2015 LA Cannabis Business Conference

Discussion in 'Marijuana News' started by jainaG, Nov 30, 2015.

  1. http://www.drugtruth.net/cms/node/5505


    Title: Cultural Baggage Radio Show
    Date: 09/18/15
    Guest: John Malanca
    Organization: United Patients Group
    Year: 2015
    Length: 29:00 minutes (13.28 MB)
    Format: Mono 44kHz 64Kbps (CBR)


    2015 LA Cannabis Business Conference I with Ethan Nadelmann of DPA,
    John Malanca of United Patients Group, Steve Yanish of Amer Cannaabis
    Exch, Matt Johnson of Cultivation Supp, Pat Lesivoi of Wonder Soil, Kirk
    Silverston of Hemp Health & Peggy Figi for Charlottes Web


    CULTURAL BAGGAGE
    SEPTEMBER 18, 2015

    TRANSCRIPT

    DEAN BECKER: Hello, friends. This is Dean Becker, and this is a
    special edition of Cultural Baggage. Today, we're broadcasting from Los
    Angeles, California, where I'm attending the International Cannabis
    Business Conference. I don't know if I'm at conference 20 or conference
    220, there's just been too many over the last fourteen years of doing
    these Drug Truth Network programs. But I keep running into people that,
    well, I love, because of their commitment, their compassion, and here's
    one such individual.

    JOHN MALANCA: Hi. John Malanca with United Patients Group.

    DEAN BECKER: Now, is that a local group to Los Angeles? Where are you based? How -- describe the organization.

    JOHN MALANCA: So, we're based out of the San Francisco bay area.
    We're actually an international company. We specialize in, the leading
    information education on medical cannabis. So people come to our site,
    doctors as well as patients, as well as product people, but they come to
    the site to learn. We do a lot, we proud ourselves on having the utmost
    updated information education, but they come to our site for
    hand-holding, so we get a lot of patients that don't know where to
    start. Don't know where to start. And we get a lot of doctors that work
    for institutions, and when their patients are asking about medical
    cannabis, which is becoming a very popular question nowadays, to
    doctors, not only here in California but around the US. The doctors are
    saying, you know, we can't recommend medical cannabis, and because of
    the institution that we work for, we really, can't really talk about it,
    but here's an organization that we do trust. And so we get a lot of
    recommendations from doctors to say, talk to these guys, they can help
    us.

    So, we don't sell products. We don't ship products. But we work with
    top product companies, top doctors, and institutions that we're able to
    hand-hold and guide people through this, literally tangled web in this
    industry.

    DEAN BECKER: You know, speaking of, my hometown of Houston, you know,
    I had a couple of calls over the years from doctors who worked at M.D.
    Anderson Hospital, who asked me to discretely help some people who
    needed cannabis, and it's ironically within the last year or two,
    perhaps those same doctors at M.D. Anderson Hospital are conducting
    studies on the use of cannabinoids for children with epilepsy. It's
    something else, isn't it?

    JOHN MALANCA: So, I wasn't going to mention that, but we have more
    recommendations or referrals I'd say from M.D. Anderson,
    Sloane-Kettering out of New York, Johns Hopkins, Cancer Centers of
    America, that they're referring their patients to us. We have doctors at
    M.D. Anderson, a pediatric doctor that we're working with right now,
    she knows nothing about it, but she made a promise to this family with a
    child that had, a five, six year old child, and she made a promise to
    the family that she would do some research on cannabinoid therapeutics.
    So we get a lot of that.

    One story that really hits home, not with pediatric but with a
    doctor, we had a doctor that called us one time, this was a few years
    back, and one of the press releases that we did, he called me up and he
    said, is this John? I said yeah. Does this work or is snake-oil? And I
    said, well what do you mean? And he goes, I'm reading your press release
    right here, and I said, the reason -- I'll tell you the reason why I
    think it works. And I know I've shared this story with you, why we
    started United Patients Group, because of my father in law. He was
    diagnosed with stage four lung cancer, metastasized to his brain, and he
    was given two weeks to live. It's been close to five years right now,
    and six weeks ago, he just had his sixth lung and brain scan, still
    clear.

