- Culture
- Observations
2 July 2017updated 09 Sep 2021 5:55pm
The hippie mission to decriminalise marijuana remains a dream.
By Helen Nianias
You always expect the sun to come out for hippies, as though they have their own Californian microclimate. But in Britain, the summer of 1967 started late and ended uprather rainy. Even though the weather didn’t live up to the look, this was the first Summer of Love. This is whenpot became political, andit left a legacy of drug use that we still haven’t come to terms with.
Lee Harris attended the first Legalise Pot Rally in Hyde Park on 16 July 1967, and is a lifelong campaigner in the movement to legalise cannabis. Harris is a gentle man. He misses the colourful clothes and optimism of the 1960s, and he believes that if cannabis were legalised it would help reduce inequality and end the war on drugs.
Within two hours of our meeting in Hyde Park, he has dropped so many famous names – George Harrison, John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Marianne Faithfull, Allen Ginsberg – that I wish I’d made bingo cards.
These names might still carry a certain cultural cachet, but the hippie mission to decriminalise cannabis remains a dream. These days, establishment figures confess to sparking up, and even the right-wing think tank the Adam Smith Institute has called for legalisation (it argues that making cannabis legal will raise £1bn in tax). Despite a number of US states having decriminalised it and medicinal marijuana now being available on the NHS, in the UK in 2017 you can still, theoretically, be jailed for five years for carrying a spliff’s worth of weed.
“This park has always been the centre of the cannabis debate,” Harris says, as we sit in the sunshine. He comes back every April for the 4/20 smoke-up on 20 April, which organisers say attracted an estimated 12,000 guests this year. “It was just a haze of smoke,” Harris says.
He stood for mayor of London in 2016 as the candidate for the Cannabis Is Safer Than Alcohol party. “Imet Nigel Farage and he said,‘Oooh, I’ve read about you,’” he recalls.
Now a darling of youth-focused media, he even put in an appearance on Channel 4’s First Dates and was swamped by people asking for selfies atthe 4/20 event. “All the kids know of me,” Harris says.
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He remembers heavy-handed policing at pot rallies in the 1960s and 1970s. “Police were chasing them, and girls with their long skirts, and this is Britain and that’s supposed to be all right,” hesays, leafing through a copy of his old magazine, Home Grown. “People don’t know this is repressive Britain. Ifpeople in other countries were treated like that, we’d be upset– but this is Hyde Park.”
By comparison, the 4/20 thisyear was calm; the police even helped organisers disposeof rubbish from the event after an administrative error left them with six bins instead of 60.
However, pro-cannabis campaigners don’t all agree. Peter Reynolds, the president of the campaign group CLEAR Cannabis Law Reform, says the movement that started in that warmish summer of 1967 hasn’t only “not achieved the goal, but has held back reform”.
Reynolds (who has a history of provocative statements and has previously been accused of making anti-Semitic comments) advises protesters to “wear a suit and look ministers in the eyes instead of dancing round a park with a silly hat on”. The protest movement doesn’t really want cannabis to be decriminalised, he argues. “They prefer their status as outlaws.”
Not so, says Stuart Harper, the political liaison officer for UK Cannabis Social Clubs and an organiser of the 4/20 event in London. “It’s nonsense, of course. Our clubs are for safety and not for fun.”
Harris agrees that the movement is fractured and laments how so many of the young people he meets indulge in conspiracy theories: “They all follow Alex Jones and DavidIcke and don’t know who Assad is because they don’t read the papers. They all say Paul McCartney’s dead, too,but he’s not and I know because I was at a party with his son, James!”
Alternative facts may proliferate in the pro-cannabis movement but science is in favour of decriminalisation. And yet the leading neuropsychopharmacologist Professor David Nutt says British drugs law won’t change under Theresa May (“She’s an authoritarian religious bigot”).
Research generally shows that cannabis is less harmful to the lungs than tobacco because it burns at a lower temperature, and that the evidence for the oft-mentioned link with schizophrenia is shaky at best. “In the past 50 years, since the campaign to legalise cannabis, consumption has gone up 5,000 per cent and schizophrenia has gone down,” Nutt says, “so if it’s causative, it’s pretty hard to imagine.”
However, he accepts that specially bred, THC-heavy skunk is linked to psychosis. “And why do we have skunk? We have skunk because we have prosecuted [for] cannabis. What happened when we started testing prisoners for cannabis? They started using Spice. It’s like when beer was banned during Prohibition in America and everyone turned to toxic moonshine.”
For his part, Harris wonders what the legacy of the summer of 1967 will be. “It was an extraordinary time,” he says. “To change something makes life worthwhile – to be a little part of it.”
I turn off my Dictaphone and he pulls a lump of Moroccan hash out of his sock, red-brown and dull as a clump of soil. I roll up and we smoke as he reads from Home Grown. If 4/20 is a protest, if the Legalise Pot Rally in 1967 was a protest, is this one? Despite a half-century of research and rebellion, most of us don’t have even the fuzziest idea where weed stands.
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This article appears in the 28 Jun 2017 issue of the New Statesman, The Brexit plague