Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Halifax Councillor Shawn Cleary Says He Won't Use The Word 'Marijuana' Because It's Racist

The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2017 11:25 AM
    HALIFAX — A Halifax councillor says he will no longer use the term "marijuana" because it is racist, sparking a social media debate over the well-used synonym for cannabis.
     
    Coun. Shawn Cleary said a police officer he works with on a cannabis legalization task force recently brought it to his attention that the term has a racist history.
     
    Cleary said in the early 1900s during the criminalization of cannabis in the U.S., "marijuana" was used to demonize marginalized communities, namely Mexicans.
     
    He said after doing some of his own research on the term's origins, he decided to stop using it, saying earlier this week on Twitter: "Let’s do what we can to not perpetuate racism."
     
    "We need to actually have conversations, have dialogue, and talk about these things. By doing that we're actually increasing the amount of understanding and interest in history," said Cleary in an interview Thursday.
     
    "These are teaching moments. They are opportunities for us to go and learn stuff and to find out more about the history of the world around us."
     
    His tweets have prompted a social media firestorm — including comments from a fellow councillor denouncing the issue.
     
    "Only in Canada could you smoke it but not say it," Coun. Matt Whitman said on Twitter in response to a poll from a local Halifax radio station, which tweeted: "Should we stop using the word marijuana?"
     
    Some Twitter users said they were unaware of the word's racist history and thanked Cleary for informing them, while others questioned the validity of his comments.
     
    Earlier this year, the U.S. National Hispanic Caucus of State Legislators passed a resolution calling for the decriminalization of cannabis, and took note of its racist history.
     
    "During the 1920s and 1930s, when it was first penalized in various states, cannabis use was portrayed as a cultural vice of Mexican immigrants to the United States, and racist and xenophobic politicians and government officials used cannabis prohibition specifically to target and criminalize Mexican-American culture and incarcerate Mexican-Americans," the document said.
     
    "The racist politicians who first criminalized cannabis, used the term “marijuana" ... to refer to it, precisely because they wanted to underscore that it was a Latino, particularly Mexican 'vice.'"
     
    Barinder Rasode, CEO of the National Institute for Cannabis Health and Education, said cannabis is a more "progressive" term and one that should be used as the country moves towards legalization next July.
     
    "We've seen words that are used to describe ethnic communities, sexual orientation and women have changed over time because we're recognizing issues of equality and progressiveness," said Rasode.
     
    "I do believe the word marijuana has context attached to it of the old world — the illegal market. When I grew up, cannabis was considered a gateway drug. Now, as our understanding has changed and considering the role the product will now play in society, I think with that we do have to change words because marijuana has negative connotations."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Three Main Factors Push Up Insurance Rates For B.C. Drivers: ICBC

    Three Main Factors Push Up Insurance Rates For B.C. Drivers: ICBC
    More crashes, more damage and injury claims, and higher costs associated with those claims mean higher rates are needed to cover expenses.

    Three Main Factors Push Up Insurance Rates For B.C. Drivers: ICBC

    Questions Surround Michael Page-Vincelli's Death After Altercation Inside Burnaby Starbucks

    Questions Surround Michael Page-Vincelli's Death After Altercation Inside Burnaby Starbucks
    BURNABY, B.C. — Outside a busy Starbucks in Metro Vancouver, a black-and-white photograph of a young man in a suit and tie sits nestled among flowers, handwritten cards and a bright red ribbon that reads, "Michael."

    Questions Surround Michael Page-Vincelli's Death After Altercation Inside Burnaby Starbucks

    Teen Lands Job After Toronto Police Officer Buys Him Formal Clothes He Allegedly Tried To Steal

    Teen Lands Job After Toronto Police Officer Buys Him Formal Clothes He Allegedly Tried To Steal
    Toronto police say that after an officer bought an alleged shoplifter the clothes he was trying to steal for a job interview, the teenager got the job.

    Teen Lands Job After Toronto Police Officer Buys Him Formal Clothes He Allegedly Tried To Steal

    Young Boy Allegedly Abducted By Mother Three Years Ago Back In Canada

    Young Boy Allegedly Abducted By Mother Three Years Ago Back In Canada
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Police in southern Alberta say a young boy allegedly abducted by his mother and taken out of the country three years ago is back in Canada.

    Young Boy Allegedly Abducted By Mother Three Years Ago Back In Canada

    Some Asylum-Seekers Struggling To Find Housing After Leaving Shelters

    Some Asylum-Seekers Struggling To Find Housing After Leaving Shelters
    MONTREAL — Some of the asylum-seekers who have recently crossed the Canada-U.S. border say they're struggling to find a place to live once they leave government-run temporary shelters.

    Some Asylum-Seekers Struggling To Find Housing After Leaving Shelters

    Canadian Pastor Freed From North Korean Prison Speaks To Congregation

    Canadian Pastor Freed From North Korean Prison Speaks To Congregation
    MISSISSAUGA, Ont. — Despite a grim account of his imprisonment, the mood was joyful as a Canadian pastor freed from a North Korean prison addressed the congregation at a Toronto-area church Sunday.

    Canadian Pastor Freed From North Korean Prison Speaks To Congregation