    So this doctor said, does it work? And I said -- I shared this story,
    and he started crying, and I said, what's wrong? And he said, I'm not
    telling you everything, but I'm a medical doctor, I'm here in Florida,
    my wife has brain cancer and I'm scared to death and I don't know what
    to do. So I shared with him the legal ways for him to become a legal
    patient, and he flew out to California, became a legal patient, how they
    got it back, it's up to them. But he called me back about six days
    later and he said, you remember me? I said, of course I do. He goes, I
    did what you told me. Thank you. So over the next seven month period, he
    and I talked on the phone, emailed as well as texts back and forth, at
    the seven month mark he called me and he says, you got time? I said of
    course, always for you, what can I do? And he goes, my wife and I are
    just leaving our doctor's office, and you're the first person I'm going
    to call. My wife's scans are clear. He's crying, I'm crying, and he
    says, he wrote me the nicest letter. He said, you've allowed me to cut
    this cell malfunction off at the knees with a feather, and we're tied
    for life.

    So education's what we do, yeah. And everyday we have stories like
    that, and it's very special. You know, and people always ask, you know,
    is your father in law the only success story? I said, there are hundreds
    and hundreds of patients, and we're not the only people helping people
    out there. You know?

    DEAN BECKER: And you know, John, and, I'm not going to say sad fact,
    but just the unknown factor is that there are a lot of people out there
    that are doing it that you don't hear about, that doesn't make the
    press, that they don't even want folks to know that it helped them. Your
    thoughts in that regard.

    JOHN MALANCA: We get that everyday. I mean, we have a lot of people,
    it's still a taboo topic. Melissa Etheridge today made a great point,
    you know -- ooh, you're smoking some cannabis. You know? But once you
    say, ooh, I know a friend of mine who's using it for medical reasons --
    it's okeh to talk about. So, where is the line between medical and
    recreational? You know, people think there's that fine line, oh, you're
    recreational, you're bad. Oh, you're medical? You're great, here, take
    some more. So, it is, hopefully one day that stigma and that line will
    mold together. But, again -- I cut you off, sorry.

    DEAN BECKER: No, that's all right. You know, John, each week I
    release an email that kind of summarizes the week's show for the network
    and a few other organizations, and I include in there a line that, when
    euphoria is a crime, everyone will suffer. Closing thoughts, John.

    JOHN MALANCA: Closing thoughts. You know, this conference has been
    great, the education has been great, and as you and I, prior to walking
    and starting this conversation, you and I have known each other for
    four, four and a half years now, and we've seen a lot of changes.
    There's a lot of changes, not only coming into this industry but a lot
    of changes with our government, the local and state. Patients are doing
    their own education, and trying it as an alternative. You know, we're
    fortunate that we live in a legal state, my father in law's fortunate we
    live in a legal state. If he didn't, he wouldn't be here today, and
    it's sad to know that there are other Americans out there who also live
    in -- who live in the US but they live in the illegal state, and they
    don't get a second chance at life. They're loved just as much as my
    father in law is, from our family, and again, you know, they're treated,
    one, sorry you don't get a second chance, or if they are using it,
    they're treated as criminals.

    And so, I hope one day, you know, more than half our states, we have
    23 states and DC right now that are legal, 2016 is going to be a great
    year, so. Education is important, not only for ourselves, but our
    government as well as our medical professionals.

    DEAN BECKER: John, before we close, your website, please.

    JOHN MALANCA: UnitedPatientsGroup.com. Thank you very much.

    DEAN BECKER: All right.

    Folks, in about two weeks I'm turning 67 years old, and as I approach
    that final hour, I take great comfort in knowing that I'm on the right
    side of this issue, that I've worked to promote the right side of this
    issue, and I hope you'll do the same, soon. I think in the coming weeks,
    I'm going to talk with some local officials, the district attorney, my
    friend the police chief and the new sheriff I've never met, tell them
    we'd like to help the United Patients Group help M.D. Anderson help
    these kids.

    Okeh, so I'm here in Los Angeles, I'm walking down the hallway, kind
    of the day before things get started with the cannabis business
    conference, and I'm looking at a box, it says 800 Puffs of Hemp Hookahs.
    VG based, no propolyne glycol added, legal in all 50 states, and I'm
    here to speak with Mr. Kirk Silverston. He's the sales manager of Hemp
    Health. Kirk, tell us what this product's about, please.

    KIRK SILVERSTON: This product is, comes from the cannabis plant. It's
    CBD, which is cannabidiol, which is the main ingredient of hemp. Now
    hemp, unlike marijuana, is legal in all fifty states.

    DEAN BECKER: I wanted to ask you, Kirk, I mean, I see the stories
    with, what's his name, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, and the little kids with Dravet
    Syndrome, and, how the CBD helps them. Is this the same thing?

