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Drug Testing Lobby Sues Over Schedule III as Illinois Signs Major Cannabis Law Changes

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On the June 14 (Flag Day) episode of Cannabis Legalization News, the hosts preview a lead story about the National Drug and Alcohol Screening Association suing to pause federal cannabis rescheduling to Schedule III, arguing economic harm as federal marijuana trafficking prosecutions have dropped about 95%. 

They discuss Illinois’ newly signed SB 3222, described as the biggest change to Illinois cannabis laws in six years, including requiring ID checks for hemp, ending most hemp sales by November 12, doubling possession limits, expanding hours, allowing drive-through/curbside options, and increasing craft grow limits to 14,000 square feet; they note it may also help their dispute over Illinois social equity loan eligibility and discuss their dispensary operations in Pekin. 

Other topics include a possible Virginia deal to legalize sales, Rhode Island ending residency requirements, DC proposing higher medical taxes, Alabama reaching 100 patients, Maine recalls for yeast/mold, and international news from France, plus a 710 Seattle Dab Roast cannabis art event.

00:00 Welcome and Rundown
00:00 Schedule III Lawsuit
00:50 Schedule III Lawsuit Setup
01:55 DEA Registration and Dispo Plans
04:52 Drug Testing Lobby Explained
08:18 Illinois SB 3222 Signed
09:56 SB 3222 — Illinois Law
11:24 New Store Ops and 710 Promo
13:45 Virginia Deal
13:45 Virginia Legal Sales Deal
15:15 Rescheduling and Next Green Rush
18:26 Hemp Crackdown and THCA Debate
18:40 Hemp Crackdown
20:32 Federal Rules and Enforcement Ahead
21:17 AI Employees Debate
21:59 Marijuana Laws Shift
22:25 Green Lab Blog Plug
23:32 Rhode Island Lottery Woes
23:35 Rhode Island Update
25:03 Cannabis Taxes Breakdown
26:10 Alabama Program Slow Roll
26:11 Alabama, France & International News
27:56 Recalls and Mold Testing
29:11 Data Centers and Latency
30:23 France Hemp Market Chaos
31:43 Hemp Genetics Loopholes
33:00 Missouri Genetics Lockdown
36:02 FDA Breakthrough Cannabinoid
36:22 Dispensary Grand Opening Talk
37:31 Shop Operations and Q&A
38:38 Wrap Up and Next Show

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1 SPEAKER_01: What up?

It's another episode of Canvas Legalization News coming at you

live from wherever Miggie and I are located.

It's not at 359 Court Street in Beacon, but I hear that place is

open.

If you're doing something on a Sunday in Taswell County.

We have a lead story, would you believe?

Somebody filed a suit to stop Schedule III because they were

making money on Schedule One.

The drug testers.

So the drug testers have filed suit.

That's going to be one of our lead stories.

Illinois just did something that was great, and it was now signed

into the law, so it's effective.

We have perhaps a Virginia deal.

A whole bunch of cannabis lawyers right now are in

Chicago, by the way.

I am not.

We even have international news.

France, Alabama, Rhode Island, DC.

Oh, and for the standing issue that we'll be talking about in

our lead story about the lawsuit, it's not Sam, but it's

uh I can't remember what their acronym is, but they're just

like essentially a drug testing organization that worried that

their profits will go away.

Because as weed trafficking prosecutions at the federal

level are down 95%.

So that economic harm might give them standing.

Let's do some cannabis legalization news for this flag

day, June 14th.

And if you are attending the UFC fight tonight at the White

House, I do not envy you.

What was that?

I don't envy the people that would be watching in the out.

It's 90 degrees and rain is in the forecast.

It all day seems like shit.

But yeah, how's it going?

Hey everybody.

Yeah, thanks for joining us.

It's been another week.

Still another week.

And it was quasi-legalized.

One of the cool things for Miggy and I is that we'll be able to

fill out a form here in for the dispo in Peking pretty quick

whenever Illinois gets the forms, and then we can register

with the DEA.

We'll do registration with the DEA.

Tom and Miggie register with the DEA later.

Like we'll do that as a live or kind of how we did the when we

applied to get our license.

Yeah.

Remember that one.

SPEAKER_02: That was uh fluke.

What are we gonna be able to do this now or do we have to wait

till 29th for the year?

SPEAKER_01: Oh no, the okay.

So that's SB322.

There's a lot of twos in it.

3, 2, 2, 2, 2.

But let's do that.

Uh, I think it's our second story in the stack.

It's not on the table of contents, but I slipped it in

there after the drug testing lobby and big pharma are suing

to pause Trump's rescheduling move, and that's MMJ V

international.

I know, right?

You're telling me that if you move it, our ability to drug

test people, which is how we make money, by the way, we drug

test you, that would be impacted.

