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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Low Turnout Not A Problem At Pro-Pot Rally
Title:CN ON: Low Turnout Not A Problem At Pro-Pot Rally
Published On:2007-04-23
Source:Tribune, The (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 07:36:07
LOW TURNOUT NOT A PROBLEM AT PRO-POT RALLY

NIAGARA FALLS - Saturday's 420 pro-marijuana rally at the Oakes
Garden Theatre only attracted about 50 people, but organizer Matt
Mernagh said it's a byproduct of a grow-op of a legal sort.

"We usually bus people in from Toronto, but Toronto had its own this
year," said Mernagh, a 33-year-old marijuana activist from St.
Catharines who writes for Cannabis Culture magazine.

"What's nice about Niagara Falls is we got it started here four years
ago. Now, Hamilton, Guelph, Toronto and Ottawa all have their own
rallies. People have taken the seeds to spread them around."

Seeds are at the heart of the rallies, held in places across Canada
in support of the so-called "Prince of Pot" Marc Emery, who has been
jailed for selling marijuana seeds over the Internet.

Emery made a call in to the rally, but his cellphone message -
filtered through a megaphone - couldn't be heard by most in the crowd.

Nevertheless, they cheered as Mernagh said Emery offered support for
the small, somewhat mellow rally.

Almost as many people lined up for wedding photos as sat down to
spark up in the park at 4:20 p.m. Saturday, the time adopted by
marijuana activists as the time to relax with a joint.

That didn't bother the group, who were low-key before the countdown
to 4:20 p.m. began.

"I think they were all out last night and saw 4:20 a.m.," Mernagh quipped.

The low-key crowd made it easy for Niagara Regional Police and
Niagara Parks Police to do their jobs.

"It was uneventful - very peaceful, with no incidents," said Parks
Police spokesman Insp. Paul Forcier.

Mary, who asked her last name not be published, attended the rally in
a wheelchair with her daughter.

Diagnosed with MS in 2005, Mary described herself as an occasional
user in the past, and now uses Cativax - a cannabis spray - to help
keep her symptoms under control.

At a cost of $650 for a vial - which isn't covered by drug plans -
Mary said it's out of reach of many people who rely on the drug for
relief from not only spasms, but also the nausea that goes along with
treatments such as chemotherapy.

"Marijuana helps instead of narcotic drugs," she said.

"That's why I'm a member of the Compassionate Society. For a lot of
people with chronic pain and debilitating diseases, this is their
only source of relief."

But not everyone has the same reason to want to see marijuana legalized.

Mike Lavoie, a 17-year-old musician from Niagara Falls said he has
been getting high on pot since he was in Grade 6.

He attended the rally - his second - with his face painted green and
a black bandanna with pot plants on it to "show my love and support
for what I believe in."

Lavoie said he thinks the government is afraid to legalize marijuana
because it will unleash a wave of creativity across the country.

"It frees your mind and introduces you to new mind states. That's why
the government fears it," said Lavoie.

Mernagh has another take on the issue.

He doesn't believe people like Lavoie should have access to
marijuana, anymore than they should be able to buy beer, wine or
cigarettes underage.

Rather, he advocates for the regulation of marijuana to bring more
money into the government coffers.

"If it was legalized and sold in through Cannabis Control Board of
Ontario at a 1,500 per cent markup," Mernagh said, referring to a
report released earlier in the week indicating that is how much the
government is marking up the cost of medical marijuana, "I'd say it's
easily a $1 billion industry in Ontario alone."
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