News (Media Awareness Project) - CN NS: End Pot Persecution, Activist Says |
Title: | CN NS: End Pot Persecution, Activist Says |
Published On: | 2004-04-13 |
Source: | Halifax Herald (CN NS) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 12:47:10 |
END POT PERSECUTION, ACTIVIST SAYS
Getting High Improves Skills In Parenting, School, Argues Millionaire
Speaking in a hall thick with the scent of the illegal drug, Canada's
leading marijuana activist might be accused of preaching to the converted.
But Marc Emery said his Monday-afternoon talk was meant to mobilize
members of a cultural group whose continued persecution he compared to
that of Jews, blacks and Chinese-Canadians.
"Pot improves life in every single way," Mr. Emery, president of the
British Columbia Marijuana Party, publisher of Cannabis Culture
magazine and millionaire owner of a seed distribution company, told an
audience at Dalhousie University.
He said people high on marijuana are better parents, better students,
better drivers and better lovers. But they are also better thinkers,
and he said that's why marijuana users are jailed in greater numbers
than criminals guilty of any other offence.
"This is a very vicious worldwide pogrom against our people for the
crime of free thinking and creative thought and questioning
authority," the Vancouver native said after speaking to a crowd of
about 50.
"People like us have always been pilloried throughout history, but in
the year 2004 it's shocking that we can really get rounded up in
record numbers."
Mr. Emery's two-hour talk was part polemic and part standup comedy,
drawing lots of laughs out of a sympathetic crowd.
He stopped in Halifax on his way to Sydney, where he plans to protest
the 90-day sentence given to Wallace Gouthro, 18, a Sydney Academy
student with marks in the 90s caught selling $5 bags of pot at a dance.
Mr. Emery said that during a three-day stint in a Saskatoon jail for a
marijuana-related charge last year, he was told how to make crystal
methamphetamine, how to hide heroin from police and how to sell cocaine.
"If you think that's where an 18-year-old with 90 per cent grades
should spend his time, you are wrong," he said.
He said smoking marijuana was "the most intelligent choice an
18-year-old could make in euphorics."
Mr. Emery noted that beer, while implicated in thousands of deaths and
crimes, is perfectly legal.
"Everything that'll kill you is legal," he said. "Pot doesn't hurt
anyone in any way."
He said many of the people who hold political office today have
admitted to trying pot in the past, and parents and teachers who grew
up in the 1960s and '70s "did way more drugs" than the young people in
the audience.
They know it has no ill effects, but Mr. Emery said they also know
that people who are high won't automatically bend to authority, so
they try to frighten young people with harsh punishments.
In a mile-a-minute talk that delved into the construction of the
Canadian National Railway and the history of jazz music, Mr. Emery
argued that those attitudes and the drug laws that resulted were
founded on racism.
He said the Chinese labourers who built the railway were encouraged to
use opium while they worked, but once the project was completed the
drug was banned and became an excuse to deport thousands of Chinese.
Mr. Emery said pot brings people together in a spirit of sharing and
discussion. It also allows them to enjoy whatever they're doing
instead of hurrying to the next task in a goal-oriented society.
He left the smokers in the audience with a mission: find those who
don't smoke pot and get them high, and drag two other people out on
federal election day to vote for the New Democratic party.
He said a talk with NDP Leader Jack Layton convinced him the party is
committed to ending the persecution of "pot people."
Sometime smoker Alex Derry admitted the speech was inflammatory at
times but said it gave him a lot to think about while he's going
through "a weird relationship with marijuana."
"I'm moving into a period of my life where I don't need it anymore,
but it kind of brought me back to why I smoked pot in the first
place," he said.
"It reminded me of things that I enjoyed about it and things that I
didn't enjoy about life when I wasn't smoking."
Mr. Emery will protest outside the Sydney Justice Centre from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Thursday.
Getting High Improves Skills In Parenting, School, Argues Millionaire
Speaking in a hall thick with the scent of the illegal drug, Canada's
leading marijuana activist might be accused of preaching to the converted.
But Marc Emery said his Monday-afternoon talk was meant to mobilize
members of a cultural group whose continued persecution he compared to
that of Jews, blacks and Chinese-Canadians.
"Pot improves life in every single way," Mr. Emery, president of the
British Columbia Marijuana Party, publisher of Cannabis Culture
magazine and millionaire owner of a seed distribution company, told an
audience at Dalhousie University.
He said people high on marijuana are better parents, better students,
better drivers and better lovers. But they are also better thinkers,
and he said that's why marijuana users are jailed in greater numbers
than criminals guilty of any other offence.
"This is a very vicious worldwide pogrom against our people for the
crime of free thinking and creative thought and questioning
authority," the Vancouver native said after speaking to a crowd of
about 50.
"People like us have always been pilloried throughout history, but in
the year 2004 it's shocking that we can really get rounded up in
record numbers."
Mr. Emery's two-hour talk was part polemic and part standup comedy,
drawing lots of laughs out of a sympathetic crowd.
He stopped in Halifax on his way to Sydney, where he plans to protest
the 90-day sentence given to Wallace Gouthro, 18, a Sydney Academy
student with marks in the 90s caught selling $5 bags of pot at a dance.
Mr. Emery said that during a three-day stint in a Saskatoon jail for a
marijuana-related charge last year, he was told how to make crystal
methamphetamine, how to hide heroin from police and how to sell cocaine.
"If you think that's where an 18-year-old with 90 per cent grades
should spend his time, you are wrong," he said.
He said smoking marijuana was "the most intelligent choice an
18-year-old could make in euphorics."
Mr. Emery noted that beer, while implicated in thousands of deaths and
crimes, is perfectly legal.
"Everything that'll kill you is legal," he said. "Pot doesn't hurt
anyone in any way."
He said many of the people who hold political office today have
admitted to trying pot in the past, and parents and teachers who grew
up in the 1960s and '70s "did way more drugs" than the young people in
the audience.
They know it has no ill effects, but Mr. Emery said they also know
that people who are high won't automatically bend to authority, so
they try to frighten young people with harsh punishments.
In a mile-a-minute talk that delved into the construction of the
Canadian National Railway and the history of jazz music, Mr. Emery
argued that those attitudes and the drug laws that resulted were
founded on racism.
He said the Chinese labourers who built the railway were encouraged to
use opium while they worked, but once the project was completed the
drug was banned and became an excuse to deport thousands of Chinese.
Mr. Emery said pot brings people together in a spirit of sharing and
discussion. It also allows them to enjoy whatever they're doing
instead of hurrying to the next task in a goal-oriented society.
He left the smokers in the audience with a mission: find those who
don't smoke pot and get them high, and drag two other people out on
federal election day to vote for the New Democratic party.
He said a talk with NDP Leader Jack Layton convinced him the party is
committed to ending the persecution of "pot people."
Sometime smoker Alex Derry admitted the speech was inflammatory at
times but said it gave him a lot to think about while he's going
through "a weird relationship with marijuana."
"I'm moving into a period of my life where I don't need it anymore,
but it kind of brought me back to why I smoked pot in the first
place," he said.
"It reminded me of things that I enjoyed about it and things that I
didn't enjoy about life when I wasn't smoking."
Mr. Emery will protest outside the Sydney Justice Centre from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on Thursday.
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