T
The420Guy
Guest
Chris Clay says our marijuana laws "don't make any sense." He should
know.
After all, this is the guy who got a government loan to help finance a
shop where he sold pot pipes, rolling papers and other paraphernalia.
Not only did the Youth Venture program lend him money for his cannabis
shop (Clay says a federal official told him the store "looked like it
would do well"), but the police helped him out, too.
"There was a break-in at my store once," recalls the former Londoner.
"The police came and they actually caught the thieves and (the police)
returned everything. It was an interesting sight, seeing police
carrying all these big (pipes) and putting them back on the shelf."
It's been almost six years since police raided Clay's Hemp Nation
store on Richmond Street, shortly after he started selling tiny
marijuana plants to customers. Clay, who was later convicted on
trafficking and possession charges, did it because he wanted to change
Canada's marijuana laws.
Now, it looks like he'll get his chance.
Last week, the Supreme Court of Canada agreed to hear three test cases
that could result in the decriminalization of marijuana. One of those
cases, which should be heard early next year, belongs to Clay.
The 30-year-old London native, who moved to B.C. three years ago and
now runs a Web design company in Victoria, is an unlikely activist. A
soft-spoken father who doesn't pretend pot will solve the world's
problems, Clay says he now tokes about once a month.
And he doesn't think teenagers should be allowed to smoke pot until
they're 18 or 19 years old.
"It's illegal now, but a lot of teenagers smoke it anyway," he says.
"So if they're going to do it, we can at least teach them to do it
sensibly."
Sensible is a word, however, that seems missing from this law.
It's a law that, according to the Addiction Research Foundation, more
than a quarter of Canadians admit to having broken. It's a law that
has saddled more than 600,000 Canadians with criminal records that
restrict their careers and travel. It's a law that, back in 1972,
Canada's LeDain commission concluded should be phased out, and
marijuana decriminalized.
And it's a substance many observers, including most of the lower court
judges who ruled on the three cases, conclude is relatively harmless
-- apart from chronic use, which may lead to bronchitis.
"You can still find some police officers who say it's a gateway drug
that leads to other drugs, but they're lone voices out there that are
saying this," says Clay, who was placed on probation for three years
after his 1997 trial. "Most people think it should be decriminalized.
Anybody who's looked into the issue at all comes to the same
conclusion."
But won't decriminalizing pot send the wrong message to young people?
"Just because something is legal does not mean society condones it,"
he says. "Potato chips are legal and they're bad for you. But that
doesn't mean society condones or promotes the use of junk food."
Clay would like to see marijuana decriminalized, regulated and taxed.
That would create revenue for the government, pull profits away from
the black market and organized crime, and remove the stain of a
criminal record from hundreds of thousands of otherwise law-abiding
Canadians.
Of course, Clay isn't overly optimistic. He has a 30-year-old
newspaper clipping advocating the same things.
"This should've been done long before I was born," he says. "And now,
my son is growing up and it's still illegal. I certainly hope that
someday he doesn't get a criminal record from smoking a joint. It's
ridiculous."
Source: London Free Press (CN ON)
Copyright: 2001 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation.
Contact: letters@lfpress.com
Website: Canoe.Com
Pubdate: Tue, 20 Mar 2001
Author: Ian Gillespie, Free Press Columnist
Bookmark: MapInc (Clay, Chris)
know.
After all, this is the guy who got a government loan to help finance a
shop where he sold pot pipes, rolling papers and other paraphernalia.
Not only did the Youth Venture program lend him money for his cannabis
shop (Clay says a federal official told him the store "looked like it
would do well"), but the police helped him out, too.
"There was a break-in at my store once," recalls the former Londoner.
"The police came and they actually caught the thieves and (the police)
returned everything. It was an interesting sight, seeing police
carrying all these big (pipes) and putting them back on the shelf."
It's been almost six years since police raided Clay's Hemp Nation
store on Richmond Street, shortly after he started selling tiny
marijuana plants to customers. Clay, who was later convicted on
trafficking and possession charges, did it because he wanted to change
Canada's marijuana laws.
Now, it looks like he'll get his chance.
Last week, the Supreme Court of Canada agreed to hear three test cases
that could result in the decriminalization of marijuana. One of those
cases, which should be heard early next year, belongs to Clay.
The 30-year-old London native, who moved to B.C. three years ago and
now runs a Web design company in Victoria, is an unlikely activist. A
soft-spoken father who doesn't pretend pot will solve the world's
problems, Clay says he now tokes about once a month.
And he doesn't think teenagers should be allowed to smoke pot until
they're 18 or 19 years old.
"It's illegal now, but a lot of teenagers smoke it anyway," he says.
"So if they're going to do it, we can at least teach them to do it
sensibly."
Sensible is a word, however, that seems missing from this law.
It's a law that, according to the Addiction Research Foundation, more
than a quarter of Canadians admit to having broken. It's a law that
has saddled more than 600,000 Canadians with criminal records that
restrict their careers and travel. It's a law that, back in 1972,
Canada's LeDain commission concluded should be phased out, and
marijuana decriminalized.
And it's a substance many observers, including most of the lower court
judges who ruled on the three cases, conclude is relatively harmless
-- apart from chronic use, which may lead to bronchitis.
"You can still find some police officers who say it's a gateway drug
that leads to other drugs, but they're lone voices out there that are
saying this," says Clay, who was placed on probation for three years
after his 1997 trial. "Most people think it should be decriminalized.
Anybody who's looked into the issue at all comes to the same
conclusion."
But won't decriminalizing pot send the wrong message to young people?
"Just because something is legal does not mean society condones it,"
he says. "Potato chips are legal and they're bad for you. But that
doesn't mean society condones or promotes the use of junk food."
Clay would like to see marijuana decriminalized, regulated and taxed.
That would create revenue for the government, pull profits away from
the black market and organized crime, and remove the stain of a
criminal record from hundreds of thousands of otherwise law-abiding
Canadians.
Of course, Clay isn't overly optimistic. He has a 30-year-old
newspaper clipping advocating the same things.
"This should've been done long before I was born," he says. "And now,
my son is growing up and it's still illegal. I certainly hope that
someday he doesn't get a criminal record from smoking a joint. It's
ridiculous."
Source: London Free Press (CN ON)
Copyright: 2001 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation.
Contact: letters@lfpress.com
Website: Canoe.Com
Pubdate: Tue, 20 Mar 2001
Author: Ian Gillespie, Free Press Columnist
Bookmark: MapInc (Clay, Chris)