News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Up In Smoke: Potheads Unite: 45 Arrested at Annual Protest |
Title: | US MA: Up In Smoke: Potheads Unite: 45 Arrested at Annual Protest |
Published On: | 2003-09-21 |
Source: | Boston Herald (MA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-19 12:08:42 |
UP IN SMOKE: POTHEADS UNITE: 45 ARRESTED AT ANNUAL PROTEST
Police arrested 45 pot smokers on Boston Common yesterday as protesting
hempheads called for an end to the war on drugs and a diversion of billions of
anti-drug dollars to the war on terrorism.
``Fight terrorism! End prohibition,'' yelled Joe Bonni of MASS CANN/NORML, the
pro-weed lobby that organized the event. Citing the transfer of narcotic agents
to terrorism duty after 9/11, Bonni said, ``Imagine how safe we'd be if they
had been on home security in the first place. We need to make the nation a
safer place, and one of the ways to do that is to end the war on drugs.''
Thousands of cannabis enthusiasts along with anti-reefer activists descended on
the Common for the 14th annual Freedom Rally, where pot, politics, tie-dye
styles, head-banging punk rock, Christian evangelism and fried dough converged
in a big, sweaty, sun-baked mass yesterday.
Clouds of marijuana smoke wafted across the green, and by 5 p.m., undercover
officers had arrested 45 people for possession or distribution of marijuana.
A reporter's approach made one 50-year-old pot smoker jump.
``I'd have some explaining to do,'' said the Waltham man, who identified
himself only as ``Joe.'' He estimated that he had been smoking pot for at least
32 years, and said he considered it a crime that it is still illegal.
``The penalties people get for smoking pot are ridiculous,'' Joe said.
Where two main paths crossed, a series of activists with placards angled for
the attention of passersby. They ranged from an evangelist beseeching sinners
to change their ways, to a pot proponent protesting NORML for proposing
legislation rather than fighting a court battle on constitutional grounds.
An earnest young law student clutching a hefty tome argued the issue with him.
Another man nearby simply held up a store-bought utility sign that said, ``Keep
Off the Grass.''
A blue-haired, black-clad youth said he came because he thought the Freedom
Rally would be a patriotic event featuring punk rock bands like Scissorfight.
``I think pot should not be legalized. I'm a born-again Christian. Why do you
think I wear this stuff?'' he said about his ``Abortion is Homicide'' T-shirt.
But Joyce Walsh, 73, a former Beacon Hill resident now retired in Savannah,
Ga., said, ``I think it's way overdue to legalize it.'
Police arrested 45 pot smokers on Boston Common yesterday as protesting
hempheads called for an end to the war on drugs and a diversion of billions of
anti-drug dollars to the war on terrorism.
``Fight terrorism! End prohibition,'' yelled Joe Bonni of MASS CANN/NORML, the
pro-weed lobby that organized the event. Citing the transfer of narcotic agents
to terrorism duty after 9/11, Bonni said, ``Imagine how safe we'd be if they
had been on home security in the first place. We need to make the nation a
safer place, and one of the ways to do that is to end the war on drugs.''
Thousands of cannabis enthusiasts along with anti-reefer activists descended on
the Common for the 14th annual Freedom Rally, where pot, politics, tie-dye
styles, head-banging punk rock, Christian evangelism and fried dough converged
in a big, sweaty, sun-baked mass yesterday.
Clouds of marijuana smoke wafted across the green, and by 5 p.m., undercover
officers had arrested 45 people for possession or distribution of marijuana.
A reporter's approach made one 50-year-old pot smoker jump.
``I'd have some explaining to do,'' said the Waltham man, who identified
himself only as ``Joe.'' He estimated that he had been smoking pot for at least
32 years, and said he considered it a crime that it is still illegal.
``The penalties people get for smoking pot are ridiculous,'' Joe said.
Where two main paths crossed, a series of activists with placards angled for
the attention of passersby. They ranged from an evangelist beseeching sinners
to change their ways, to a pot proponent protesting NORML for proposing
legislation rather than fighting a court battle on constitutional grounds.
An earnest young law student clutching a hefty tome argued the issue with him.
Another man nearby simply held up a store-bought utility sign that said, ``Keep
Off the Grass.''
A blue-haired, black-clad youth said he came because he thought the Freedom
Rally would be a patriotic event featuring punk rock bands like Scissorfight.
``I think pot should not be legalized. I'm a born-again Christian. Why do you
think I wear this stuff?'' he said about his ``Abortion is Homicide'' T-shirt.
But Joyce Walsh, 73, a former Beacon Hill resident now retired in Savannah,
Ga., said, ``I think it's way overdue to legalize it.'
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