    KIRK SILVERSTON: Yes, it is. CBD works with the endocannabinoid
    system, which is something all of us animals, and mammals, have, and it
    turns out that the endocannabinoid system is the -- they think, the
    largest neuro system, neurological system in the human body, is mostly
    involved with the immune system, and with the, with the gut, with
    digestion. Cannabidiol, that works with the endocannabinoid systems,
    from hit up of CBD1 and CBD2 receptors, and it works on the mood
    modulation. So, it calms all of those impulses, you know, the
    over-excitement.

    DEAN BECKER: The random electrical firing of the brain.

    KIRK SILVERSTON: Yeah. Exactly. And it calms it all down.

    DEAN BECKER: I've even heard that, you know, we hear there are 22
    veterans killing themselves every day, many of them with that post
    traumatic stress they picked up from going to our various wars, and that
    they take a lot of pain pills, they take a lot of pills, that the VA
    prescribes for them, and I've heard that the use of CBD and other
    cannabis products can help diminish the need for those pills and help
    stabilize their head, so to speak. Your thoughts, sir.

    KIRK SILVERSTON: Yeah, it is true. There, initially, cannabis was
    sold to the public as a gateway drug. That if you took cannabis, it
    would lead to harder drugs. As it turns out, cannabis is an exit drug,
    that it actually, and these are papers written by the government, you
    know, PubMed, that it interrupts the pleasure signal from opioids, and
    that it changes the relationship to the pain, as opposed to a narcotic,
    which just tries to mask it, and block the signal. CBD, the way it works
    is it tends to change the relationship to the pain.

    DEAN BECKER: I've been speaking with Mr. Kirk Silverston, sales manager of Hemp Health. Is there a website?

    KIRK SILVERSTON: Website is hemphealthinc.com.

    DEAN BECKER: It's time to play Name That Drug By Its Side Effects.
    Breast enlargement, impotence, corneal opacity, deafness, anaphylactic
    shock, pseudomembraneous colitis, bloody diarrhea, rectal hemorrhage,
    myocardial infarction and death. Time's Up! The answer: From Bristol
    Meyers Squibb the answer weirdly is Asafex, for heartburn and obviously
    not for your ass effects. By the way, the number of potential
    complications is more than one hundred.

    You are still listening to Cultural Baggage, the unvarnished truth
    about the drug war on the Drug Truth Network and Pacifica Radio. Today
    we have reports from the Los Angeles cannabis business conference.

    STEVE YANISH: My name is Steve Yanish, and I'm the CEO of Amercanex, the American Cannabis Exchange.

    DEAN BECKER: Well, Steve, tell us a bit about this situation, what do
    you guys do, how it involves itself in the cannabis industry.

    STEVE YANISH: Absolutely. We're very excited, actually, to bring the
    first fully electronic marketplace for wholesale distribution for
    licensed cultivators, distributors, dispensaries, food manufacturers,
    all an online transaction venue so now they can buy and sell from each
    other on an online platform.

    DEAN BECKER: Okeh, it had been pretty much a hodge-podge, just kind of catch as catch can in prior years, right?

    STEVE YANISH: It really has, it's been a face to face transaction, and we've kind of developed the ebay of pot.

    DEAN BECKER: Given the circumstance, you guys could really take off
    soon. Tell us how it's, how far along you guys are in your efforts.

    STEVE YANISH: Absolutely. We're actually very far along in the state
    of Colorado, we have some of the marquis names on the platform, like
    Medicine Man, Dixie Elixirs, Native Roots, some of the largest, both
    producers and consumers in the state of Colorado have joined the
    technology in our platform, and now we're moving into California with
    those same vendors and many new participants here.

    DEAN BECKER: Now, you know, we're here in Los Angeles at this major
    gathering, the cannabis business conference, it's just a sign of things
    to come, is it not?

    STEVE YANISH: It really is. If you look at what's happened just the
    past two or three weeks in California, it does look like this state is
    now going to regulate and tax the industry, which is a huge milestone
    for medical cannabis.

    DEAN BECKER: You know, I've not had enough time to thoroughly read
    and analyze these new regulations that they're putting forward. What's
    your take on them, is it an improvement?

    STEVE YANISH: Oh, it's a tremendous improvement. You're actually
    building in an infrastructure to help grow and develop the business now,
    where now you'll have licensing, you'll have mandatory testing, you'll
    have transportation. These farmers and these traditional business owners
    will now be able to, literally be able to produce to live in the white
    market instead of the gray/black market.

