'Stoner' Tommy Chong says Canada's pot legislation could set example for U.S. - Action News
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'Stoner' Tommy Chong says Canada's pot legislation could set example for U.S.

Comedian, musician and pot activist Tommy Chong says he intends to keep "priming the pump" until marijuana is legalized across the United States and in Canada.

Chong is scheduled to appear Thursday at the two-day International Cannabis Business Conference in Vancouver

Comedian, musician and pot activist Tommy Chongsays he intends to keep "priming the pump" until marijuana is legalized across the United States and in Canada. (Neil Visel/The Canadian Press)

Comedian, musician and pot activist Tommy Chong says he intends to keep "priming the pump" until marijuana is legalized across the United States and in Canada.

Chong, 78, said the introduction of legislation promised for next spring to legalize recreational marijuana in Canada could set an example for the United States, where a state-by-state approach isn't ideal.

Chong, who is scheduled to appear Thursday at the two-day International Cannabis Business Conference in Vancouver, said he hopes the next American president will legalize pot throughout the U.S. so states can rake in millions of dollars from taxing the drug.

Colorado was the first state to legalize marijuana in 2012, and Washington, Oregon and Alaska followed while about two dozen other states have so far legalized only medical cannabis.

"I've been trying to convince people for decades that pot is the way to go," Chong said Wednesday in a telephone interview from Los Angeles.

The marijuana conference in Vancouver will bring together activists and present information on investing in cannabis startups and the drug's therapeutic potential.

Comedian and marijuana icon Tommy Chong, second from right, talks to visitors as he stands near a life-sized cardboard cut-out of himself, while promoting his line of marijuana products, including his "Chongwater" hemp drink, a custom joint roller, and his "Smoke Swipe" wipes that can remove the odor of pot smoke from clothing, during CannaCon, a marijuana business trade show in Seattle in 2015. (Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press)

Chong doesn't see any conflict between people who use pot for recreational and medicinal purposes and big-business investors trying to gain a foothold in a growing industry that has operated underground for decades.

He said he smokes a couple of varieties of pot and credited cannabis for healing him of prostate and colorectal cancers.

"I'm totally cancer free now," he said, adding he smokes two or three times a day to go sleep or be creative.

"Just a tiny, tiny amount so I can function because I don't want to go into a coma state. So I do a little tiny amount out of a bong that I've perfected."

Pot activist and comedian Tommy Chong speaks during the annual Hash Bash in April, 2016, in Ann Arbor, Mich. (Junfu Han /The Ann Arbor News/The Associated Press)

Chong was sentenced in 2003 to nine months in a U.S. jail for selling bongs as part of multiple unrelated raids focusing on drug paraphernalia businesses, distributors and manufacturers.

"It was like a camp," he said of the minimum-security jail, adding he is holding off on pursuing a pardon for the crime in hopes his record will be expunged if and when marijuana is legalized in the United States.

The Edmonton-born musician who became famous in the 1970s for his stoner movie "Up In Smoke" with Cheech Marin said he first tried pot at age 17 at a Calgary jazz club where a bass player gave him a joint he'd brought back from California.

"That joint he gave me lasted me a month. I wasn't sure what it would do so I didn't smoke it all in one night."

Chong said he doesn't see any downside to smoking pot except potheads have poor memories and that anyone who tokes up too much might sleep for four or five days.

As for how he'd like to be remembered, Chong said most people may just think: "What's that guy's name, with the Mexican? Everybody thinks I'm Cheech anyway."