Source:
Flint Journal
Joe
Lawlor, Journal Staff Writer
MARCHERS VOICE THE NEED FOR LEGAL WEED
Flint - "If you can get pot people up before noon,
you can change the world," said Linda Hagensen,
while resting on her multi-colored cane.
About 100 protesters rallying for the legalization of
marijuana rose within hours of dawn for a 10 a.m. rally
Saturday in front of Flint City Hall.
Protesters also were scheduled to rally in Battle Creek,
Traverse City, Lansing and Detroit. Police made no
arrests in Flint and there didn't appear to be any
obvious marijuana use.
They called it "Liberation Day," and their
symbol was the "Free Weed" van.
Some wore leather jackets, others sported tie-dye shirts
or red and purple scarfs. One man rested a 2-foot plastic
Godzilla on his shoulder.
Plastic marijuana plants were everywhere - in pots,
around people's necks, tying up pony tails or hanging
from belts.
A.S. Wright, rally organizer, took pictures of people
holding plastic plants, encouraging them to "Flip
off FANG (Flint Area Narcotics Group)."
Wright, who wore a black top hat and smoked a cigar, said
the pictures will be posted on the Legalize Michigan Web
site.
"The cool thing is, they won't be able to tell the
plants aren't real from looking at the Web site,"
Wright said. "One time, this cop tried to stop me
because he saw my plants, and I said 'No, look dude, it's
nylon.' And then he was like, 'Can I search your van?'
"So I gave him my potted plant from the van, and
after he saw it was plastic, he was like, 'Wo-ow.' After
that, he was just like, 'No way, I'm just going to leave
this guy alone.' "
About 100 people chanted "No more drug war!"
and joked with the Genesee County Sheriff's Department
mounted patrol, who briefly rode across the street from
the protesters.
"We have some for you!" one man yelled, as the
deputies laughed.
The protesters held signs with phrases like, "I'm
not a criminal, I'm a pot smoker," "War on
drugs is a war on the poor and working class," and
"Stand up for American freedom."
Ken Mathenia, of the Green Party, said the party is in
favor of legalizing marijuana possession, a position that
he doesn't believe will alienate voters.
"Here we have people locked up for possessing
marijuana, and yet Enron executives are walking the
streets," Mathenia said.
Hagensen of Flintsaid marijuana is less harmful than
alcohol.
"The myth that you will end up living in your
mother's basement wasn't true in 1972, and it isn't true
now," Hagensen said. "Make me responsible for
my actions, and not because I smoke weed."
According to the National Institute for Drug Abuse,
long-term marijuana use can affect motor skills,
short-term memory and is harmful to the lungs.
Betsy Savinski of Flint has multiple sclerosis and said
smoking marijuana eases her pain and controls her muscle
spasms.
Some states, such as Oregon, have approved marijuana for
medicinal purposes.
But Hagensen said the goal is to legalize marijuana for
all uses.
"You should not have to be sick to be free,"
Hagensen said.
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