And so I know you have science, but we would prefer if we could

continue drug testing people to make money.

And but then what are they attacking?

They're attacking the ultravirase, they're attacking

that now.

I guess that June 29th hearing does make sense in this instance

now.

But because what they've done so far is the the acting attorney

general, who may be voted in and be the attorney general, uh,

issued something from the hip where he just says that we're

getting in compliance with our treaty obligations or

international treaty obligations, and that's why I

don't need to do the process that will be on the 29th, that

is for the rest of Schedule 3.

SPEAKER_02: Okay.

And again, people are gonna get mad whenever I talk about the

sparish Japan.

Well, you didn't have legalization.

Yeah, it was cool that everybody got to sell it to somebody else,

but people were still getting piss tests, and truckers didn't

have rights and all this other stuff.

If it didn't matter, these guys wouldn't be scared, right?

SPEAKER_01: Like this is happening.

And but what's the best that they're gonna be able to do?

Are they gonna get an injunction?

How much are they really being hurt?

How many drug tests have been canceled in the past month and a

half since that April 23rd order?

A few, but like Florida, no, that's you can't it's

interesting, there's definitely interesting times, and we'll

have I'm not quite able to get back to doing videos, but I

think I'll be able to get back to doing videos in the next

couple of months.

I'll do some, but for some reason, I'll be quite centric on

a particular location in Pekin, Illinois, where you're 21 or a

medical patient can make purchases of certain guts.

Hey, come on down, Taswell, can we?

Is it Taswell or Taswell?

How do they pronounce it?

Taswell.

I said Taswell, but I'm like looking at it and it's so like

yeah, Illinois has an S on, and we don't pronounce it.

Oh no, I respect it.

I respect the words.

That's funny, though.

I do like to add a uh marijuana moment headline because the

actual paperwork is so boring, right?

This is the case right here, right?

Yeah, uh perhaps.

I don't think so.

That one says that it was filed on in 2018.

Oh, you're right.

The one above it probably closer to it.

But this is that what was the what's the large acronym?

The N D A S A is the long acronym, and that sounds to not

gonna have any fun.

I'm sorry, National Drug and Alcohol Screening Association.

Yeah, you can still screen for the liquor, they get arrested

for them, Deweys, or there's always OWI.

Uh uh, then you can go screen them for their alcohol.

Like they're worried that they're not gonna have just

think about all the mandatory testing for the schedule one

stuff, right?

SPEAKER_02: Like, once this gets solidified, there will be rights

eventually that can be worked in, right?

SPEAKER_01: There'll be roles that can be shaped around the

rescheduling because right now everything's is looking for

schedule one, which is right good, not good at all, but it's

not schedule one.

It's it's gonna be very interesting at our shop.

We're gonna be like we have inventory.

The inventory is identical, right?

The inventory is identical, and then we have a medical patient

that'll come in and we file file the paperwork so that we don't

have to charge them the tax, and then we can be the medical

person patient.

That will be a completely lawful transaction.

We've we'll register with the DEA.

It's here's all our stuff, Gemini Christmas.

Take that dispensary in New Mexico that's got no vault, but

uh then somebody else behind them will come in and they're

just an adult and they will order the same thing, and that's

where we have a little sign that says all use is medical use.

You are self-prescribing this for medical purposes, and then

we just try to avoid IRC 2008 entirely.

Yeah, this these are the hurdles that we have to go through.

Somebody's commentated the screen is Jack.

I think you're looking at the wrong stream.

Switch to the other stream because we Stream Guard does

have two streams where it does the Instagram on the YouTube

too.

So we have a good YouTube, yeah.

YouTube has one, one of them looks good right now.

But if you ever do anything like this, let me do this, let me put

on the subscribe button, and so that screws it up.

And then if I take off the subscribe button, now we look

great.

And then if I put this on, oh, that also screws it up.

But they don't care because it's a nice nugget.

I still haven't gotten a chance.

We don't have a name that strange.

Sorry, guys.

We're gonna try to rebrand that retool it.

SPEAKER_02: Get back to uh the store though, because uh a lot

of people have an opinion how this cannabis business stuff

should work, really.

Uh uh, a lot of people like when we got the store now, you get a

brick and mortar, you want to say on a still location across

from the courthouse if you can, but like uh we're not done yet.

This is just starting, like it's been a three-year process, and a

lot of my family, there's congratulations.

I'm like, I don't know what the fuck you're talking about.

Like, congratulations to Tom.

Tom, all I had to do was get arrested and believe in

something.

SPEAKER_01: You know what I mean?

Now with the social community.

We also had to live where you live for five out of the past 10

years.

We had to approve all that stuff to the regulators so that they

would issue an award us to license.

