Pubdate: Tue, 03 Nov 2009 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Ethan Erkiletian Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09/n986/a03.html WE SHOULD NOT ABDICATE RIGHT TO PROTECT CITIZENS Re: 'Marc Emery deserved his punishment in prison' (Your Letters, Daily News, Oct. 31) After reading the piece from Conner Whelan of Ladysmith, I had to think about what he was saying. The letter seems to ignore some very important aspects of the case of Marc Emery, our very own Prince of Pot and his extradition for selling cannabis seeds. Mr. Whelan says that this is not about sovereignty but it certainly is. When faced with the prospect of one of our citizens being claimed by a foreign nation to face a standard of justice that is so greatly different than our own, it is a matter of sovereignty to rightly claim that our laws must take priority. Should our standard of justice be insufficient to punish some one for a crime, it is up to our lawmakers to change the standard. Applying a foreign standard of justice to a citizen in and of our own land at the request of a foreign power is an abdication of our sovereign jurisdiction over citizenship and domestic law. Mr. Whelan also mentions that compounding Mr Emery's fate was the fact that he was open in flaunting American laws. Our voice is suppose to be our own and if this should subject one to a harsher standard of justice than those who keep their mouths shut, I would dare our law makers to create a standard of justice that punishes those who speak before those who do not. This is a terrible attempt at justifying a punishment that should never have been undertaken. Mr. Whelan also attempts to paint Emery as a coward hiding from American justice officials claiming his rights of Canadian citizenship. Seeking protection from the lawmakers sworn to protect him, asking the domestic authorities take justice into their own hands in their own realm and continuing to speak brazenly and without apology for his convictions is far from cowardly. A coward would have run, shut up and begged for forgiveness. It would be a coward who would accept an unjust punishment in hope for a small bit of leniency. Emery did not do this. Emery never backed down from his convictions. Emery may not deserve admiration for some of his traits but I am certainly not ready to call him a coward as Mr. Whelan so passively managed to do. I am also not ready to abdicate our responsibility to protect Canadian citizens from even our allies should our allies seek something from us that is a blatantly different standard of justice from our own. Ethan Erkiletian Saskatoon - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom