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Will Success Spoil Cheech & Chong? Of Course (1980)

Published
2 days agoon

Original publication: August of 1980.
Who was that sinister, torpedolke figure seen herding Richard “Cheech” Marin and Tommy Chong into a glossy, opium-black limousine on fashionable Sepulveda Boulevard? Stunned onlookers, witnessing the evident abduction, set all Tinsel Town abuzz with rumors. Was it a Mexico City publishing firm’s hit man, contracted to bump off the hypercreative twosome for appropriating the traditional Latin American photonovella format for their new Jove book, Cheech and Chong’s Next Movie, based on their new Universal movie of the same name? Was it possibly the person to whom the title of their new Warner Brothers comedy album, Let’s Make a New Dope Deal, was originally addressed, before the dope in question got hijacked between Oaxaca and Marin County? Or was it one of the Killers, who performed the Mark Davis music for the Next Movie soundtrack album, reverting to type? Traffic stopped all along the street of dreams as the ominous limo sped away, carrying the fabled zonk-comedy duo off to who knew where? The river? The ocean? Forest Lawn? Philadelphia?
At last it can be none of the revealed: above! Actually, it was former High Times editor Ed Dwyer (currently starring high on the masthead at glamorous Oui magazine), just taking his old pals Cheech and Chong outfor a few joints and a raft of tacos. They bullshitted about old times, like in 71 when Tommy was running a topless burlesque joint in Vancouver, and Cheech came in one day by way of evading the U.S. draft and chasing some pussy, and iá been uphill ever since. Sometime in the middle of it all, Dwyer remembered to switch on the tape recorder, and when we played it back, this is what it said to us. You go figure it out.
High Times: Cheech and Chong’s Next Mo-uie hits the theaters this month. Your second movie already. The burning question now on the lips of millions of Cheech and Chong fans.. .the thousands who got high and went to your live shows, who got high and listened to your albums .. .the millions who get high now and go to your movies____What we all want to know now is-^what die hell are you doing in Hollywood? Did you financially sell out on us, you sly fuckers?
Chong: Absolutely. Total corruption.
Cheech: Next question? We’re in a rush, we gotta go audition 600 blond bathing beauties from central casting for the big Sodom and Gomorrah scene in our next flick.
High Times: Your next flick’s a Biblical epic?
Chong: Fuck knows, man. So far we just know it’ll have plenty of drugs, loud rock music and beautiful women.
Cheech: And a message. Real deep, heavy social-comment message. It 11 be in there somewhere.
High Times: But you can’t give us a hint what it’s about?
Chong: No, see, we won’t know ourselves until we’re done with it. Like the last flick, Up In Smoke, the one we did with Paramount, we wound up improvising most of it right on the set. We had to.
High Times: You guys don’t go in with a script when you do a movie?
Cheech: Do you go in with a script when you get laid? I mean, suppose the script you go in with calls for lots of cocaine and a rubber duck and a Ping-Pong paddle, and then when you get down with the lady you both just feel like a six-pack and a shower stall? Same thing with movies exactly.
Chong: Yeah, we made that mistake with our first movie; we went in with a whole script. And the studio biggies said change this, fuck that, do some other damn thing. So we rewrote the script and made it better\ and they loved it.
Cheech: Then when we went in to make the movie we just said fuck it, bum the script. And we just shot what we felt like doing, and now we’re big Hollywood stars.
High Times: So, are you trying to tell us that you hang out now with other big stars like Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman?
Cheech: Not if they can avoid us.
Chong: Being a star, it’s funny. We go to parties and stuff and there’ll be people there like Ringo Starr, Avery Schreiber and us. Everybody kind of waves and raps a little—but nobody goes out of their way, you know, to really meet each other, get it on big. Everybody’s at the same level, everyone’s respecting other people’s privacy and guarding their own. It’s kinda nice, no horseshit at all in it.
Cheech: The fact is, maybe you don’t zoant to really get to know a lot of these people. They’re your stars, you’ve seen them do great stuff, you expea them to be like that in person. And then you meet some guy you’ve always thought was great shit, because you admire his work—and he turns out to be a whole bundle of insecurities, and he’s nervous as hell. Or maybe it’s somebody like Jane Fonda or Bo Derek, and when you get up close she’s got halitosis. Jeez, do you want that to happen to your fantasies?
High Times: So you’re not star struck, huh?
Chong: I’m in love with the town. I’ve been in love with Hollywood since I was a little kid, you know, growing up in Canada and watching every movie that came to town. And now I’m here, and it’s a real place. There really is a Pine Street, Grauman’s Chinese Theater, Musso Hank’s. Every time we go to the Brown Derby it’s like being a part of most other people’s fantasy and nostalgia trips.
Cheech: The Brown Derby, yeah. This is where those old actors used to get drunk and throw up all over the tables, and here we are. It’s our element, man. Hollywood: party city.
Chong: More than a town it’s like a big collection of restaurants, hangout spots. You just drive from restaurant to restaurant and hang out, party till you’re sick. And they’re always changing. The cook in your favorite joint quits and starts his own place, so you shift over and hang out there for a while. Then his cook quits, starts his place, and there you go. That’s heaven.
High Times: Must be fun having piles of money, you sly fuckers.
Chong: Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it, man. I enjoy what I’m doing now, I mean, I really look forward to it. This morning I was on the freeway in my Comiche with the top down, going to the studio to meet with the vice-president. I was supposed to meet him yesterday, but I put it off till today when I don’t have anything better to do. And I felt pretty fucking good about the whole thing, you dig?
High Times: It’s true then, you sly fuckers. Success has spoiled Cheech and Chong.
Cheech: Hey, it’s good for you, keeps you on your toes. It’s a lot like dope dealing. I was reading in HIGH TIMES about this big grass dealer, he had just suitcases full of dollar bills and didn’t know what to do with them. Because how do you spend like a hundred grand without being conspicuous about it? In show biz it’s even more awkward. When you make it, you got millions and everybody in the world knows about it. And if you don’t keep on top of it, there are a lot of crafty mothers out there who can take it off you so quick it’ll make your head spin.
High Times: What are you guys worth all together? Bottom line figure.
Cheech: Well, let’s work it out. What’s a movie budget, five million? Takes two months to shoot and then maybe four months to wrangle it all out—six months, tops. Five million for six months, that’s, urn, two and a half into…
Chong: A little less than a million a month. Thirty days into that is around $300,000 a day, eight hours a day is 16 into $300,000… Hell, we pull down something like $20,000 an hour. Divide that by 60, it’s—hey, wait a minute—that’s only $3,000.
Cheech: Three lousy grand a minute? Shit, that’s 50 fucking dollars a second! Stone ripoff, man. What can you do with a lousy 50 dollars these days? We’re getting burned, Tommy.
High Times: I take it you’re not nostalgic for the days when you were broke and struggling.
Chong: Listen, I can have the old days back any time I want them. I was bom poor, grew up poor, and you can get off on that, too. Like, I was living in Seattle once with a girl who was on welfare. She had like four, five kids. And just nearly every single night we’d get stoned and go and party the hell out of the whole neighborhood. Every night was party night because there was nobody who had to get up to go to work in the morning. The children were being fed, and everybody was just having a great time.
Cheech: A lot of rich people really get fucked up behind it, too. I mean, I’ve been to parties full of rich people who were so flicking closed up and scared of being real—because they think they’re gonna get ripped off for bread if they open up and give themselves away—that, fuck, you really wanted to dose the punch with Ex-Lax, so maybe it’d get them to walking around and talking to each other.
High Times: You’re pushing Ex-Lax now, Cheech?
Cheech: No, but Tommy smuggles marijuana. He moves it into Mexico.
High Times: You move grass into Mexico?
Chong: It was just those Hawaiian buds you gave us to get this interview. I rolled ’em in a sock and took ’em down and did just a little every day we were in Puerto Vallarta. Hawaiian dope, Mexican sunsets—it was a real Technicolor, Cinemascope week, great week. And then on the way back this Customs guy recognizes us, Cheech and Chong, the dope celebrities, and he gets all wise-ass and smirking. “I really should go through your stuff, y’know.” And I tell him, “It’s cool, we’re clean in this direction. We’ve got a new scam, we smuggle it m.” And he cracked up. He thought it was a fucking joke.
Cheech: There was a heavy nosh factor in those buds, man. I ate like a fucking pig. But that’s the great thing about Mexico, you can eat all you want because sooner or later you’re going to get that special disease. Then you go on the Mexican diet. It’s like a law of nature, a territorial imperative: Whatever you eat in Mexico, gringo, you are going to leave there. Guacamole, mangoes, chili, tacos, chuchufritos—eat yourself silly and don’t worry, because the Mexican diet will definitely take care of it. Beats hell out of the Scarsdale diet.
Chong: And on those Hawaiian buds, even that part was okay. I mean it wasn’t no fucking picnic, but it was nicer than usual. Those Hawaiian growers know their shit, they really do.
High Times: Would you say this Hawaiian’s the best of the new domestic stuff? How do you think it compares with like Humboldt County second-generation, Thai sinse or Haze Brothers Purple Haze?
Cheech: That’s your show biz, man, not ours. We don’t discriminate about dope. If it gets you off it’s good, and it always gets us off.
Chong: The best dope in the whole world is what you’ve got on you, any time you’ve got some. If there’s just a few skinny little joints of green backyard homegrown around, and you haven’t had any dope in a week, and you can’t afford to eat and you can’t pay the rent, then that homegrown is the best fucking dope in the whole world. You get up on it, and you score a Twinkie, and that’s the best fucking Twinkie in the world.
Cheech: Oh, then there’s that little green bush you grow yourself, and you tease it and trim it, spoil the hell out of it and coax it up to two feet, then three feet, five feet—and then it’s just starting to bud out a little, just beginning to get all sexy, and blam! there’s a fucking early frost and it dies and you lose a whole growing cycle and have to start all over again. But finally you get a good big green healthy bush with buds all over, enough for you to smoke all year and still have plenty to give your friends. Now, that there is awful good dope.
Chong: No, no, wait. There’s even better dope than that, man. It’s when you’re flat out, your neighborhood dealer’s being held hostage in Bogota or something, and you ain’t got no fucking dope, you don’t know where to get no fucking dope, and you run into some guy on the street and he hands you a joint for nothing. There’s just no way you can ever get better dope than that. Not ever.
High Times: Okay, you sly fuckers, you passed the litmus test. This whole interview was just a lead-up to that last question, to test if you really had been spoiled by success. But you answered it just like you would’ve a year ago, so now you get a reward. It just so happens, in the glove compartment of this Rolls we got a prerolled lid of Shungnak Thimderfuck, grown by Eskimos up north of the Arctic Circle. Hey Julio, pull in at the next taco stand and order us all a raft of everything they got. It’s party time.
Chong: That really is the best part about being rich. There never isn’t any dope around.
Cheech: About the best part of being famous is, there’s always people around like Dwyer who want to give you dope.

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.
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Marijuana Users In Iowa Are Engaged And Active Citizens, Survey Shows—Smashing ‘Lazy Stoner’ Stereotypes

Published
51 minutes agoon
July 6, 2025
“Many of today’s cannabis consumers are ‘middle American’ adults, employed, own a home, vote regularly, pay their taxes and are involved in their communities.”
By Bob Sillick, Iowa Capital Dispatch
For many years, cannabis users were characterized as a cult of stoners: young, often unemployed, party animals. That sector still exists in some form, however, many of today’s cannabis consumers are “middle American” adults, employed, own a home, vote regularly, pay their taxes and are involved in their communities.
That is the general profile of adult cannabis consumers across the country and in Des Moines, according to a recent survey by Consumer Research Around Cannabis/The Media Audit.
The Media Audit, the parent company of Consumer Research Around Cannabis, is an international research company serving 80+ local markets in the U.S. and Canada for more than 20 years. It started gathering data about cannabis use and attitudes in 2016.
Although the sale of adult recreational cannabis is illegal in Iowa, the survey found 16.2 percent of all adults age 18+ in Des Moines said they used or bought cannabis during the past month, or the statistical equivalent of approximately 140,000 adults.
The smallest percentage in the following table, monthly usage in Des Moines, is still substantial—and suggests a pent-up market. Unleashing the recreational cannabis market in Des Moines and all of Iowa would likely generate jobs and significant taxes for the state—money now escaping across the borders.
The survey data from Des Moines and 42 other markets was aggregated and showed 24.1 percent of adults 18+ used or bought cannabis during the past month. (Local factors affect these percentages and comparisons.)
For 15 years, Jonathan Caulkins, H. Guyford Stever professor of operations research and public policy at Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College, has been studying cannabis legalization. He is also the author of several books on the topic and a member of the Commission on the North American Opioid Crisis.
Caulkins’s research fine-tunes the results of the Des Moines survey from Consumer Research Around Cannabis.
“From 1992 through 2023, the most recent year for which we have released data, the trend has been towards an enormous increase in the number of people who are using cannabis daily or near daily. They account for 80 percent of recreational cannabis sales. They dominate the market,” Caulkins said.
In states like Iowa that haven’t legalized adult recreational cannabis, Caulkins expects when they do, the middle of the market will be blue-collar high-school graduates, adults 25–40 who are employed but not affluent.
