Pubdate: Mon, 18 Aug 2014 Source: Guardian, The (CN PI) Copyright: 2014 The Guardian, Charlottetown Guardian Group Incorporated Contact: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/174 Author: Karen Selick Page: A7 'PRINCE OF POT' A CANADIAN HERO Marc Emery a powerful force for liberty in Canada It's not often that I disagree with Globe and Mail columnist Margaret Wente, but her recent column on Marc Emery (Pot still fails the sniff test) triggered one of those rare occasions. Unlike the "Prince of Pot", I don't use marijuana. I never have, and probably never will, even if it were to become legal for recreational use. But then, I don't use alcohol either. Slowing down my brain just isn't my cup of tea. Nevertheless, I have been a staunch admirer of Marc's ever since I first met him, about 38 years ago, long before he began championing pot legalization. Marc has been a powerful force for liberty in Canada on several fronts. For instance, he helped legalize Sunday shopping by operating his London, Ontario, bookstore seven days a week, back when it was illegal to do so. He even went to jail over that issue, after refusing to pay his fines. That four-day stint proved to be merely a practice run for his later five-year marijuana-related imprisonment. Marc challenged Canada's obscenity laws by selling banned music tapes. He then racked up a freedom-of-speech victory by publishing a marijuana newsletter at a time when the Criminal Code forbade it. An Ontario court eventually struck down that law as contrary to the Charter. Marc has also contributed to the welfare of his fellow Canadians by diligently reporting every penny of income from his marijuana seed business - more than $4 million cumulatively over the years - and paying federal and provincial income tax on it (at least, if you believe that those governments will spend that tax revenue on Canadians' welfare, which is questionable. But I digress). Canada has changed radically since Marc first set out to legalize pot. There are now approximately 40,000 legal medical marijuana users, with some estimates saying there will be half a million in 10 years' time. A survey released last week by the Department of Justice showed that 70 per cent of Canadians want the law softened, either by legalization or decriminalization. Even the Fraser Institute (the free-market think tank whose name is usually preceded in media reports by the epithet "right-wing") published a report a decade ago describing the benefits of legalizing pot. Marc plowed all of his seed sale profits into funding the legalization movement, keeping nothing for himself except what he needed to live on. He made a large donation of seed money (pun intended) to help organizers in Colorado. That state is now one of two (Washington is the other) that have legalized pot for both medicinal and recreational purposes. Another 21 U.S. states and the District of Columbia allow medical marijuana. Four other states have decriminalized it, reducing the penalty for possession to fines, rather than a jail sentence and a criminal record. Even John McKay, the former U.S. attorney who prosecuted Marc, has changed his mind and now publicly favours legalization. While Marc didn't do this single-handedly, there is no question that he was a driving force in the movement. He is at least partly responsible for the fact that hundreds of thousands of people across North America now have legal access to a medication that helps relieve their pain and epileptic seizures. He can also take credit for keeping hundreds of thousands of people out of jail. He has achieved these victories at great personal cost, doing several stints in Canadian jails before his most recent U.S. imprisonment. Wente said that Marc's no hero, but I disagree. He has shown exceptional courage and perseverance. He has made huge personal sacrifices. His actions have benefitted thousands, if not millions, of people. That's pretty heroic in my books. But what about Wente's charge that Marc is "among the most obnoxious jerks in Canadian public life" and a "relentless self-promoter who's compared himself to Gandhi and Martin Luther King"? Yup, Marc talks a lot. He talks quickly - too quickly for some people to grasp what he is saying. Sometimes he talks when it's really somebody else's turn to talk. But where's the rule that says a hero has to be perfect? These are minor flaws, all things considered, especially since most of what Marc says makes extraordinarily good sense, and is something that people urgently need to hear. And I'll bet neither Gandhi nor King were perfect, either. Karen Selick is the litigation director for the Canadian Constitution Foundation. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt