The Cannabis Industry Forgot Who Built It

Main Hemp Patriot
12 Min Read

Legal cannabis promised legitimacy. Instead, many of the people who carried the culture through prohibition are being priced, regulated, and pushed out of the industry they helped build.

I am beyond angry. A lot of us are. People who have lived this industry are not slightly disappointed. Many of us are livid because cannabis is becoming exactly what we feared in America: legal enough for the government to collect from, expensive enough to push small businesses out, and controlled enough to reward the people who showed up after the danger passed.

America made room for cannabis before it made room for the people who built it. That is the part that still pisses me off. The biggest slap in the face is not just the law. It is the cultural disconnect itself.

There is a real divide in cannabis now. On one side are the people who risked their lives and freedom for the plant. They understood what cannabis meant before clean packaging and investor decks showed up. On the other side is a new generation of legal cannabis users and companies that only know the plant after the door opened.

I do not blame people for coming through the legal door. That is the door now. But let’s be honest about what happened.

All this “weed for the people” and “weed for the culture” talk starts to sound insulting when it comes from people who stayed away from cannabis until there was a safe way to make money from it. They stayed away when the cost of cannabis could be your freedom, your children, or your life during a robbery or turf dispute. Then they showed up when the danger dropped, befriended innovators, extracted the knowledge, and pushed some of those same people out once the value was clear.

And what were those people supposed to do, sue from the shadows? Meanwhile, many of the people who carried the real risk are still being treated like guests in a house they helped build. In real life, the line between legal and traditional cannabis is getting harder to see. Consumers know it. Operators know it. The culture knows it. But the government still talks about cannabis like it causes normal people to turn into murderers, criminals, and addicts.

In reality, I would argue cannabis turns more people into pacifists than criminals.

For people like me, cannabis was not a political talking point. It was life. It was how we found each other, trusted each other, and fed our families around a plant the government kept lying about. The first time I understood that was not in a boardroom. It was on the streets of Los Angeles, where people like me were not called operators.

We got called drug dealers.

I was naïve enough to think that President Obama admitting he inhaled meant the lying was almost over.

I was wrong.

Cannabis in California was still illegal enough to ruin your life, but I was young and dumb enough to believe being faster and smarter than the law could get me out of almost anything. Cannabis was not some idea people like me debated from a safe distance. It was rent, daily pressure, and survival.

We sold it before “legacy operator” became a respectable label. Police pressure was not something people discussed on panels. Getting caught could ruin your life before you had a chance to build one.

Photo courtesy of GRAS GRÜN via Unsplash

The Market Was Already There

The government did not create the cannabis market. It found one already alive and put a toll booth in front of it. That is the story people are starting to forget. The demand, culture, and people who knew the plant were already here. Legalization did not create value. It created a legal price of entry. A lot of us paid the entrance fee because a license felt like proof we were finally legitimate. Instead of watching for police lights, we became business owners watching fine print, hoping the next rule did not turn yesterday’s plan into tomorrow’s problem.

Legalization did not remove the pressure. It made the pressure more expensive. The old market was never as simple as people make it sound. Some people moved with discipline and respect. Some people cut corners and made life harder for everybody trying to do it right.

Both things are true. But the legal market still likes a clean villain. It acts like everyone without a license was the problem, when the truth is more uncomfortable.

I saw that same thing in prerolls. I built Puro during the shift from Prop 215 to Prop 64 because I saw a category that needed innovation if cannabis was ever going to become a respectable industry. Prerolls were everywhere, but most were packed with trim, mold, and flower nobody wanted to show in a jar.

That bothered me because I respected the plant in its purest form. People act like the legal industry invented innovation. It did not. A lot of that knowledge came from real risks, blowing up homes, trying to perfect BHO, or scorching concentrates with the first rosin presses made from hair straighteners.

Corporate America did not discover cannabis. It discovered value that other people had already created under pressure.

The Price Of Legitimacy

The country already lives with cannabis. The government is still acting confused. That is why federal progress can feel strange from the ground. When Washington moves an inch, people outside the industry expect operators to clap. But operators do not run businesses inside press releases. They wake up facing the same banks, landlords, and insurers that shaped their decisions yesterday.

Schedule III may finally admit what the culture already knew: cannabis has medical value. But the industry does not become free because Washington changed the category. Adult-use operators are still stuck in the same federal gray area. Interstate commerce does not open overnight. A state license still does not erase the federal shadow.

Progress with a leash on it is still a leash.

And the leash is not the same size for everybody.

Large operators can be in the room while the conversation is happening. Small operators usually hear about it when the bill shows up. Cannabis has entered the influence machine.

Photo courtesy of CRYSTALWEED cannabis via Unsplash

The New Pressure Looks Cleaner

The old pressure was easier to recognize: police lights, raids, court dates, shootouts. The new pressure comes dressed like business. The system does not have to raid you anymore. One labeling change can turn tens of thousands of dollars of paid packaging into trash overnight.

That is how bureaucracy picks winners. It rewards whoever can survive the mistake. I saw the same thing with capital in 2025. The money did not disappear because cannabis lost value. It pulled back because nobody wanted to guess how long uncertainty would last.

In investor rooms, nobody wanted the dream version anymore. They wanted to know if the business could survive the rules as they existed that morning. That is how federal uncertainty does its damage. It lets everybody sound responsible while the operator loses time, cash, and leverage. A lender asks for one more answer. An investor waits one more quarter. By the time everyone is done being careful, the operator is weak enough to become somebody else’s opportunity.

That is the part people leave out when they sell legalization like a clean win. The system does not have to tell small operators to leave. It can just make staying too expensive.

Survival Is Not Legalization

The most insulting part is still the character judgment. People talk about cannabis consumers and businesses like we do not have families, employees, payrolls, and communities watching us.

Alcohol gets the benefit of the doubt in America. Cannabis does not. Alcohol can sit at dinner tables, business events, and family parties without having to explain itself. Cannabis can be licensed, tested, tracked, taxed, and still get treated like it is one mistake away from proving the critics right.

Serious operators are not asking for cannabis to live without rules. Anything people consume should have standards. The issue is that cannabis can follow the rules and still pay a penalty for old suspicion. That suspicion is expensive. It shows up in rent, insurance, banking, contracts, and the constant need to prove you belong before you even get a chance to build momentum.

Cannabis does not need another speech. Operators need stable ground. The thing that wipes you out is not always a disaster. Sometimes it is one sentence in a lease or a tax bill that shows up before the cash does.

That is survival mode. Not legalization. Legalization was supposed to open the industry. Instead, it permitted too many operators to enter and then made staying too expensive. An industry built on arrests should not become an industry where only the protected survive.

Call it what it is: the same old punishment, dressed better. If the people who carried the risk are still fighting to stay in the industry they helped create, who is legalization actually serving?

This article is from an external, unpaid contributor. It does not represent High Times’ reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.

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