He has also seen a gender trend as more states allow the sale of recreational cannabis.
“As cannabis has become more legal, the male/female use gap has become noticeably smaller. When it was an illegal action or a risky action, there was a much bigger gender gap, but that gap is declining. Use by men is increasing with legalization, use by women is increasing even more,” he said.
Cannabis consumers in Des Moines also align with the 43-market survey when comparing gender and income. Millennials at 42.3 percent and Gen Xers at 35.5 percent account for three-quarters of the adult cannabis consumers in Des Moines who bought or used cannabis during the past month. These percentages are slightly more than the 43-market survey at 41.5 percent and 28.2 percent, respectively. The 33.8 percent of cannabis consumers in Des Moines with household incomes of $35,000 to $75,000 is also slightly more than the 43-market survey at 29.6 percent.
The Consumer Research Around Cannabis data also profiles cannabis consumers at a more granular level. The “household profile” category shows which three were the largest purchasers or users of cannabis during the past year, or 33.8 percent collectively.
- Affluent, no children at home: $75,000+ household income
- Affluent white-collar worker: Family income $100,000+
- Affluent Boomers: $100,000+ household income
Comparing cannabis purchasers and users in Des Moines with the 43-market survey by their employment status and occupation reveals some contrasts. The data indicates that many in Des Moines are working and contributing to the local economy.
Voting is a meaningful measure of civic responsibility. Millennials at 22 percent, Gen Xers at 54.4 percent and Baby Boomers at 12 percent who purchased or used cannabis during the past month voted in local, state and national elections, compared to 33 percent, 32.1 percent and 24.6 percent, respectively, in the 43-market aggregate survey.
This particular data point may have ramifications for future legislative efforts to legalize adult recreational cannabis sales in Iowa. While the Iowa Legislature’s majority Republicans have rebuffed Democrats’ proposals to legalize recreational marijuana, advocates suggest time may be on their side if an increasing body of citizens support legalization with their votes.
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Here’s Where To Buy Legal Recreational Marijuana In Delaware Next Month

Published
2 hours agoon
July 6, 2025
All seven medical marijuana operators have converted to adult-use cannabis sales, with over 10 locations, which will be up and running in August.
By Brianna Hill, Spotlight Delaware
Delaware will begin recreational marijuana sales on August 1, state officials announced Tuesday, putting the first definitive date on the start of a long-awaited rollout for the $280 million industry.
Customers on that first day will be heading to existing medical marijuana businesses though, as the burgeoning legal market has yet to develop the dozens of new businesses licensed for recreational-only sales.
That decision has already sparked criticism from advocates and residents, who say it puts other businesses at an unfair disadvantage.
For years, medical marijuana dispensaries have denied that they sought the handful of licenses available at the time in order to get a first-adopter advantage for the eventual recreational market. But now that is occurring.
“The existing medical marijuana dispensaries lobbied for less competition and to begin sales before new businesses, and now, with the [Office of the Marijuana Commissioner]-caused delays, they will end up with first sales and absolutely no competition,” Zoë Patchell, president of the Delaware Cannabis Advocacy Network, which advocated for years for legalization, wrote in a Facebook post.
Delaware medical marijuana dispensaries

Jacob Owens, Spotlight Delaware / Source: Delaware Office of the Marijuana Commissioner / Created with Datawrapper
- First State Compassion–Wilmington, 37 Germay Drive, Wilmington http://firststatecompassion.com
- First State Compassion–Lewes, 12000 Old Vine Blvd., Unit 102, Lewes
- http://firststatecompassion.com
- Fresh Cannabis, 635 N. Dupont Blvd., Milford
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 200 S. DuPont Blvd., Smyrna
- https://col-carede.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 5606 Concord Pike, Wilmington
- https://col-carede.com/
- Columbia Care Delaware, 36725 Bayside Outlet Drive, Suite 760, Rehoboth Beach
- https://col-carede.com/
- Field Supply, 4543 Kirkwood Highway, Wilmington
- https://thefieldsupply.com
- Fresh Cannabis, 800 Ogletown Road, Newark
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- Fresh Cannabis, 22983 Sussex Highway, Seaford
- https://freshdelaware.com/
- The Farm, 105 Irish Hill Road, Felton
- https://www.thefarmde.com
- The Farm, 240 S. Dupont Highway, New Castle
- https://www.thefarmde.com
- Best Buds, 516 Jefferic Blvd., Dover
- https://www.bestbuds.com
- Best Buds, 23 Georgetown Plaza, Georgetown
- https://bestbuds.com
Delaware’s adult-use marijuana industry, which was legalized in 2023, allowed for 125 licensees to operate throughout the state across cultivation, manufacturing, testing and retail sales. The operators were chosen at the end of last year through a lottery system that saw more than 1,200 individuals apply.