And then the state had the gall to say that we were ancestral

equity and deny us a loan, which it is negatively impacting our

ability to operate the social equity business, by the way.

Uh, but this this uh next case, or it's our case, then our next

story has to do with SB 3222 being signed into law.

This happened on Friday.

Uh, this is the largest change to the Illinois cannabis laws in

six years.

Uh, I tried to get a Claude generated uh you know uh uh

article out about it and do an email blast, but I've just been

busy.

Um try.

More customers is is the focus though.

It's very very limited focus.

But um yeah, and so like this is this is big news.

And so like this this may also help our lawsuit, because Meggie

and I then sued the state of Illinois uh before I left to go

to Florida to get married, because of they said that we

weren't social equity, and by we uh the company we own.

Yeah.

The license is based off of soap equity.

SPEAKER_02: So how do if you're not gonna make it make sense?

SPEAKER_01: No, they don't want it to make sense.

But now the law is effective immediately, and they changed

certain provisions to make our license type in particular

eligible for those DCEO loans.

And some of the other applicants and winners of other licenses in

in our cohort were issued more loans.

They are way they are not near as far along as we are, and they

won't be able to get operational with the funds that were given.

But that's just if you list listen to what they were trying

to find, it was us.

But then if you read it, it's probably because you're not from

Illinois.

We'll see.

Like they didn't tell us that.

That's at least what the lawsuit's about, and then it's

it'll eventually end in something.

But the this SB322, that is huge because now, like, all hemp has

to be carded, and then the rest of the hemp is gone on November

12th, and then we can terminate our largest obligation, our

largest expense, our larger than our rent is our security guard

contract, because that can that goes over 10 grand a month if

you are open for 80 hours a week.

SPEAKER_02: And it's the one that also, or is it a separate

bill that increased the limits too and everything?

SPEAKER_01: This increased the limits.

And so, yeah, we we have that that's been published on our

Facebook page for Peacens Local Disbone Supply and double

possession limits, so it's more like the rest of the states that

are around us.

We can now be open until two in the morning, but we can't

because the local ordinance doesn't say that.

And also, you're not gonna sell anything at two in the morning.

We might even be closed Mondays.

We'll see how that plays out.

But not only that, we the craft growers they can go to 14,000

square foot immediately.

And there's numerous other changes.

For example, we can have the the city ordinance said we can't do

a drive-thru, but now the state law says we can do a drive-thru.

We can't do a drive-thru where you have 115-year-old building,

but we have an alley out back, and so we have a rear entrance.

And so that alley out back, that's gonna be our, I hope we

have to work with the city on it, but that'll be our curbside

pickup.

And so people can come through, pull around to out back, we'll

just walk it right out.

But that's gonna be Dutch Epay only, prepay online only.

Dutchy pay gets released on the 23rd, and we need to put the

screws to Dutchy.

Dutchie should be sponsoring this show, and we should have a

spot for Dutchie on it.

SPEAKER_02: Hey, Dutch, would you join us?

Matter of fact, they could take over this 420 spot that I'm

gonna be playing here in a second because it's called

action for 710.

So if you're in Washington or want to come to Washington,

there's an opportunity to get involved in shenanigans, for

lack of a better.

SPEAKER_01: But everybody loves shenanigans.

Somebody at that restaurant farmer likes shenanigans and

shenanigans past the hour.

SPEAKER_02: All right, so what's up?

SPEAKER_00: Scott with the dab roast.

We're talking about 710.

We're doing an art exhibit, but we need your art.

So we want you to send it into thedabroast at gmail.com.

We're gonna take a look at your art, and if it's something that

we feel that we'll go get some votes, we're gonna bring you up

on stage, talk about your art, give you some exposure, and if

you win enough votes, we'll give you a thousand bucks.

It's free to enter a piece of art, it's free to come to our

event.

We just have to RSVP.

So come out to 710, check out a whole bunch of people's cannabis

art.

We've had some amazing art sent in so far, and we want to see

yours.

This could be performance art, this could be live art on the

spot, but whatever you're into, send it to us, and we'd like to

put you on display.

We'd like to give you some exposure and get you involved at

our 710 event.

We've got a bunch of vendors coming out, but this is a

private party in downtown Seattle in a secret new

location.

So reach out for all the details.

We'll screen you, we'll figure out if we can invite you, show

you off a whole bunch of art, possibly with you a thousand

bucks.

710 in Seattle with the DAF roast.

This is Scott McKinley.

We'll see you there.

SPEAKER_02: Ribman's also part of those guys.

SPEAKER_01: We need that's cool.

We gotta get him to be a client of Howard East, by the way.

He needs a mute to run.

But the other thing is we should record some of that shit for our

grand opening that's coming up.

Oh, it's we're gonna we're gonna do five reels tomorrow.

