The billion-dollar marijuana market should have room for every ethnic group. But going from decriminalization to medical and recreational use has resulted in a patchwork of dangerous inconsistencies.
The weaponization of marijuana laws against communities of color leaves victims incarcerated or economically incapable of high non-refundable application fees in licensing lotteries for dispensaries, growing, transporting, and/or processing legalized marijuana. Cannabis users are vulnerable to pesticide use by industrial growers.
What is the best science? Have we lost expertise to incarceration?
These barriers are not from the era of slavery or Jim Crow; but today.
The weaponization of marijuana laws against communities of color leaves victims incarcerated or economically incapable of high non-refundable application fees in licensing lotteries for dispensaries, growing, transporting, and/or processing legalized marijuana. Cannabis users are vulnerable to pesticide use by industrial growers.
What is the best science? Have we lost expertise to incarceration?
These barriers are not from the era of slavery or Jim Crow; but today.
Alonzo Waheed, Equity and Transformation Chicago
Kalambayi Andenet, President, UHURU International
Tyler Williams, co-founder Winter Haze and Chief Technical Officer for Cannabis Safety & Quaity
Ron Burch, Missouri Green Party