Top

news

Stories

 

Weed Takes Root

Marijuana's steady march toward legalization nationwide

These are not your run-of-the-mill potheads jammed into the long, narrow classroom at Oaksterdam University, a tiny campus with no sign to betray its location on busy San Vicente Boulevard south of the Beverly Center. A serious vibe fills the loftlike space, where rows of desks are arranged like church pews under exposed ducts. No one clowns around or even smiles much. Instead, eyes fix intently on a screen at the front of the darkened room.

Projected there is a photograph of a healthy marijuana plant under an array of lights. Tonight’s subject, Cannabis 101: growing the weed in indoor gardens. It’s delicate alchemy, as most of these students, who range in age from their early 20s to nearly 60, already know. During the 13-week semester, many tend and keep notes on their own clandestine nurseries in bedrooms and garages scattered around Los Angeles.

Encouraged by instructors, and by the prospects of staking out ground-floor positions in the emerging world of “cannabusinesses,” they cultivate popular varieties of bud while experimenting with soils, temperatures and light sources.

From the rear of the room, a baritone voice pipes up — a student remarking on the crystalline texture of the leaves when the plants are raised under light-emitting diodes.

“With the LEDs, it just looks way frostier than anything under the high-pressure sodium,” he says.

Details get technical, as in any science class, but the larger lesson is clear to see. Here, as in many other places across America, the future of cannabis is being sown — and, make no mistake, it is a future high on promise.

Oaksterdam takes its name from a bastardization of Oakland, where the university began, and pot-friendly Amsterdam. Here, new growers and dispensary operators are being trained like whole legions of Johnny Appleseeds, soon to spread pot’s blessings from one coastline to the other. Not that anywhere is truly virgin ground, but consider: The pro-marijuana movement has never had an army so large, politically sophisticated and well-funded, even if supporters downplay the millions that roll in. Nor has it enjoyed such a frenzied period of media exposure, a startling amount of it positive.

Never has there been such a concerted thrust to legalize the drug nationwide — for medical purposes, for the plain old joy of getting stoned, and for a gold mine in profits to be reaped by those who control the multipronged industry. Together with a rapidly shifting public attitude toward pot and a White House willing to accept state medical-marijuana laws, legalization seems as inevitable today as it was unthinkable a generation ago.

“We’re almost at a zeitgeist,” says one of the high-profile lobbyists who is making it happen, Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) in Washington, D.C.

Zeitgeist has become one of the buzzwords of the campaign — meaning, in context, a sort of coming together of favorable forces. St. Pierre, who can call on advisory-board input from the likes of Willie Nelson and Woody Harrelson, is a glib 44-year-old former altar boy and preppy from Massachusetts who likes to wear a marijuana-leaf lapel pin. He says this year NORML has seen an unprecedented escalation of Web-page hits, podcast downloads, new memberships and media calls.

“We monitor [newspaper] columns, and editors have swung in favor of reform,” he says. “I will go give a lecture in Des Moines, Iowa. The questions people are asking come right out of watching Weeds on Showtime. It’s quite remarkable.”

Badgering newspapers and television programs to pay attention to the subject used to be one of the critical challenges for people like St. Pierre. Getting a meaningful dialogue started was half the battle.

Now the buzz is self-sustaining, indicating a willingness of America, as a whole, to engage the subject.

“The first time, nearly eight years ago, I attempted to pitch a marijuana-related story to CNN, they literally laughed at me,” remembers Bruce Mirken, a San Francisco–based spokesman for the Marijuana Policy Project. “The person who answered the phone burst out laughing. Now they’re calling us. We’ve been on various broadcasts and cable network shows 21 times this year — at least a couple on CNN. We’ve also been on the Today show, ABC World News, really all over.”

CNBC has run and rerun its recent documentary Marijuana, Inc.: Inside America’s Pot Industry, exposing the booming pot trade and the sordid side of California’s largest cash crop — the shootings, thefts and arson fires; the homes in Humboldt and Mendocino counties gutted to make room for illegal indoor nurseries; and the secluded parcels of national forest planted with pot by Mexican cartels intent on cornering metropolitan markets like Los Angeles.