Because Monday, not the busiest day of the week.

Right now, Sunday is busier than Monday, and Tuesday is busier

than Monday.

Monday is not much going on on Monday.

Again, there is a lot going on every day because you have a

facility that you're running now.

You have a store that let's try and make something happen every

day.

SPEAKER_02: And so let's hope.

Hey, we got Virginia in the news.

Lawmakers and governors have a deal and build or legalize

marijuana sales this month, supposedly, allegedly.

SPEAKER_01: Allegedly.

Yeah, that would be cool.

I really hope that because it it screwed the application

consulting business dropped off the face of the earth about a

year ago when Utah ended.

After Utah wrapped up, there's a little bit in Rhode Island.

Rhode Island got became extremely difficult to do

because it was so tied to real estate.

And then Nebraska still hasn't gone.

Like Nebraska dispensaries, it hasn't been around for that.

That's months late.

It's almost as the same amount of months late as the FDA's

approved and abonoid list.

That's four months late.

And then there was Virginia that looked like it was gonna suck

all the fame out of the country and be the next big application

around state trying to sell like the MSOs.

Here's how we do the real estate plan, control the shelves, but

still gonna try to do that if they they reach this deal.

But I I don't know what are the specifics of it.

Has it happened yet?

It hasn't.

If they put it in the budget, great, and then we can get back

to trying to help more people get licenses.

SPEAKER_02: And then again, here's my question to you

because you've been doing this for lack of a better word, the

new trap, new game when it comes to cannabis, right?

Like it used to be licit and Google.

SPEAKER_01: There used to be no license, no records.

Now it's like license and records, please.

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02: And so my question to you, because you saw like a

lot of people, there's like these different waves of green

rush, right?

SPEAKER_01: Where first I know a lot of people were afraid first

to jump in the middle, and then when we got adult use, we

answered the edge one.

He's like, Yeah, I'm the one who brought on the venture brush or

whatever, but that was bound to come and happen eventually.

SPEAKER_02: And then there was a huge rush of people buying

licenses and to amendment.

That was a huge flow of money.

Like with the rescheduling, though, do you think that's

gonna happen again?

SPEAKER_01: You know, I mean, people are pushing limits and

trying to, you know, absolutely opposite.

And so everybody's gonna go legit because they all want

credit cards out their stores, they all want financing, they

all want banking, they all want to be able to say, no, this

isn't money laundering, this is legal, this is federally

compliant, and so that's the next gold rush or green rush in

this.

It's gonna be straight up legal.

SPEAKER_02: Would this be part of the would you this Tim

Rivers, right?

SPEAKER_01: Like this is a huge huge.

I think so.

I their footprint is uniquely medical.

There's no true leaf in Illinois, there's no true leaf

out west.

I don't know, I don't know.

I guess what this kind of signifies is that there's no

true leaf that's serving the adult use market.

Or so de minimis, they would they look the other way, but

also it it shows that the the stock market is willing to list

somebody provided that they are compliant.

Are they compliant?

There's lawsuits trying to challenge with Besson.

I can't remember the guy's name, Blanche.

Blanche and Besson, they're the two whitest freaking guys, and

like that should be one of the is it Todd Besson's or Blanche's

the interme, I think god damn it.

They they they're both named Todd.

Okay, fuck this administration.

SPEAKER_02: Faceless white guy, that's Todd?

SPEAKER_01: Yeah.

SPEAKER_02: But it's a huge step.

Everybody wants to underbine this follow these big players,

right?

I have to give respect to them.

Like when people talk about, I hate the word fucking pioneer or

people who are not listening, Mark.

SPEAKER_01: There's a lot of wrong trails, blazers.

Yeah, you know what I mean?

Like in the end, once you get real rules, you're gonna have

your first players no matter what.

And the whole goal here is one day you can have homework, one

day you can like tomatoes.

I would like to call the police of what those plants on my back.

Yeah, but vodka's not tomatoes, and so poppies, cocaine, and

then so there's just plant uh what's the peyote mushrooms, and

so there's there are medicinal plants and they will be

controlled, and so and that you want the medicinal plants

controlled.

You don't want somebody eating mushrooms that are gonna get

them hurt, you don't want well, like smoking weed that's laced

with crap, and so like that regulation, because it is a

medicinal plant, you need that you can't you can't have it be

banned and have it be safe.

SPEAKER_02: I think the word control here is something that

people will like what we're looking at because even with

mushrooms, there's a mushroom emporium down here by stamina,

Paul Stameth too.

Yeah, that there are some psychedelic mushroom spores I

can buy and grow myself, right?

But I'm not gonna be selling them on a market, right?

SPEAKER_01: Like see with cannabis.