    DEAN BECKER: Which is good for everybody, it would keep the cops
    involved in what they should be doing, going after violent folks, right?

    STEVE YANISH: Oh absolutely, and most importantly, the state will now
    be able to fill up its tax coffers like the state of Colorado has had,
    if you look at the most recent numbers, the numbers are staggering, over
    $70 million in revenue and that's in a marketplace that has very little
    trackability. If you looked, they probably leave somewhere between 40
    and 50 percent of that revenue on the table. Our goal as a company is to
    make sure that every state, every client, is fully regulated, fully
    transparent, and the ability to tax and collect 100 percent of the
    revenue due to the state.

    DEAN BECKER: Steve, website, closing thoughts.

    STEVE YANISH: Website is www.amercanex.com,
    that's amercanex.com. We couldn't be more excited to be delivering some
    of the best products to the cannabis industry, and even more excited as
    to what's being developed across the entire nation, over the next few
    months.

    MATT JOHNSON: Hi, I'm Matt Johnson, I'm with Cultivation Suppliers.
    We design, build, and support all cultivation facilities, all
    nationwide.

    DEAN BECKER: This is growing so fast. You guys going to be able to keep up?

    MATT JOHNSON: It's changing every day. Fortunately, we see ourselves
    as ahead of the curve. We actually came about as a commercial division
    from a retail outlet that's been in the business for many years. We were
    the first to go to YouTube to educate people about products that are
    brought into our industry. We have over 450 videos out there. It's
    really propelled our retail division, but at the same time we've had a
    lot of commercial growers call us and ask advice about things. What
    that's done is inevitably create our commercial division. We bring the
    best in, we're the most, we try to be the most knowledgeable in what we
    do. We try to be ahead of the curve in what's out there and what's
    available, but what's typically, what we all come back is what's
    traditional in ag. How are they doing it in ag? Most of the ag
    installations and greenhouses are working on low profit margin crops, so
    they have to do it as efficient as possible, and I see the cannabis
    industry going there.

    DEAN BECKER: Well, eventually it's going to have to, because the
    price will continue to fall as more and more states legalize and
    regulate, right?

    MATT JOHNSON: Yep. To be the best out there, to build the biggest
    facilities, the amount of money it takes to put up these facilities is
    quite substantial. To get your immediate ROI, you have to think
    efficiently all down the road. Mm hmm.

    DEAN BECKER: Now, Matt, as I understand it, you guys are not just national, you're going international as well, right?

    MATT JOHNSON: Yes. Well, we've looked at Chile, they're being pretty
    progressive. Costa Rica's coming on line, Jamaica's been talked about,
    but of course, Canada's our neighboring country and we've been up there
    in Quebec and Ontario quite a bit, doing large medical facilities. Mm
    hmm.

    DEAN BECKER: We're here at this gathering in Los Angeles, I don't
    know, there's a couple of dozen tables, major vendors, providing those
    services and equipment necessary for people to jump into this industry.
    California just passed a law that made it, well they're going to tax it,
    they're going to regulate it like they maybe should have done 10 or 20
    years ago, right?

    MATT JOHNSON: Probably back in '97, that would have been a good,
    interesting move at that point. But, in a lot of ways, we have a long
    ways to grow, and mature, and get it to the point where it is right now.
    I feel this is a perfect move, we all, most of us here of course do,
    it's going to regulate it, we all know that California could use a lot
    of the money, and we all know that medicinally and hopefully
    recreationally down the road that it will be available to everybody.

    DEAN BECKER: All right. Once again we've been speaking with Mr. Matt
    Johnson of Cultivation Suppliers. Matt, website, closing thoughts.

    MATT JOHNSON: Yeah, CultivationSuppliers.com, you can reach us out if
    you have any questions, any educational videos, you can go to youtube
    on monstergardens.com.

    DEAN BECKER: You know, trouble's always looking for marijuana users,
    and who's bringing the trouble? It's the cops. I have a good friend in
    an organization I'm involved with, she has a lot of maladies, she's old
    like me. She was growing a few plants in the backyard, and then the
    helicopters started flying overhead, and they tried to get in her door
    without a warrant. But they took her plants. I don't know what's going
    to happen to her, but we have got to quit this stuff.

    PAT LESAVOY: Hi, I'm Pat Lesavoy with Wonder Soil.

    DEAN BECKER: What are you bringing to this conference?

