Marijuana Legalization Favored in US, Canada
by Phillip Smith
StoptheDrugWar.org
November 29, 2012
A new Angus-Reid Public Opinion poll has majorities favoring marijuana legalization in both Canada and the US. According to the poll, 57% of Canadians and 54% of Americans are ready to free the weed.

In Canada, support for legalization was strongest in the Atlantic provinces (64%) and British Columbia (60%), while in something of a surprise, in the US, support was strongest in the Northeast (61%), followed by the West (56%). The US West has traditionally had the highest levels of support for legalization.
In both countries there was majority support for marijuana legalization in every region. The provinces or regions with the lowest level of support for legalization were Alberta (50%) in Canada, and the US Midwest (50%) and South (51%).
In Canada, men (64%) are more likely than women (50%) to call for the legalization of cannabis, while there was no wide gender gap in the United States (55% male, 53% female). The bulk of support for legal marijuana comes from respondents aged 18-to-34 in the United States (65%) and those aged 35-to-54 in Canada (61%).
Two-thirds (66%) of both Canadians and Americans believe marijuana will be legal within 10 years.
While two-thirds (65%) of Americans say their country has a serious drug abuse problem, only 43% of Canadians agree. Still, in both countries, two-thirds (68% in Canada and 66% in the US) describe the war on drugs as a failure.
While both Canadians and Americans agree that the drug war is a failure, they remain unwilling to contemplate the legalization of drugs other than marijuana. Support for legalizing cocaine, ecstasy, heroin, or methamphetamine didn’t rise above 11% for any of those drugs in either country.
The poll was an online survey of 1,005 Canadians and 1,002 Americans conducted November 19 and 20. The results were weighted to ensure a representative sample of the two country’s adult populations. The margin of error is +/- 3.1%.
Two US states, Colorado and Washington, voted to legalize marijuana in November. Legislators in at least four more plan to offer up legalization bills next year, while activists in Montana are working toward putting a legalization initiative on the 2014 ballot.
We Are Change Victoria Confronts Thomas Mulcair/NDP
by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network
December 4, 2012
Thomas Mulcair shows his true colours when he is confronted by We Are Change Victoria about his foreign policy and regressive beliefs.
Harper’s Foreign Policy – Yves Engler on GRTV [video]
GlobalResearchTV
December 6, 2012
While Canada enjoys a reputation as a peacekeeper on the world stage, its history proves it to be anything but. In his new book “The Ugly Canadian: Stephen Harper’s Foreign Policy,” author and activist Yves Engler explores how the Harper government is trying to further militarize Canada and create a change in perception of Canada’s foreign policy. Find out more in this week’s GRTV Feature Interview with your host James Corbett and our special guest, Yves Engler.
UN Receives Complaint Over Canada’s Failure To Arrest Bush [video]
Conscious Life News
November 18, 2012
(Press TV)
Individuals who have accused the US government of torturing them filed a complaint against the Canadian government at the UN this week.
They say that Canada should have arrested credibly accused war criminal George W. Bush when the former US Commander-in-chief visited Canada last October.
In the year 2000 Canada enshrined the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act which is ostensibly aimed at preventing Canada from becoming a safe haven for war criminals. However the law has never been enforced on credibly accused war criminals such as Benjamin Netanyahu and George W. Bush who are afforded police protection when they visit Canada.
Prior to Bush’s controversial October 2011 speaking engagement Amnesty International issued the following advisory.
Amnesty International today urged Canadian authorities to arrest and either prosecute or extradite former US President George W. Bush for his role in torture. . . Canada is required by its international obligations to arrest and prosecute former President Bush given his responsibility for crimes under international law including torture.
Critics contend that the Harper government affords impunity to the protagonists of the “war on terror” because Canadian politicians themselves stand accused to complicity in torture and other war crimes. In late 2008 the Harper government amazed many when they shut down Canada’s parliament, analysts believe, to avert discussion of the mounting evidence of Canadian complicity in torture.
Also see: Survivors File U.N. Complaint Against Canada for Failing to Prosecute George W. Bush for Torture
Listen To Marc Emery’s First Radio Interview Since Being Sent To Prison [audio]
The Weed Blog
November 24, 2012
Marc Emery Endorses Justin Trudeau In First LIVE Radio Broadcast Since Going To Prison
Marijuana activists Marc and Jodie Emery join the Roy Green Show to discuss Justin Trudeau’s recent support of cannabis decriminalization.
Marc Emery voices his support for the Liberal leadership candidate in the activist’s first LIVE radio address since being imprisoned in the United States for selling marijuana seeds.
Read Jodie Emery’s article about Justin Trudeau on The Huffington Post
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jodie-emery/marijuana-legalization-decriminaliza…
Find out more about Marc Emery
http://FreeMarc.ca
Find more news about marijuana
http://CannabisCulture.com
http://Pot.TV
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Related Potent News links:
We Are Change Victoria Confronts Justin Trudeau On Libya/Depleted Uranium [video]
by Terry Wilson
Canadian Awareness Network
November 23, 2012
On November 21, 2012, members of We Are Change Victoria confronted nominee of the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada, Justin Trudeau, son of former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, regarding Canada’s involvement in the NATO led invasion of Libya and the use of depleted uranium.
The question and answer was held at the University of Victoria during a Town Hall style meeting as part of Justin Trudeau’s cross Canada tour promoting his campaign to become the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.
Visit WeAreChangeVictoria.org or find WACV on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/58830368032
First Nations Stop Pipeline From Being Built
Canadian Awareness Network
November 18, 2012
By Barbara Yaffe, Vancouver Sun
Governments and corporate Canada remain in denial about a new reality: aboriginal groups hold veto power over resource development.
In his just-published book, Resource Rulers; Fortune and Folly on Canada’s Road to Resources, Bill Gallagher reviews the legal victories natives have toted up since the 1980s, and draws an intriguing conclusion.
He says it’s no longer enough for companies to merely consult on resource projects, they need to invite aboriginals to become partners and co-managers in proposed developments.
Gallagher, a Kitchener resident who has worked as an oil-patch lawyer and treaty negotiator, calls the situation “the biggest under-reported business story of the last decade.”
He personally has counted up “well over” 150 legal wins for native groups, all based on provisions outlined in Canada’s Constitution.
“The native legal winning streak now simply has to be fundamentally and constructively addressed, both nationally and regionally .”
That message was reinforced last week by Assembly of First Nations chief Shawn Atleo, speaking at a gathering north of Thunder Bay. Atleo said aboriginals are prepared to take care of themselves financially, using revenue from resources they believe they own.
Gallagher says natives have become unrelenting because their legal wins have convinced them of their clout.
That attitude is playing out at the moment in their inflexible opposition to the Northern Gateway pipeline in B.C. – despite the fact some native groups in the province have signed on to the project.
He says ultimately it will be the native people who will have the major voice in deciding risks that can be tolerated in transporting bitumen.
In the same vein, Gallagher labels “inconceivable” any oil development off B.C.’s coast – in an area where ownership rights remain unclear.
“Until we have true resource-power sharing with natives, the fate of Canada’s resource sector will be in the hands of native strategists in their new capacity as resource rulers.”
The aboriginals also are benefiting from the help of sophisticated eco-activists, though occasionally, they’ve spurned such help in favour of resource revenue and jobs on offer.
Natives, asserts the author, are “in the driver’s seat,” with power outmuscling that found even in the Prime Minister’s Office.
Provincially, says Gallagher, “Only Quebec has risen to address this complex social justice and environmental challenge.”
He points to a 2002 Paix des Braves agreement signed by Ottawa, Quebec City and the James Bay Cree.
The 50-year deal, which followed decades of court battles, mandates sharing among the parties of decision-making and revenue relating to mining, forestry and hydro power development on Cree land in northern Quebec.
The Cree, expecting to reap $3.5 billion from the accord, have opened an embassy in Quebec City in the spirit of nation-to-nation dealings.
B.C., Gallagher says, is making progress in engaging aboriginals in resource decision-making while Ontario is by far the poorest performer on this front.
Former premier Gordon Campbell, who presided over a 2010 Olympics that fully recognized B.C.’s aboriginals, received credit from the author for being the Canadian leader who has tried hardest to bring about a reconciliation with native Indians.
In Alberta, the oilpatch has yet to realize, “only natives can green the oil-sands and thereby imbue Canada’s bitumen with a measure of international respectability.”
As for the corporate sector, Gallagher says too many business executives continue to take native people for granted.
Perhaps in recognition of the growing influence of aboriginal people across the country, a trio of aboriginal lieutenants-governor have been appointed: Ontario’s James Bartleman in 2002; B.C.’s Steven Point in 2007 and New Brunswick’s Gray-don Nicholas in 2009.
Source: Canada.com