Like, why can't we just have seeds and then because fucking

gas stations and those hamsters, those hamsters were wilding out

saying THCA isn't fucking weed.

They were next story is of like kind of how the mainstream media

still doesn't get what's going on.

Congresses have cracked down, could eliminate CBD sleep aids,

THC drinks, and THC products across Michigan and Ohio.

This seems like a purchased story, but at the same time, it

came out on June 8th on this mytechnews.com.

That's a reliable source, by the way.

SPEAKER_02: And um right to but like, but you the whole thing is

it's just all these clickbait, it's all the same power gram,

right?

It's all gonna, in the end, it's going away.

I wish I had something better to say for these people.

And the only reason why I always say it's going away is just we

gotta get that bag and get the fuck out.

SPEAKER_01: Because you're about to be holding on a bunch of

products come November, not now already.

Less and less each year or each day, each coming day, but that

nobody's coming to save them.

And here's what's coming to save them legal wheat, Kim Rivers

being listed on the Nasdaq or an NSA.

And so these beverages, those probably aren't coming to be

saved unless Kim Rivers is selling them.

And then then it's all right.

You I bet we're gonna have to, and so that might be another

amendment to our statute in the coming year, would be to allow

us, and like we would get a cooler and we would stock the

five, 10 milligram.

We wouldn't call it pemp anymore.

There's places already like New Mexico who have these mounges.

Like last night, Chad Osano was talking to him, and he was

watching FIFA and a bar where they're doing dabs and they can

get five milligram drinks.

SPEAKER_02: They can actually even ask how much milligrams

they want on the drinks.

They were able to, they can they don't have they have no limits.

New Mexico is the wild card in all this, where they already

have these stuff.

SPEAKER_01: Yeah, but if they're all right, we're gonna probably

see federal regulations and then they're gonna have to get alight

to a certain extent, or not get access to the banking or

something like that.

There will be rules, like you know, and we still don't have

rules.

I think that's what's coming for 2027, 2028.

You get schedule three here, and then it would be interesting if

you have to understand the marijuana crimes in the

Controlled Substances Act are very often substance specific.

So if they start enforcing the marijuana crimes against people

that don't have the license register of the DEA, is that

gonna already happen now with him?

SPEAKER_02: People are legit selling weed and they're being

busted because they're just not compliant with the freaking

state rules, like yeah.

SPEAKER_01: But come November, they could do big raids, but I

don't think they're gonna do big raids.

I I let's see how this election goes.

But if the Democrats are running the show, I don't know, like

they could try to do big raids or whatever, but it's just gonna

be the impeachment.

It'll be like the last last time he had.

Hopefully, his first lame duck era or whatever, his first time

when he lost the midterms, we got COVID.

And so this time he's gonna lose the midterms, and we're gonna

have AI employees.

No way, we're gonna bowl up Trinity Loop.

I'm not saying the AI employees won't be good for business.

I could see the upside of the AI employees making a lot of money

for a lot of people, and maybe that'll like maybe that'll be

his win.

The AI employees, nobody gets fired, and all the companies

make percent more money.

And or or in his math, 500% more, six, nine hundred percent.

SPEAKER_02: Yeah, it's just a tool, dog.

That's all it is.

SPEAKER_01: Well, it's not a tool, it's the law.

You know, cause it's new normal or go federal marijuana traffic

prosecutions plummet following adoption of state level laws

under no shit Sherlock.

Like but then also understanding for our lead story where that

the drug testing association was suing to stop them from going

back to Schedule Three.

No shit.

When when these things change, all of a sudden the prosecutions

drop off a cliff, and I'm not having somebody pee in the cup

to test for the easiest thing in the world.

Oh, speaking of cops and peeing at this, I finally finished uh

the article that was about my green lab experience.

Good.

SPEAKER_02: If you go to our website, CLU, there's a blog

post right there.

It's my green lab uh sister to the wet lab.

And I just sit here and uh break down the experience and working

with the cops.

SPEAKER_01: And honestly, I was automating a lot of that then.

The thing's working, it looks like there's a lot of new pages

in there.

You're promoting the website.

No, it's good.

That's what we're doing today now, bro.

We'll post an article in the in the in the comments.

We have to update the prompts then for creating the show notes

to allow for the seamless interweaving of commercials and

self-promotion.

Is that what we're doing?

We're weaving, we're just weaving, baby.

Right, don't do that.

The the orange man in chief that's gonna have the people

wrestle out back tonight.

Yeah, he would say that he uses the weave.

At least we could say we got a little high.

There is a little high hat somewhere around here that's

from Cresco.

It's pretty funny.

SPEAKER_02: Little high hat?

SPEAKER_01: It just says I got a little high.

It's basically a line from Towley.

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02: Nice.

SPEAKER_01: Next story is out of Runa.