    PAT LESAVOY: I'm bringing Wonder Soil, which is a dry, compressed
    planting medium, core fiber based. We can mix to order, our factories in
    Las Vegas. We add worm castings, mycorrhizal kelp, humic acid, azomite,
    zeolite, unless you wanted organic, we add potassium polyacrylate
    polymers, which molecules are too big to get into the plant but it also
    helps save up to 50 percent water. A very successful growing medium.

    DEAN BECKER: Main question is, you know, there are, gosh, on your
    list, about 40 different components that can be a part of your product.
    Why so many? I guess would be my question.

    PAT LEVASOY: Some want higher nitrogen, some want lower nitrogen.
    Just like plants differ, and strains differ, so do the ingredients that
    you want that will help your plants thrive.

    DEAN BECKER: Some of your product is even going mainstream to Home Depot and other facilities, correct?

    PAT LEVASOY: Absolutely. We're the private label lawn repair for Home
    Depot, Ace, True Value, Do It Best, mix with Barenbrug Seed. They've
    done testing and our seeds thrive, grow faster, higher germination rate,
    than any other planting medium.

    DEAN BECKER: You know, as I understand it, California's been
    undergoing a severe drought for, gosh, nigh onto a decade now, and I
    hear people faulting growers for using too much water to grow their
    plants, but your product will help prevent that over-usage, will it not?

    PAT LEVASOY: Absolutely. It helps with the over-watering and the
    under-watering, and we save up to 50 percent water. In Las Vegas, where
    we manufacture, it's been tested in the parks. They brought in 9 trucks,
    we brought in one truck. They brought in 200,000 pounds, we brought in
    2,000 pounds for comparable land where they were starting just from
    sandy dirt. And it took them 30 hours to spread it out, it took us 3
    hours with a little spreader. Seven days later we were green, they
    weren't, and 15 days later we were greener. We could have actually cut
    the watering down after 7 days but because it was a test, all on one
    watering system, they didn't. And even after 60 days, after a high
    traffic event, we were still green.

    DEAN BECKER: Pat, if you would, please share your website, some closing thoughts.

    PAT LEVASOY: Okeh. WonderSoil.com, we're available online, we're also
    on HomeDepot.com, we're also on Costco.com, and we sell bulk, up to a
    thousand pound supersacks, and made to order.

    DEAN BECKER: The first keynote speaker at this cannabis conference
    was the executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, Mr. Ethan
    Nadelmann. I got a chance to talk to him right after his speech.

    So, I heard your speech upstairs, a powerful, an enticement, an
    invitation for all of these cannabis enthusiasts to look at the bigger
    picture of the drug war, am I right?

    ETHAN NADELMANN: Well, that's right, Dean. I mean, you know, an
    interesting thing at these conferences, there's two and half thousand
    people here, probably only about a fifth of them actually come to my
    talk, so you figure most of the people here aren't even interested in
    the broader politics. This was the 20 percent who are, and you know,
    it's fortunate they are, and as I said to them, my pitch is that they
    aim to create a really ethical, decent, inclusive, diverse industry, do
    it the right way, recognize the historical origins of this amazing
    industry opportunity, and then a kind of half joking, half serious
    pitch, where I said that the guys I want to meet in this crowd right
    here, I want to know which of you is going to do two things. One, make a
    hell of a lot of money, and have or develop a commitment to the broader
    cause of drug policy reform. You know, because you guys are the future,
    when it comes to funding this broader movement.

    DEAN BECKER: We've all been, had family members busted for one drug
    or another, at least some friends we know, we know it impacts us, our
    family, our friends. But we don't, as you were talking about in the
    speech, we don't bring it home necessarily, we don't embrace it that
    it's part of our life, we just ignore it too many times. Your thoughts,
    sir.

    ETHAN NADELMANN: Well, look, I mean, two things. One is that for a
    lot of people, when they go through an experience of either themselves
    or close friends or family being arrested for drugs, they, all they
    focus on is putting it behind them as fast as they can and then leaving
    it behind. So most people don't want to get caught up in our movement
    because they want to forget that difficult moment in their lives. The
    other thing of course is that, who ends up getting caught up in the
    system, there's a real, you know, equality about that. I mean, all the
    evidence shows is that, although white people, brown people, black
    people, roughly the same percent use drugs, and perhaps even the same
    percent roughly are involved in selling it, it's disproportionately the
    people of color who are ending up getting arrested and prosecuted,
    incarcerated, and ending up with a criminal record.

