-
Hey look, if you guys
are anything like me,
-
you've found it harder and harder
to turn around recently
-
without seeing words like "free-range,"
-
"farm-to-table,"
-
"organically produced,"
-
especially here in Colorado.
-
Now as we become more conscientious
of the way that we eat in recent years,
-
these once unfamiliar words have worked
their way into our daily lexicon.
-
When we started to pay more attention
-
to the way that the food that we're eating
interacted with our bodies
-
and with the earth,
-
the food industry had to listen,
-
and the results have been really powerful.
-
Now, those of you out there
from states like Washington and Oregon,
-
and of course my fellow Coloradians --
-
(Laughter)
-
y'all know what I'm talking about --
-
because this is not --
-
(Laughing)
-
words like "all-natural" and "homegrown"
are not just being used in our diet.
-
There's this whole new industry
using this language now.
-
You guys know --
-
it's weed.
-
An industry that [tax] a sale
-
of about six billion dollars
worth of product in 2016.
-
So what if I were to propose to you
-
that some of what you think you know
about this legalized marijuana thing
-
could be wrong.
-
Listen, I get it.
-
Talking about issues with legal weed
is a pretty quick way
-
to get uninvited
from the cool kids' table.
-
I know that better than most,
-
but I intend to do it anyway.
-
First, before I get started,
-
let me be perfectly clear about one thing.
-
My fight is not against the casual
adult use of marijuana.
-
I don't care about that.
-
What I care deeply about
is this new industry
-
that is working to convince us
-
that we are consuming something natural
while fixing social ills when we aren't.
-
So let's start with
a little bit of weed 101.
-
Cannabis is the plant that grows naturally
and has been used within textiles
-
and even traditional Chinese medicine
for thousands of years.
-
Genesis 112 even tells us that
"I have given you
-
all of the seed-bearing plants
and herbs to use" --
-
It's the microphone --
-
it's kind of TV preacher sort of thing --
-
(Laughter)
-
Now cannabis is made up of hundreds
of different chemicals,
-
but two of those chemicals
are by far the most interesting.
-
That's CBD and THC.
-
So CBD is where almost all
of the medicinal properties lie.
-
It's an incredibly fascinating
part of the plant
-
with real potential to help people.
-
It also is totally non-intoxicating.
-
You could take a bath in the stuff
while vaping pure CBD
-
and drinking a CBD smoothie
-
and you still couldn't get high.
-
(Laughter)
-
I've tried.
-
(Laughter)
-
I haven't, I haven't,
-
that costs a lot of money.
-
(Laughter)
-
Now, for as interesting and remarkable
a part of the plant as CBD is,
-
it actually makes up a really tiny portion
of the commercial market.
-
The real money is being made
in that other chemical --
-
in THC.
-
THC is the natural part of the plant
that gets you high.
-
And before the 1970s,
-
cannabis contained less than half
of a percent of THC.
-
That's what's naturally occurring.
-
Over the last 40 years,
-
as we became better gardeners,
-
that --
-
(Laughter)
-
that percentage of THC started
to slowly but steadily rise ...
-
until recently, when the chemists
started to get involved.
-
So these guys moved grow cycles --
-
I'm sorry, these guys moved cultivation
exclusively indoors,
-
and then they grow cycles extremely
and unnaturally short.
-
They also started to use
pesticides and fertilizers
-
in some ways that we
should be concerned with.
-
In fact I was recently talking to a buddy
who had just left a job
-
at a commerical grow operation
-
because he was so concerned
with the chemicals
-
that he was being asked to interact with.
-
Some of his fellow employees
were actually encouraged
-
to wear hazmat suits
-
while they were spraying
their chemical cocktails on the plants.
-
WIth that kind of manipulation,
-
the products that are being sold today
can contain above 30 percent THC.
-
In our concentrates --
-
our concentrates can actually contain
about 95 percent THC --
-
a far cry from the natural plant.
-
Listen, this isn't your grandpa's weed.
-
(Laughter)
-
This isn't your Dad's weed.
-
Like, this isn't even my weed.
-
(Laughter)
-
If you've ever set foot inside
one of the thousands of dispenseries
-
that have sprung up in recent years,
-
you know that what we're
really selling in them is THC.
-
All of the weed that you buy commercially
lists exactly how much THC it contains,
-
as do your other much more
popular products,
-
like vape pens, coffee, ice cream,
condiments, granola, gum, candy,
-
baked goods, suppositories --
-
(Laughter)
-
And of course, lube.
-
For real.
-
(Laughter)
-
Pretty much anything that you can imagine
introducing into the human body.
-
The vast majority of cannabis
that's being sold today --
-
it isn't really cannbis.
-
It's THC in either a pure form
-
of in an extremely high
and unnatural concentration.
-
To say that we have legalized weed
is subtly misleading.
-
We have commercialized THC.
-
And it's happened really quickly.
-
Now, the reason why the commercial market
has so rapidly exploded
-
is because there is a hell
of a lot of money to be made
-
in satisfying and increasing
our desire to get high.
-
And that money is no longer really
being made by the mom-and-pop shops.
-
So industry groups and corporations --
-
groups like the drug policy alliance,
-
the marijuana policy project,
-
arkview investment,
-
the cannabis industry association --
-
they've chased out and helped to chase out
a lot of the small-time growers.
-
So these cats know that the best way
-
to get this to continue
to profit off of us
-
is if they follow the alcohol
industry's 80/20 rule.
-
It's simple.
-
It's where 80 percent
of the product is consumed
-
by 20 percent of the consumers --
-
the problemed users.
-
The wealthy, white, weed lobbyists --
-
and seriously, they are almost all
rich, white men --
-
they know that we will consume
more of what they're selling
-
if they jack up the potency.
-
They also know that we are more than
twice as likely to consume THC regularly
-
if we earn under $20,000 a year
than those who earn over $50,000 a year.
-
In other words, the poorer you are,
-
the more likely you are to spend
money on their products.
-
And in this country,
-
income and race are highly correlated.
-
One of the reasons that we often hear
cited for the legalization of marijuana
-
is that it will help to stop
the disproportionate incarceration rates
-
among minorities,
-
which is something everybody in this room
should be extremely concerned with.
-
Unfortunately, we don't
have to look any further
-
than arrest rates for juveniles
here in Colorado
-
to counter that argument.
-
According to Colorodo Department
of Public Safety,
-
since we opened retail in 2014,
-
almost all of which are in poor,
minority neighborhoods,
-
we saw an eight percent reduction
in the arrest of white kids
-
for all weed-related activity.
-
Good on 'em.
-
During that same time period,
-
there was a 29 percent increase
in the arrest of Hispanic kids
-
for weed-related acticity
-
and a 58 percent increase in the arrest
of black kids for weed-related crimes.
-
You guys heard that, right?
-
We are actually arresting more
people of color in Colorado
-
than we were prior to commercialization.
-
And you're not reading that in the Post.
-
Colorado Department of Safety,
-
legal marijuana coming into focus.
-
Another big issue that we have
is in school suspension rates.
-
So, schools that are
predominantly white --
-
that is they have a minority population
of 25 percent or fewer --
-
in the first full year of data collection
following commercialization,
-
these schools had a grand total
of 190 drug-related suspensions --
-
almost all of which are for THC.
-
At the same time,
-
schools with a minority population
of 75 to 100 percent,
-
had 801 drug-related suspensions,
-
almost all of which were for THC.
-
When discussing minority populations,
-
one that unfortunately often
gets left out of the conversation
-
is the LGTBQ community.
-
Now, members of this community are more
than twice as likely to consume THC
-
than those who identify
as heterosexual or cisgender.
-
They also unfortunately have higher rates
of mental illness and suicide.
-
According to a study published in 2014
called "Going to Pot,"
-
we see unnaturally high levels of THC
found in today's products
-
that they actually
compound those issues --
-
they make them worse.
-
Unfortunately, that seems
to matter very little
-
to the folks who are
selling these products
-
because as we saw, clearly this is
a good consumer base.
-
Listen, I get it.
-
In many circles, legal marijuana
is too much of a sacred cow to question.
-
But we need to start this conversation
-
because what's being sold
today is not natural,
-
and lobbyists and industry are using
social justice as a smokescreen
-
so that they can get richer.
-
It's been my own journey to sobriety
-
that led me to begin questioning
a lot of what I was seeing --
-
that's kind of one of the things
that we're taught to do.
-
When I left Boulder for
the Washington DC area
-
at 12 years old,
-
I was transported into a world where
the kind of shoes that you wore
-
mattered more than
just about anything else,
-
and my family was just too poor
to help me play that game.
-
So I was faced with a pretty real
crisis of identity.
-
In this new scene where there's more
blacktops than treetops,
-
man, I just didn't know who I was,
-
so I smoked weed for the first
time when I was 13,
-
and I loved it.
-
(Laughter)
-
I instantly found this social group,
-
and I also just really liked being high.
-
I finally found a way to shut this up.
-
I quickly turned to other
drugs and alcohol
-
and something just woke up
inside of my brain.
-
I was a daily user within
a couple of months,
-
so my addictive use,
-
it mirrors many of the stories
that I'm sure you've heard before.
-
It started out as fun,
-
it got scary
-
and then it was just necessary.
-
Enough said.
-
I got wasted for the last time
on June 15 of 1996 --
-
(Applause and cheers)
-
thank you.
-
And I've spent the last 21 years
trying to both put my life back in order
-
as well as trying to find
some peace in this world,
-
and one of the ways that I've done that
-
is by working inside non-profit
drug and alcohol treatment
-
for the last 10 years
-
with groups like Phoenix Multisport,
-
the University of Colorado Hospital
-
and NowGap,
-
the National Association
-
for Lesbian, Gay, Transgender, Bisexual
treatment providers and their allies.
-
Even after all of my work
on the front lines
-
and as a former consumer myself,
-
I was shocked and pissed
when I started to see
-
what commercialization
was doing to cannabis,
-
because you see, our hope
for something pure and natural
-
is making it hard for us to see
what's really going on,
-
and that is that the rich
are getting richer
-
on the backs of the poor
-
and lying to our faces the entire time.
-
(Applause)
-
Thank you.
-
My friends, once again,
-
I fear that we are allowing industry
-
to take advantage of the most
challenged among us
-
in order to turn a profit,
-
much like we saw with tobacco
and food in years past.
-
So when we told the food industry
-
that we understood the impact
our choices were having
-
and that we demanded better
for ourselves and our families,
-
that industry got into line.
-
So is there any reason why we couldn't
demand the same thing for this
-
and from future industries who are trying
to get a piece of our paychecks?
-
What if we made these guys answer
some hard questions?
-
What if we held them to a higher standard
than we are right now?
-
Because as it stands,
-
for many in our community,
-
the grass isn't greener on this side
of commercialization.
-
They've just been sold a bag of goods.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
Jeremy Duhon: I know
this is a sensitive topic
-
but a very important one,
-
so thank you for bringing this up
and helping us explore it.
-
A lot of folks are experiencing
health benefits
-
from marijuan and cannabis.
-
What would you say
to that part of the community?
-
JC: I'm actually really glad
you brought that up.
-
I think one of the most important things
that we can do right now
-
is to separate out medicinal,
-
and especially what's happening
-
and some of the advances
that are being made
-
using parts of this plant and even
some whole-plant medicines,
-
from the commercial market for THC,
-
and that's crucial.
-
We've got to stop putting them together
-
and we've got to say, "OK, here's
the part about getting high,
-
and here's the part about the medicine."
-
(Applause)
-
JD: So it sounds like your talk
is less about being anti-cannabis
-
and more about raising awareness
about aspects of commercialization.
-
Is that a fair way to put it?
-
BC: Yes, so I am not the anti-weed guy.
-
(Laughter)
-
I'm the pro-logic guy.
-
For me to cast stones --
-
listen, I'm a drug addict.
-
I don't get to do that
and I don't want to do that
-
but what's bothering me
-
and what's so hard for me is to see
the way that we are just embracing
-
without asking the hard questions,
-
when if this was another industry,
-
we'd be holding their feet
to the fire on some stuff.
-
And no, I'm not the anti-weed guy,
-
I'm the pro-thought guy.
-
So, think.
-
I don't even care if you're smoking
when you do it,
-
just as long as you're an adult,
-
just think.
-
(Applause)