Entering the licensing lottery alone required individuals to submit detailed applications and fees. Most application fees cost $5,000, with the active license itself costing up to $10,000.
Medical marijuana operators seeking to enter the recreational market were required to pay steep conversion fees—$100,000 for retail or manufacturing licenses and $200,000 for cultivation.
The state used the revenue to create a $4 million reimbursement fund for social equity applicants, defined as individuals with prior marijuana-related convictions or those from communities disproportionately impacted by prior marijuana enforcement.
Since March, business operators have been awaiting clarity from the Office of the Marijuana Commissioner (OMC), the state office in charge of regulating the industry, on when sales could legally begin.
The market’s launch was originally slated for April but faced delays after the state failed to secure FBI approval to conduct background checks on licensees.
As of June 18, 43 individuals have cleared their background checks, according to OMC spokeswoman Keila Montalvo. The office did not respond to requests for information on how many conditional licenses have been issued.
Even as an official date is set, state lawmakers are still trying to revise the law that made recreational sales legal.
The law permitted municipalities to prohibit marijuana businesses from their jurisdictions and gave counties broad authority to dictate where they could locate, but those allowances have led a third of Delaware towns and cities to opt out of allowing marijuana shops and Sussex County to place significant restrictions on locations.
A bill to lessen those restrictions has passed both the House and Senate and now awaits consideration from Gov. Matt Meyer (D).
All seven medical marijuana operators have converted to adult-use cannabis sales, with over 10 locations, which will be up and running in August.
Given the ongoing barriers faced by other licensees, including strict local zoning rules, delayed funding for social equity applicants and pending conditional license approvals, the early start for medical marijuana businesses could give them a major head start in shaping the market.
“Our focus is on building a safe, equitable, and accountable marijuana market that delivers real benefits to Delawareans. We will continue to issue conditional licenses to previously selected applicants to ensure they can begin operations once active,” Joshua Sanderlin, Delaware’s new marijuana commissioner, said in a statement.
This story was first published by Spotlight Delaware.
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Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

Nowadays, people tend to associate the cannabis plant with Mexico, and for good reason. For decades, narcos smuggled their harvests into the United States and Europe. Along with California, Mexico is known to produce some of the finest cannabis in the world. The states of Sinaloa, Nayarit, Jalisco, Michoacán, Guerrero, Oaxaca, Chihuahua, Sonora, and Durango—where the largest farms are located—all have climates that are perfect for cultivating cannabis: year-round temperature ranging between 70 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit, with cool, long nights and low humidity.
But long before cannabis was introduced to—and became synonymous with—the New World, it was being cultivated in the lands of Central Asia. Initially, though, the cannabis or hemp plant was grown not for its leaves but for its stems, which could be processed into a strong and durable rope.
Excavations reveal that humans have been using hemp rope since the Neolithic age. The earliest evidence for burning cannabis, meanwhile, dates back to 3,500 BC, and is attributed to the Kurgans of modern-day Romania. This Proto-Indo-European tribe probably burned the plant as part of their rituals and ceremonies, a practice that spread eastward as its practitioners migrated. Why the Kurgans burned cannabis is difficult to say. They may well have discovered the plant’s psychoactive properties by accident, only to find that the smoke heightened their connection with all things spiritual.
The earliest evidence for smoking cannabis comes from the Pamir Mountains in western China. There, in 2500-year-old tombs, researchers discovered THC residue inside the burners of charred pipes that were probably used for funerary rites. (Similar pipes, dated to the 12th century BC, were later found in Ethiopia, left there by a separate culture). These devices, compared to pyres, would have yielded a much stronger high. Given their placement inside a crypt, however, it’s safe to say they were used only ceremonially, not recreationally.
Some scholars have argued that cannabis was an important ingredient of soma, a ritual drink concocted by the Vedic Indo-Aryans of northern India. Described in the Rigveda, a collection of ancient Sanskrit hymns, soma was made by extracting juice from an unknown plant. When taken in small doses, soma was reported to induce a feeling of euphoria. In higher doses, it caused people to see hallucinations and lose their sense of time. All three of these effects have been ascribed to cannabis, but even if cannabis was not the main ingredient of soma, it may have been combined with psychedelics such as psilocybin, a.k.a. magic mushrooms.