SPEAKER_02: Uh with legislation to eliminate residence

requirements.

Would this be another opportunity for you for the

consulting?

SPEAKER_01: If they restart the lottery, but uh it's like a lot

of these lotteries and stuff like that suck.

It's like Rhode Island really sucked.

It was hard, it's got a good population, but it's a dinky

little state.

And then they did not allow applications to stack on

property.

There's very few compliant properties.

You very often have to have a property, and then you want the

landlord to stop marketing this property that you're giving to

the state to say that you're gonna have, and then you're

gonna have to wait six months before you have that lottery,

and you can't you have to have that real estate locked up and

ready to go for it, and that's the only person that's allowed

to do it.

Talk about making it a millionaires contest.

Can you bleed 10 grand a month on real estate costs?

Can you bleed five grand?

How much can you bleed a month?

Dollar nine to the industry, $1.99.

It's not like yeah, but then it's that's where they're at

now.

And so then the the okay, letting out of state people in,

great.

How much of these people already lost on that real estate they

were holding?

And that was like the last that was after Utah, and then so you

after Utah was Rhode Island, and Rhode Island turned out, and

then now we're here.

Remove that guy in Texas like in the beginning of the Texas

rollout that never really got through.

SPEAKER_02: He was folding a piece of property for a year.

John, also you're thinking about like how y'all speaking about

the bleed out because DC, District of Columbia's a budget

proposal raising the taxes on their medical marijuana.

I think it's gonna be which is still low compared to most

things.

SPEAKER_01: Yeah, ours is we got three percent at the local

level, we got three percent at the county level, we got all the

sales tax that you want too, and then buddy, yeah, taxes based on

THC.

And so yeah, we have if it's more than 35%, high tax.

If it's less than 35%, it's 10%, it's lower tax.

And if it's an edible, it's a different tax.

And there's just too much tax.

And so we actually tax by THC percentages, which is why our

vapes are more expensive than Michigan vapes.

SPEAKER_02: Sure, you know who ends up argument?

Talking to accountants.

Like there's no reason to do that.

Sort of the vision of the uh the taxing for the flour, but

because each state's different too.

I think in here, Washa State, it's just a flat, you know,

processor, producer, and then of course stores either way, still

high.

SPEAKER_01: I think it's upset 35%.

Yeah, it's not good.

But what is good is in Alabama they got the first order

patients so far.

That's great.

And then talking about bleeding out while you're trying to get

your license going, Alabama is right up there, number one with

a bullet.

These people have been holding on for five years, and Alabama

and Georgia, they would be like, show us six hundred thousand

dollars.

Like, you're not gonna let you do anything except for lose that

money for the next five years.

And that's they finally got I think True Leap's got something

in Alabama too.

SPEAKER_02: That's unfortunate where you have what Alabama and

Kentucky when they opened started, it was like, yeah, they

have 500,000 or some shit in the bank.

SPEAKER_01: No, it wasn't Kentucky, it was Alabama and

Georgia.

Okay, Kentucky did it right.

Kentucky did a good job.

Arizona was what just the fifty thousand dollars players' fee,

like Arizona had some high fees, and then they did social equity,

which turned into just mad punts after that, where people are

trying to exit because you can't.

Social equity in cannabis, and then once you get into the

regulations and it's gonna be over a million bucks to get

operational.

SPEAKER_02: And again, I still got a day job.

People can assume that like all of a sudden life is golden and

this whole no, no, it's it's a uh we we no one gets paid until

the employees get paid, and then the bills get paid.

SPEAKER_00: You gotta pay the vendors, yeah.

SPEAKER_01: Everything else has to get paid first until you

figure out the bottom line, and that's unfortunate for hey, but

we've donated 11 bucks to Freedom Grow today.

SPEAKER_02: Well, yeah, dude, that's probably a half-arold

toilet paper.

You know that probably lower price, but fortunate.

It is.

SPEAKER_01: Our prison, and then they're testing.

Those guys are like, please, Yana, we gotta test these people

so we can send them back to the jail, and then they can wait for

Freedom Grow to buy them some fucking throat paper.

Get out of here.

Jesus.

SPEAKER_02: You know, I mean bad people belong in jail.

We have uh recall me.

I know a lot of somebody with concern about recalls in yeah.

Have you seen a recall for our story?

SPEAKER_01: No, we've only been open for like a week and a half.

So I don't know what kind of like newsletters are out there

or whatever.

Like the recalls in Illinois are are uh more rare than recalls in

uh well the regulation for the the edibles is just obnoxious,

and so the regulation for the edibles in Illinois is pretty

strict, and and and and there's not very many operators as well.

