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Cannabis

In reply to the discussion: Just opened [View all]
 

jtuck004

(15,882 posts)
1. Part of the racist system in WA State? "Michelle Alexander: White Men Get Rich from Legal Pot, Black
Mon Sep 5, 2016, 03:30 AM
Sep 2016

"Michelle Alexander: White Men Get Rich from Legal Pot, Black Men Stay in Prison"

Ever since Colorado and Washington made the unprecedented move to legalize recreational pot last year, excitement and stories of unfettered success have billowed into the air. Colorado's marijuana tax revenue far exceeded expectations, bringing a whopping $185 million [3] to the state, and tourists are lining up to taste the budding culture (pun intended). Several other states are now looking to follow suit and legalize.

But the ramifications of this momentous shift are left unaddressed. When you flick on the TV to a segment about the flowering pot market in Colorado, you'll find that the faces of the movement are primarily white and male. Meanwhile, many of the more than 210,000 people [4] who were arrested for marijuana possession in Colorado between 1986 and 2010 according to a report from the Marijuana Arrest Research Project, remain behind bars. Thousands of black men and boys still sit in prisons for possession of the very plant that's making those white guys on TV rich.

“In many ways the imagery doesn't sit right,” said Michelle Alexander, associate professor of law at Ohio State University and author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness [5] in a public conversation [6] on March 6 with Asha Bandele of the Drug Policy Alliance [7]. “Here are white men poised to run big marijuana businesses, dreaming of cashing in big—big money, big businesses selling weed—after 40 years of impoverished black kids getting prison time for selling weed, and their families and futures destroyed. Now, white men are planning to get rich doing precisely the same thing?”
...
Alexander said for 40 years poor communities of color have experienced the wrath of the war on drugs.
...


and

"A few days later, the corner is empty. The reason is a Ford SUV, painted black, blue, and white, idling at the curb a few feet away; a police officer’s arm hangs out the window as he surveys the faces passing by. A few hours later he is gone, and the crowd is back. Mostly, the crowd is black. Mostly, the cops who will bust them are white. Mostly, on the corner it’s hard to see how anything was changed by a movement that aimed to change everything."

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/05/legal-pot-and-the-black-market/481506/

and

"The Unbearable Whiteness of Marijuana Legalization
Marijuana's legal, but people of color are still disproportionately criminalized and incarcerated for drug use."

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/unbearable-whiteness-legalization



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