The Fight For Non Criminal Cannabis
- shattershay
- Oct 1, 2018
- 2 min read

LET'S TALK GANJA...
Staring some eighty years ago in 1937, Cannabis began it’s novel federal and vernacular regulation. Before this criminal perspective within the early 1700s, the first law ever written about industrial hemp actually was recommending farmers to utilize Hemp for production, leaving Cannabis to be one of the largest agricultural crops in the world serving up to 25,000 industrial and medicinal uses.
Though shortly after severe propaganda following WW2, such as ‘Reefer Madness’, the image of cannabis began to deter, leaving the once harmless plant to be classified as a Class 1 substance drug in America. Since this hasty change, many states have chosen certain attitudes towards the harmful and medically useless ‘drug’, some proving its medicinal traits while others reporting the substance completely inoperative.

Following the documentary ‘The Union’, this international worldview has made an remarkable adjustment. The intensified film introduces the illegal marijuana trade industry found in British Colombia, Canada that has turned the vibrant city into a thriving business capital for cannabis worldwide, marketing the illegal trade and dispersion of unregulated cannabis.

Within ‘The Union’, topics regarding this uncontrolled trade highlights on the extensive network within this booming industry while focusing on many sensible issues involved with an commerce of the giant cannabis marketplace. Providing perspective from many notable viewpoints sampling Police Officers, Criminal Experts, Doctors, and even Pop Culture Icons, the documentary assembles supplementary content as to the actual medicinal uses of marijuana and its legitimate perks to the medical as well as the industrial field. Filmmaker Brett Harvey illustrates these issues within the black market while also focusing on the chain of circumstances involved with an industry profiting higher when illegal.
Details on the film The Union: The Business Behind Getting High (2007)
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