So um you just well, I haven't seen them because like I have

this email alert that you'll get, and so I have seen some

from Missouri, but most of them, the ones that I see are out of

Colorado, Oregon, like you know, Oklahoma, Maine, California

sometimes.

Uh but yeah, and as far as their auto testing, they found unsafe

levels of uh yeast and low, which you know you never get

that man.

There aren't any.

SPEAKER_02: The testing there's been a lot of people.

You don't test for it, it doesn't exist.

SPEAKER_01: Really?

So that's that's the secret.

I just have to not test for something, you know.

I guess I guess I'm not gonna find what I'm looking for if I

don't look for it.

Well, and again, everybody has their opinion on how a market

should be run, like uh the radiation conversation about how

sometimes uh you know the data centers or well, you know, like

we all have our you know, for a guy me, myself who loves a uh I

I don't I'm not pro-data center, but you are and I I am, yeah.

I'm just more about the light pollution and waste pollution

person.

Like I wouldn't want to live next to it.

But what yeah, I think that the data center in space is really

the way to go, but and then the data center may be like in the

oceans, uh where there's also no valleys, yeah, or in the middle

of the alkali flats in South Dakota.

But then it's just now we just have to have do you want to be

closer to the data center because the speed of light is

the speed of light, and you want to have less latency, which is

that now you really are in a 21st century like slot.

I want it 0.2 microseconds faster.

You know, you know, something only in our oh no, that they did

that's how a lot of the algorithmic trading goes down in

New York.

Like they'll try to be, or even in Chicago, they will try to be

as close to the floor as possible so they have the least

amount of latency.

Latency.

SPEAKER_02: Yeah, there's a lot of like back end stuff that

happened too, like with previous hackers and stuff.

That's another podcast.

We have France in the news international, rising adultery

cannabis in France as L C D Band Shakespeare.

SPEAKER_01: It's I think they're referring to more of the poop

suit, but it's not the actual right because they're they

haven't this is like an unregulated market.

This one I didn't read, I did not read this one.

This one was like France.

I gotta go back to work.

So they have their own version, what we have right now, and so

like I think they're going through the same makes and pains

where you know, like we had Vape Gate, like people remember

Vapegate where kids were buying with the popcorn lung, and it

was being uh that was years ago now.

That I think it might have even been before COVID.

Yeah, we have really before COVID, probably time.

Uh, because the poop soup didn't really come out until after the

CBD swan.

So back when they did the 2019 would have been the first crop

year, really big crop year for him, and then they all thought

they're gonna make a shitload of money.

And then uh 2020 comes along, and then suddenly it's COVID.

What am I gonna do with all this fucking CBD?

A little bit of chemistry, we could turn that into Delta 8,

Delta 9, and who knows what other cannabinoid we could turn

it into.

Right.

No, 100%.

And then that's definitely what led to that's what led to seeds

being bad.

Thanks, three shy from Indiana.

Thanks.

SPEAKER_02: But it is though, man.

And that's why I get upset about this hemp thing.

SPEAKER_01: Yeah, but I'm like, I don't know, they haven't

defined it genetically yet.

Keep fucking around and find out, but they haven't defined it

genetically yet.

And so you might have the seed and clone loophole indefinitely

if you don't, I mean, shut up about it.

But when you define it genetically, I mean, like to

what extreme would that like stop?

Like, I mean, defined it as soon as it's like Illinois defined it

genetically, and so like now Illinois defined it genetically.

So what kind of there?

Is it like a chemical thing?

25 to 1, like the the original hemp from the 2018 farm bill,

you know, ACBC lifter, Charlotte's Webb, the wife,

Trump number one, yeah, cherry wine.

Yeah.

But when you say genetically, though, it's just a depth uh

it's not like a chemical definition, it has to meet the

spec.

Some states have the chemical definition, but the federal

definition still is not based on genetics.

And so shut up about it.

But there is there's enough space between a tissue culture

and a clone and the gas station where you're buying smokes and

like impulse items.

So a finished product like that is still well downstream, and I

think we'll be able to have genetics from that.

But then you have Missouri, Missouri's crazy, like you can't

bring any genetics into Missouri, which is terrible.

Like, why would you do that?

And so, like, now you can't have an interstate market because

according to the rule, and so like that's one of those things

where if I had the right client, can I pay me a lot of money and

make a very good argument to the good people of Missouri about

how they've uh violated the dormant commerce clause by

locking out this uh genetic material, uh, or or some other

one, uh, where then they can't they can't just have all the

strains that were there when you got licensed.

That's it.

And so, like, if there's a new strain that comes in, then that

genetic is found in Missouri place, they get fined, they can

get yanked, they can lose their license.

So there's real breeding, yeah, in in Missouri because I mean

you're gonna be able to do that.

Let's say we have like Hermann Marker, right?

Or like, you know, uh, what was the other one that that was

something gelato, like Tuscan gelato or something like that?

Let's say you got those genetics, yeah.

Um, no, no, you don't like you lose your license if those

genetics show up in Missouri, unless like you cook it up in

your lab or in your basement, which good luck with that, you

know.

How about this though?

What if like you actually just start growing season?

Everything's just a name made up, right?

Cheetah piss.

Sure, you just have a really good grower that smokes

something once and oh, it's this, this, and this.

Give me these, get this in our stock, and I'll cross it up for

you.

But how long is that cross up gonna take?

But like that it's an eventual, yeah, sure, but then then it's

not hot anymore.

SPEAKER_02: But it's a workaround just saying it's

stuck, so it's not a good one, not a that that's surprising.

SPEAKER_01: I always think it was funny to have a markets just

start like all of a sudden, like everybody just closes their eyes

and baby stores brought seeds and clones, and then you're

locked in amber in Missouri.

I don't like it, I think it's freaking weird and crazy, but I

also think with Schedule Three, you can't do it because then you

are uh preventing your operators from accessing what the market

wants in a lawful way, if it says, Oh, yeah, it all has to be

bred and grown here according to the statute you have.

I don't know if you can do it.

Can you draft the alcohol statutes that all beer sold in

Washington must be made in Washington?

No, not here.

You can't do it in Illinois.

Yeah.

Again, that's a lawsuit, right?

Like you said, the dorm of common claws were you know the

violation of label suit.

It's a self-deal at the exclusion of interstate

commerce.

But this is these are the good questions, these are the

questions that we get to deal with now on cannabis

legalization news.

Oh, wait, we should have a fam share or something like that.

But whatever.

It's a live podcast.

But we get a yeah, we get to deal with these issues as

opposed to covering a fucking loophole.

Uh and a lot of people are butthurt about that, but now we

actually get a change the laws.

Yeah, yeah, it's shaping so much better than it used to be.

SPEAKER_02: Matter of fact, but we're finding new things about

this plan.

Did you see this one?

The FDA group breakthrough therapy designation to so this

for difficult verwan, right?

Very scientific.

It's actually a cabinoid, based off of cabinet.

Nice.

SPEAKER_01: So I thought that was interesting.

So this is obviously a PR news.

Yeah, it's a press release.

We're sending one of those out for a grand opening, which may

or may not be on June 27th.

Where's that grand opening in, is it here?

SPEAKER_02: Is it here?

SPEAKER_01: Oh, it is gonna be in the party room that we have

over at the local dispone supply.

That's right.

We have a party room.

You can rent it.

We have a dispensary that has a flexible space, like a real

community center, which we thought about maybe renting it

to a coffee shop, but do you have any idea how much updates a

coffee shop needs?

SPEAKER_02: They need a lot of you're in Cesarwalk County, come

get your week across from the courthouse.

SPEAKER_01: What I think that just actually crossed the line.

We probably got demonetized.

SPEAKER_02: No one, no what?

You know what?

Yeah, that's the that's the problem.

No matter how hard you try to be in line with the rules, working

running a legal store.

SPEAKER_01: Once I get that DEA registration, I think we just

quit that in the quarter and then say a little ticker just

goes educational purposes only, educational purposes only, and

then and then we'll get the Pope, and the Pope bless it.

That's that's what we need, goddammit.

That's what we fucking need, but uh but yeah, there's there's

more cannabis legalization news coming.

We're doing our customer ramp right now down in Peak, and I'll

be focused on that.

But then after I get the customer ramped iron out, then I

can get back to making YouTube's and managing dispensary and all

law firm.

My question to people is what do you have a question for about

running the show?

Like, like you know, everybody has their vision of what I I

think it's we could get a pool table, we could put a pool table

in there.

Oh, it's a big space.

Oh, yeah, maybe but then we can't appeal to kids.

But then again, it doesn't really matter.

We have a 21-year-old sign and so you can't go in that room,

but we'll see.

We have to work with the city.

SPEAKER_02: And then I PDR, right?

SPEAKER_01: IDPFR.

SPEAKER_02: You have to ask for permission, not for No, we do

not.

SPEAKER_01: We do not ship the drug.

One day.

When we do when we're able to do that's a day I'll be driving 20

pounds with you.

Okay.

I'm gonna I'm gonna go drive over there.

I have to take some stuff for the waiting room.

So that it doesn't look as bad as it does right now.

And next week we'll have more on it.

Oh, next week is Father's Day.

What do we want to do on that?

My family wants me to be recognized or something, shit

like that.

Yeah, I might have a little barbecue with a friend.

So let's just do it a Saturday.

Yeah.

Do it Saturday.

Yeah, all right.

Next week's Saturday, everybody.

Join us.

Oh yeah.

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