Aside from rope, cannabis was most often processed into medicine. When the Hindus of India came down with a case of “hot breath of the gods,” healers treated the illness with cannabis smoke. The logic behind this treatment was not exactly scientific; cannabis was thought to possess healing powers because it was the favorite food of the supreme godhead Shiva, also called “Lord of Bhang.” In reality, cannabis would have been able to reduce fevers because its active ingredient, THC, works on the hypothalamus to lower body temperature.
The Assyrians used cannabis not in a medical but in a religious context, burning it in their temples to release an aroma that supposedly appeased their gods. Sources from the region refer to cannabis as qunubu, providing a possible origin for the word we use today. The Assyrian Empire was conceived in the 21st century BC and lasted until the 7th. During this time, it engulfed much of modern-day Iraq as well as parts of Iran, Kuwait, Syria and Turkey. Through trade and conquest, Assyrian traditions spread to neighboring societies, including the Dacians, Thracians and Scythians, the latter of which were among the first to consume cannabis in a distinctly recreational manner.
The Scythians were part of a Central Asian nomadic culture that flourished from 900 to around 200 BC. Originating in northern Siberia, Scythian tribes settled as far as the shores of the Black Sea, where they came into contact with the ancient Greeks. When Scythians died, their friends and family burned hemp inside tents to commemorate their passing. While the Kurgans and Assyrians burned their cannabis out in the open or in large indoor spaces, the Scythians were essentially hotboxing themselves at every funeral. At least, that’s the image we receive from the historian Herodotus, who wrote that “the Scythians enjoy [the hemp smoke] so much that they would howl with pleasure.” And so, the primary purpose of this ritual was to send off the dead; it clearly also served to entertain the living.
Herodotus did not live among the Scythians, but his observations seem to have been confirmed by excavations. Archeologists discovered fossilized hemp seeds at a Scythian camp in western Mongolia that were left there between the 5th and 2nd century BC.
Romans, too, consumed cannabis for their own pleasure, but not in the way you might expect. Like many societies of classical antiquity, they harvested the plant for its seeds rather than its leaves, which were discarded as a waste product. When grounded, the seeds were used in medicine. When fried, they were served up as delicacies during lavish dinner parties. Roman chefs mentioned cannabis seeds in the same breath as caviar and cakes. Galen, the famous Roman physician, wrote that they were consumed “to stimulate an appetite for drinking.” Nowadays, it’s the seeds—not the leaves—that are considered useless. However, the Romans believed they, too, had some intoxicating properties; Galen adds that, when consumed in large amounts, the seeds would send people into a “warm and toxic vapor.”
Cannabis was so widely consumed in classical antiquity that people raised the same questions and concerns we are debating today. The Greek physician Pedanius Dioscorides, for instance, wrote that the plant’s spherical seeds, “when eaten in excess, diminish sexual potency.” Modern-day cannabis users are all too aware of the connection, even if they don’t eat seeds. As stated by Healthline, cannabis is “often associated with side effects that may affect sexual health, including erectile dysfunction.” Similar to some psychedelics, the general sense of euphoria generated by cannabis may counteract or override the reception of sexual stimuli.
Let’s skip forward a bit. Recreational smoking became especially popular after the 9th century AD. In the Middle East and Western Asia, the followers of Islam took up the habit for the simple but somewhat amusing reason that their holy scripture, the Quran, forbade the consumption of alcohol and various other intoxicating substances. Fortunately for Muslim stoners, the Quran did not say anything about weed. Of course, they smoked not just any weed, but hashish.
Skipping forward again, this time to the 16th century—the century that cannabis arrived in the New World, and for the sole purpose of making rope, no less. Actually, Americans did not start smoking weed until about one hundred years ago, when Mexican immigrants entered the country to seek refuge from the Mexican Revolution. For decades, the U.S. government turned a blind eye on this harmless, multicultural and age-old practice. However, this changed during the Great Depression, when Washington redirected the anger of unemployed workers to their Mexican brethren. After millennia of peaceful consumption, cannabis was suddenly decried as an “evil weed,” and, in 1937, the U.S. became the first country in the world to criminalize cannabis on a national level.
The rest, at this point in time, has now become history as well.
Original publication: 2022

Author: mscannabiz.com
MScannaBIZ for all you Mississippi Cannabis News and Information.

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