In September, Fortune magazine ran the headline, “How Marijuana Became Legal,” as if the outcome of the fight were a fait accompli. “We’re referring to a cultural phenomenon that has been evolving for 15 years,” observed author Roger Parloff, who suggested that the critical, sea-changing climax might turn out to be a “policy reversal that was quietly instituted [this year] by President Barack Obama.”

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Next Page >>
 
  • Andrew Leezan 02/28/2010 7:04:00 AM

    I knew that Dave is a bad ass bassist, but hell, he's a great writer too! LP is the best band ever!

  • ANNA 01/19/2010 10:25:00 AM

    Recently, I found an interesting millionaire site called- __see k rich~c om__ It's a nice place- for hot- Women and wealthy Men, or rich Women and- handsome Men,- to interact with each other. Date a real millionaire is- not a problem- there. You may check out or tell your- friends.

  • skinnymalinky 01/13/2010 11:15:00 PM

    I think when the author said those smoking 5 or more joints a day may have bigger problems, he was probably referring to both people who are addicts and people who are sick enough to not be worrying about potential cancer risks. It's a line that can have multiple meanings.

  • Jack 01/13/2010 12:40:00 PM

    John Thomas: there's violence in this pot infested country. so your argument is bogus. most of the people whose houses smell of weed, also have rampant gun usage.

  • william 01/13/2010 12:36:00 PM

    john thomas, there's been plenty of violence in this weed infested country. so your argument is bogus. people are making excuses to get pot, and the nation is deteriorating, because of it. it's just frying peoples' brains.

  • Brad 01/11/2010 8:56:00 PM

    Legalization makes complete and total sense, no matter how you approach it, including looking at it in terms of "keeping the kids safe." But uh, who's got the $150/oz weed? I ask ONLY because I'm a, uh, fact-checker. Yeah, that's it. What?

  • Stickman 01/11/2010 11:42:00 AM

    $150 an ounce is street value? I certainly hope your other facts an figures are better researched than this one! But Mr. Farrell does seem to have a good feel for the salient points of the argument, so I'd have to say this was a fairly good article overall, despite the tasteless throw away line about a user smoking 5 joints a day having bigger problems than cancer.

  • Pasty &inMcCline 01/11/2010 3:51:00 AM

    Well personally I think Patsy McDs'journalism is every bit as good as this attempt... For 3rd grade it's really quite remarkable and both boys should be given the names 'scoop'. This is of course a great way also for the LA Weekly to reduce costs employing these very promising 3rd graders. Well done !

  • Michael Backes 01/10/2010 12:09:00 AM

    When is the Weekly going to institute the most rudimentary level of fact checking? You misspell Ethan Nadelmann's name repeatedly in this article. It's not like he's some guy you called for a quote; he's the founder of the Drug Policy Alliance. C'mon folks... there's this site called Google, where you can check these things. And it's free, too.

  • Jeff Koloski 01/09/2010 8:55:00 PM

    I appreciated the straight forward tone of this article over the previous poorly written ( and clearly not fact checked) articles on Medical Marijuana. However , Mr. Ferrell's candid opinion after quoting The federal National Institutes of Health (?). " On the other hand, someone smoking five joints a day probably has bigger problems than risk of cancer" . What kind of expert is Mr. Ferrel on Marijuana , Medical or not , that he can opine as what constitutes an acceptable dosage ? This article is a half hearted attempt to win some advertisement back. L.A. Weekly will still be fit only for my rabbit cage. -Jeff Koloski

  • Jennie B 01/09/2010 7:02:00 AM

    John Thomas: I couldn't agree anymore. The first few comments got me.

  • Cheryl Shuman 01/09/2010 6:53:00 AM

    It's refreshing to see a positive article from LA Weekly for the Marijuana / Cannabis community. I'm very proud to be a part of the reform movement and love working with NORML, Oaksterdam and other activists. We're currently working on a Celebrity PSA and National Media campaign for the NORML Women's Alliance in the national office. We're making history! Are you going to be a part of it? Cheryl Shuman Executive Director Beverly Hills NORML http://www.NORML90210.org

  • John Thomas 01/09/2010 6:47:00 AM

    Jennie B Mr.Ferrell is not presenting a point of view. He is presenting a picture of marijuana reform succeeding at last. He did an excellent job!

