in provoking debate about marijuana legislation in Canada and elsewhere. It's probably not a stretch to say that he managed to catalyze the changing attitudes among mainstream Canadians about pot and public policy. Give him that. Now to last week's scene in Windsor: Having served his sentence in the southern U.S., Emery was deported to Canada via the Windsor-Detroit tunnel and walked straight into a crowd of about 100 supporters, media and assorted hangers-on. He declared his confidence in Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and the party's sincerity about legalizing marijuana. Then he turned his attention to the "pernicious prohibition" of marijuana and trained his oratory on the prime minister. "I will say this: I deplore and loathe Stephen Harper. I think he's an evil man," Emery said, calling the prime minister a "tyrant" and "a Machiavellian manipulator." Which, in a country with Charter freedoms such as freedom of speech, is his right. And the assembled media, of course, lapped it up, pretty much unchallenged. What should be remembered, though, is that Emery didn't land in a U.S. prison cell - and endure what became his most arduous incarceration to date - because of Canadian drug laws. He landed there because of the much less tolerant anti-drug policies of the United States. His arrest in 2005, which eventually led to the U.S. prison term, was the result of an investigation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), which accused him of money laundering and selling marijuana seeds to American customers. It was Emery who cut a plea-bargain deal with U.S. authorities in 2008, which would have seen him serve a five-year sentence in both Canada and the United States. After the Conservative government declined to approve the deal, it was Emery, again, who agreed to plead guilty to drug distribution and consented to serving his sentence in the U.S. He'd managed to get the prospect of a minimum 10-year sentence (up to life in prison) reduced to five years on the single charge. Canada's marijuana laws had little to do with it all. Neither did the "evil" prime minister, unless you count his unwillingness to shape Canadian policy and practice on bilateral law-enforcement issues around Emery's particular needs. There was another bit of unreality in his Windsor media conference, too. Emery went into U.S. custody as a kind of poster boy for drug policy reform. He returned to a very different country - one in which, even in the space of five years, large segments of the population have substantially shifted their views on the decriminalization of marijuana. Many have come to favour legalization. All without his constant harangues. That national discussion will take on a more fervent pitch with the approach of the next federal election, in which Emery's wife Jodie is seeking the Liberal nomination in B.C. That fact ensures we haven't yet heard the last from the egomaniacal (his description) Marc Emery. And neither, somewhat to their chagrin, have Trudeau's Liberals. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom