News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: OPED: Smoking & Fucking: Why Fags Should Support Pot |
Title: | CN ON: OPED: Smoking & Fucking: Why Fags Should Support Pot |
Published On: | 2005-08-18 |
Source: | Xtra! (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 20:13:05 |
SMOKING & FUCKING: WHY FAGS SHOULD SUPPORT POT PROTESTERS
Analysis
Haven't rightwing freaks and other assorted homophobes been tranquil so far
this summer? Thank God for pot, though. Still staggering from their
same-sex marriage defeat, pot's a chance for the neo-cons to get all riled
up again. Pot rights issues are practically begging the queer community to
make it our next great contribution to the advancement of society.
Marc Emery, the Vancouver-based pot advocate who's made a decent buck off
selling marijuana seeds by mail order, saw his life going up in smoke this
month as US officials demanded the Canadian government hand him over to be
charged with trafficking. Now pot, which seemed like a settled issue in
this country - no big deal, wait long enough and it will be legal - is at
the forefront of debate here.
Here in Canada, our flawed pot laws are murky, making our country a
low-stakes place to sell and smoke. That's why millions of us do it without
much thought. South of the border it's a different story. Weed is in the
same league as heroin. Emery may have had his $3,000-a-month pad to pay
for, but eventually some of his US clientele revealed themselves as
soldiers from the great US war on drugs. If convicted, Emery faces a
sentence as stiff as life imprisonment.
Setting aside his stupidity in toying with the Americans, Emery and the
entire cannabis movement itself could use a few extra loud pro-pot voices
sounding off. Why not ours?
I've lit enough joints on dancefloors, at house parties and in bedrooms to
say with certainty that it's the odd homo who says no-no to the offer of a
little time with Maryjane. Certainly not every queer is a pot smoker, but I
could write up an extensive list of those who are.
Countless people with HIV/AIDS can testify to how marijuana helps them with
legions of ailments including loss of appetite, upset stomach and pain
relief. For the hedonistic amongst us it seems like it's always 4:20pm, the
international time of the day to light up. Sweet smoke clouds up gay
backyards, bathtubs, dinner parties and bathhouses throughout this city as
we use it to relax deeply, enjoy extra sensory enhancement or augment
critical thinking. Gay people have for decades enjoyed a sweet and
satisfying relationship with our weed, and because of this it's worth
considering doing a bit more than giving the headlines a glance over.
Besides, our sex lives used to be against the law, didn't they, and that
didn't stop us fucking, did it?
Eighty-two years after it was first deemed criminal, millions of Canadians
still smoke pot and the majority don't support its criminalization. Almost
every royal commission and governmental committee in Canada and
internationally has recommended that pot be decriminalized, the way it has
been in Australia and many places in Europe. As far as we can tell, there
hasn't been a decline in society there. That's the same argument that's
been unsuccessful used by Bible-thumpers against same-sex marriage.
The next time you spark up a spliff, consider being more vocal about
decriminalizing pot. If only just so we can watch those neo-cons get all
crazy on us again. It's been a while since I've been called a depraved
homosexual drug addict.
For things you can do to help Marc Emery, visit:
www.Cannabisculture.com/-articles/4471
Analysis
Haven't rightwing freaks and other assorted homophobes been tranquil so far
this summer? Thank God for pot, though. Still staggering from their
same-sex marriage defeat, pot's a chance for the neo-cons to get all riled
up again. Pot rights issues are practically begging the queer community to
make it our next great contribution to the advancement of society.
Marc Emery, the Vancouver-based pot advocate who's made a decent buck off
selling marijuana seeds by mail order, saw his life going up in smoke this
month as US officials demanded the Canadian government hand him over to be
charged with trafficking. Now pot, which seemed like a settled issue in
this country - no big deal, wait long enough and it will be legal - is at
the forefront of debate here.
Here in Canada, our flawed pot laws are murky, making our country a
low-stakes place to sell and smoke. That's why millions of us do it without
much thought. South of the border it's a different story. Weed is in the
same league as heroin. Emery may have had his $3,000-a-month pad to pay
for, but eventually some of his US clientele revealed themselves as
soldiers from the great US war on drugs. If convicted, Emery faces a
sentence as stiff as life imprisonment.
Setting aside his stupidity in toying with the Americans, Emery and the
entire cannabis movement itself could use a few extra loud pro-pot voices
sounding off. Why not ours?
I've lit enough joints on dancefloors, at house parties and in bedrooms to
say with certainty that it's the odd homo who says no-no to the offer of a
little time with Maryjane. Certainly not every queer is a pot smoker, but I
could write up an extensive list of those who are.
Countless people with HIV/AIDS can testify to how marijuana helps them with
legions of ailments including loss of appetite, upset stomach and pain
relief. For the hedonistic amongst us it seems like it's always 4:20pm, the
international time of the day to light up. Sweet smoke clouds up gay
backyards, bathtubs, dinner parties and bathhouses throughout this city as
we use it to relax deeply, enjoy extra sensory enhancement or augment
critical thinking. Gay people have for decades enjoyed a sweet and
satisfying relationship with our weed, and because of this it's worth
considering doing a bit more than giving the headlines a glance over.
Besides, our sex lives used to be against the law, didn't they, and that
didn't stop us fucking, did it?
Eighty-two years after it was first deemed criminal, millions of Canadians
still smoke pot and the majority don't support its criminalization. Almost
every royal commission and governmental committee in Canada and
internationally has recommended that pot be decriminalized, the way it has
been in Australia and many places in Europe. As far as we can tell, there
hasn't been a decline in society there. That's the same argument that's
been unsuccessful used by Bible-thumpers against same-sex marriage.
The next time you spark up a spliff, consider being more vocal about
decriminalizing pot. If only just so we can watch those neo-cons get all
crazy on us again. It's been a while since I've been called a depraved
homosexual drug addict.
For things you can do to help Marc Emery, visit:
www.Cannabisculture.com/-articles/4471
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