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Pubdate: Wed, 05 May 2004 Source: Oakville Beaver (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Oakville Beaver Contact: http://www.haltonsearch.com/hr/ob/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1600 Author: Craig MacBride Cited: http://www.themarijuanamission.com Cited: Law Enforcement Against Prohibition http://www.leap.cc/ Related: http://www.themarijuanamission.com/alison.htm Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Alison+Myrden NDP HAVE HIGH HOPES FOR MARIJUANA ADVOCATE Both before and after the nomination meeting that made her the NDP candidate, Alison Myrden was vomiting in the parking lot. She had also been smoking marijuana, and most definitely inhaling. In fact, she's likely the only candidate of the four nominated to run in Oakville that smokes 12 grams of pot per day. Only if the forever-on-the-fringe Marijuana Party of Canada decides to run a candidate here will Myrden have competition for that. But before you begin thinking that Myrden is a slacker pot head with nothing better to do, you need to get to know her. Myrden, 40, has chronic progressive multiple sclerosis and Tic Douloureux, a chronic facial pain, and the discomfort cannot be dulled by the 32 pills and between 600 and 2000 milligrams of morphine she takes to make it through every day. So she uses pot, which the government allows her to do. Unfortunately, the government won't provide Myrden with the type of pot she needs, so she continues to get her supply from "the street." She claims that the federal government's stash has between 5.1 and 10.1 percent THC. The strain Myrden considers ideal has 28 percent THC. Because of that, she has to spend about $1,200 per month on pot from dealers, instead of from the government's marijuana farms. Not only can the government not offer the strain Myrden requires, but neither, in many cases, can her dealers. Without the proper type of pot, the pain is immense, and she vomits frequently and gets "the shakes," which are often so bad she has to use her wheelchair or her walker. Her demand that the government offer marijuana that will actually help patients is the main reason she is running. Her candidacy is not her only attempt to get her message out, though. She also runs the web site www.themarijuanamission.com, took part in last weekend's Million Marijuana March in Toronto, is a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition and works with the Compassion Club, "Canada's largest medical marijuana's buyers' club," according to the web site. A Queen Elizabeth Park High School and Sheridan College graduate, Myrden now lives in Burlington. Back in March, she tried unsuccessfully to win the nomination to run as Burlington's NDP candidate. Beyond the NDP view of medicinal marijuana, Myrden was impressed by party leader Jack Layton, and the party's advocacy of same-sex marriage and a clean, sustainable environment. Like the rest of the party members, she thinks she can win the riding. "Look at the numbers in the polls," she said following her nomination speech. "Things are changing. People want change." When asked about past-president Gary Shillington's recent comments to the Oakville Beaver that the NDP wouldn't be able to win Oakville even if they ran Jesus Christ and one of the other parties ran Charles Manson, Myrden remained confident. "I think it can change, as long as people know who they're voting for." The Oakville riding association has dwindled away to only 90 members, but during a time of rejuvenation for the entire party, the Oakville chapter thinks it can harness the same energy and momentum. "There has never been a greater chance for an Oakville NDP candidate to win," said Sean Cain, who ran as an NDP candidate in the 1999 provincial election. Tina Agrell, president of the Oakville NDP riding association, was even more assuring when she told the audience, "not only will we be in this election, we will win it." That is a lofty goal, especially considering that in the 42 elections and by-elections in Oakville (including north Oakville in the Halton riding, which was created in 1996), the NDP and their predecessor the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation have never won. Their most successful attempt was in 1965, when Murray Kernighan secured 20 percent of the vote. In the most recent federal election, NDP candidate Willie Lambert received only 2.8 percent of the votes. Though history is not on their side, with Jack Layton as their leader, and with the latest polls putting them at 20 percent nationwide, the members believe anything is possible. "Our political opposition, for a five week period during the campaign, they will pretend to be NDPers," said Cain. "They will pretend to care about health care, they will pretend to care about education, they will pretend to care about the environment...We know the real people who are going to protect these issues." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake