Denver Direct: Can We Learn by Example?


Monday, August 27, 2007

Can We Learn by Example?

Pot Peace in Seattle as Another Hempfest Celebrates Cannabis Nation
from Drug War Chronicle, Issue #499, 8/24/07

“Cannabis Nation was on the march in Seattle last weekend. An estimated 150,000 people showed up Saturday and Sunday at Myrtle Edwards Park on Elliot Bay just north of downtown to celebrate the 16th annual Seattle Hempfest and call for marijuana legalization. Lauded by organizers as the world’s largest drug reform protest rally or, as they like to put it, “protestival,” once again, the Hempfest lived up to its advance billing.

As usual, Hempfest was marked by peacefulness, a hefty dose of commerce, and the heady, sickly sweet smell of burning marijuana. Hundreds of vendors — the vast majority of whom seemed to be peddling glass pipes, eight-foot bongs, and other smoking accoutrements — did a brisk business, and thousands of celebrants toked up blissfully as Seattle police — obeying a 2003 voter-installed city “lowest priority” ordinance — looked on without acting.

Some 60 bands ranging from rock to reggae to hip-hop to punk, as well as a tent pumping out techno music, kept the sounds coming. Among the musical highlights were reggae veteran Pato Banton, whose “I Do Not Sniff the Coke (I Only Smoke Sinsemilla)” evoked huge roars of approval and Hempfest mainstays the Herbivores, whose “Losing Battle” (“You can throw us all in prison, but you can never win the fight”) could well be the Hempfest anthem.

Between the people-watching — oh! What a glorious parade of punks, Goths, aging hippies, junior hippies, suburban moms with strollers, Oregon pot fairies, men in skirts, and the simply indescribable — the music, the pipe shopping, and the effort of moving among the masses, it was easy to miss the serious political message behind the event, but organizers made every effort to ensure that even the most apolitical stoner got a healthy dose of the reform message.

Hempfest is all about promoting the freedom of choice and human rights,” said head organizer the ubiquitous and tireless Vivian McPeak from the Main Stage during one of his countless mini-rants between acts. “Responsible, law-abiding adults should not be incarcerated for marijuana offenses,” he reminded the audience.

That could be a mark of the “normalization” of marijuana on the West Coast in general and in Seattle in particular. After a rocky start with police in the festival’s early days in the 1990s, police and organizers have reached an accommodation. Law enforcement reasonableness is doubtless linked to experience with the peaceful gathering, which has become a Seattle institution, but is also a matter of law and public policy in the city. In 2003, voters there approved an initiative making adult marijuana possession offenses the lowest law enforcement priority. With fewer than 40 marijuana possession arrests in Seattle last year, the police clearly have heeded the voters.

While Seattle police were visible and circulating among the crowds, a no-arrest policy was clearly evident. Officers walking or riding bicycles routinely passed clusters of young pot-smokers without taking action. Seattle police Wednesday told the Chronicle there had been a grand total of five arrests. “It was a peaceful event,” said Officer Mark Jamieson, a department spokesman. “There were three felony arrests and two misdemeanor arrests, and a few patrons were escorted out of the park,” he said.

For Officer Jamieson and the Seattle police, Hempfest is just another event. “Hempfest is approached the same way as any of the hundreds of other events held in the city annually,” he said. “It is a permitted, legal event which requires Seattle police officers to staff, based on the numbers of participants that attend each year.”

And that’s as it should be. Hempfest is indeed the world’s largest drug reform “protestival,” but it is also — and for the majority of attendees, more — a celebration and normalization of the cannabis culture that they share. Given the broad community support in Seattle and a police department that knows how to follow as well as lead its community, America will know it has reached “drug peace” when Seattle’s approach is norm and not the exception for similar events around the country.

To see how far we are from drug peace now, though, just ask yourself what might have happened if Hempfest had been held in your community.”

Doesn’t Seattle have conflicting Federal laws? Of course it does. So much for that spurious argument.