    And so, for many of us who are white and middle class, we know it's a
    risk and we all know people and have close people who've been
    victimized. Many of them were fortunate enough to get a good lawyer and
    to deal with it, right? Not everybody. But we also know that if you're
    poor, live in the wrong place, or your skin color or your accent is the
    wrong one, you've got a lot less likelihood of getting out of a drug
    thing if you get into it.

    DEAN BECKER: You know, Ethan, it's so seldom I get to see you, but
    luckily I'll get to see you in about, well less than two months, I
    think, or right at two months from this point, in Washington, DC,
    correct? Tell us what's happening.

    ETHAN NADELMANN: That's right. It's going to be the next biennial
    international drug policy reform conference, organized by the Drug
    Policy Alliance, my organization, but co-hosted with a lot of the other
    leading drug policy reform organizations in this movement as well as
    some of the major, you know, organizations like the ACLU, American Civil
    Liberties Union, Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference of African American
    Clergy, Open Society Foundation, which has been an important funder, but
    I'll tell you, we've already got close to 700 people registered with
    two months still to go. Never happened before, so either we're being
    much more efficient than before in getting people to register early, or
    it's possible this conference is going to be far bigger than anything
    we've done before.

    I mean, we've gotten up to 1100, 1200 people, who knows? This one
    could be a big one, and taking it back to the nation's capitol, hasn't
    been there since before Drug Policy Foundation merged with the
    Lindesmith Center to create DPA back in 2000, and so, it's going to be
    an exciting moment. You know, part of the challenge we have now is that,
    as the mainstream comes increasingly in our direction, how we continue
    to keep our focus, our age, our radical spirit, right, while at the same
    time engaging ever more effectively with folks in government -- that's
    one of the challenges up ahead.

    DEAN BECKER: Once again, speaking with Mr. Ethan Nadelmann, the
    executive director, Drug Policy Alliance. They're out there on the web,
    drugpolicy.org. Please check it out.

    I should note that Ethan was the first plenary speaker. Anyway, he
    spoke at the main stage, and he was followed by the singer Melissa
    Etheridge, who was introduced by Peggy, the mother of Charlotte Figi.
    You've heard of Charlotte's Web, right.

    PEGGY FIGI: My daughter Charlotte had a severe form of epilepsy. They
    consider it the worst kind. Her life was transformed by CBD, by the
    cannabis plant. We're about -- we're coming onto four years now. She was
    [applause] she was not going to make it, a couple weeks, a couple
    months left to go, home on a hospice, horrible horrible situation, and
    we started this. We figured it out. Stanley Brothers, knowledgeable and
    all of this brothers, they helped her, and they saved her life. She's
    been on medical, she's been using CBD, Charlotte's Web, for this entire
    time and no other drugs, and the world is kind of watching because it's
    unprecedented to see what's happening to her. So this issue has my
    passion and my heart.

    We have to watch all these other parents decide what to do, in other
    illegal states and countries. They have a choice, they can break the law
    in their state, you know, this is growing everywhere. They could
    refugee to Colorado, or they could pass a bill in their state, so many
    many states are, you're seeing this happen, are passing CBD or hemp
    legislation because that state wouldn't allow anything else. And these
    parents, it's very deeply deeply close and personal to our hearts, we're
    very very passionate about this, because we have nothing else to try,
    and I don't like to be told no, so people can't tell me my child has to
    suffer because they're uncomfortable with something. Thank you.

    So, we have gotten involved federally. If people wanted to pass a
    federal bill, it's not the whole shebang, it's not the whole cannabis
    plant, but they want to take a little baby step and pass CBD and
    agricultural hemp descheduling bill. These are schedule one substances. A
    mistake was made, we're trying to fix it. So, I've been passionately
    involved with the Coalition for Access Now, it's a nonprofit in DC, and
    we're going to pass this bill as soon as possible, and we need help. So
    if you're listening to Ethan, and you're going to hear some more people
    in a minute, we need an army of people to get on board with every single
    thing. We need to coalesce on every single issue, and we have public
    opinion, we just need to enforce it, we need to act, and we need to do
    it urgently.

    DEAN BECKER: Charlotte's mom, Peggy Figi, is absolutely right. We do
    need to act urgently. You may ask, why after a hundred years of
    prohibition do we need to act urgently? Because it might be you, it
    might be your mother, your daughter, your friend, who could benefit from
    medical cannabis. I guarantee you it won't help everybody, but for
    those it will help, why in god's name should we stand in the way of that
    progress.

    That's it for Cultural Baggage. As always, I remind you, because of
    prohibition you don't know what's in that bag, and certainly not outside
    the legal states. Take care of each other.
     

Share This Page