  • Jennie B 01/09/2010 6:06:00 AM

    So, the idea that a reporter isn't attempting to present a point of view is not even a consideration? It's all opinion, never an attempt to inform or educate?

  • ganjafree 01/09/2010 4:06:00 AM

    Glad to see the Weekly knows how to suck up to the medical marijuana industry after screwing the pooch on that last story. That'll keep 'em from getting skipped in the rotation.

  • Eric Watson 01/08/2010 10:47:00 PM

    Thank you for this comprehensive investigative article on the status of marijuana reform in our country. After the the LA Weekly's previous cover story on the subject I was beginning to wonder if their were any real journalists left at the publication. These repressive marijuana laws were put into place during the Richard Nixon administration as a way to combat the growing counter-culture of the baby boomers. It's taken forty years but we are finally seeing some sense creep back into our drug policy in this country. Individuals have a right to do whatever they want to their own bodies and the government has no right to persecute them in any way for these personal choices. Thank you again for your article and I hope we continue to see real reform in our nation.

  • JohnThomas 01/08/2010 3:20:00 PM

    william -- >>>"celebrate a nation that is working toward medicating itself into not thinking clearly, and making it legal?" -- That's just demonization and confusing marijuana with alcohol. Marijuana doesnt detract from thinking. It ENHANCES thinking. Consider these testimonials: http://www.marijuana-uses.com/read.html -- Besides, we've seen that in countries that have reduced or eliminated marijuana penalties, they have less use than the U.S. The Netherlands has HALF the use as this country. -- No matter how you look at it, marijuana prohibition is counter-productive. It doesn't accomplish one good thing. It only causes untold corruption, violence and death.

  • william 01/08/2010 12:11:00 PM

    let's see...a nation that frames a do gooder, right on past his death, and makes him out to be a drug addict, because he can't speak for himself, this time(Michael Jackson)..a city that bellyaches over love of money, at the expense of a memorial in his honor, though it's ok to celebrate the lakers with a parade..(forget that MJ paid for peoples' funerals, gladly, during his life) and then, celebrate a nation that is working toward medicating itself into not thinking clearly, and making it legal? This nation doesn't need enemies outside it's borders. it's taking itself down, all by itself. all an outside nation has to do is light the fuse to explosives created by america, itself.

  • leland cole 01/08/2010 9:11:00 AM

    So, after years of bogus attacks on medical marijuana the L.A.Weekly disinformation campaign is clear. You are the enemy of the sick and dying and allied with the L.A. Mayor's Cabal- who fear the rising political power consistent with the growth of the medical marijuana movement . With the Mayor's power over the City of Los Angeles, even the present Attorney General of the State of California is playing along too, probably to gain support in his failing bid for another term as Governor. This will eventually cost you most all of your readership, and then your membership in the alternate press. In the words of the late great Sherman H. Skolnick, Chairman of the Citizens Committee To Investigate Court Corruption- "Some of the media actually employ the government hacks-those liars and whores of the press, with their two hundred hundred dollar hair- do's their nickel brains, and their very secret friendships within the government that they allege they're reporting on". Sounds to me just like the LA weekly . Bye Bye L.A. Weekly -your soon to be yesterday's toast! (corrected copy)

  • leland cole 01/08/2010 9:05:00 AM

    So, after years of bogus attacks on medical marijuana the L.A.Weekly disinformation campaign is clear. You are the enemy of the sick and dying and allied with of the L.A. Mayor's Cabal- who fear the rising political power consistent with the growth of the medical marijuana movement . With the Mayor's power over the City of Los Angeles, even the present Attorney General of the State of California is playing along too, probably to gain support in his failing bid for another term as Governor. This will eventually cost you most all of your readership, and then your membership in the alternate press. In the words of the late great Sherman H. Skolnick, Chairman of the Citizens Committee To Investigate Court Corruption- "Some of the media actually employ the government hacks-those liars and whores of the press, with their two hundred hundred dollar hair- do's their nickel brains, and their very secret friendships within the government that they allege they're reporting on". Sounds to me just like the LA weekly . Bye Bye L.A. Weekly -your soon to be yesterday's toast! n

  • Brian Moritz 01/08/2010 4:55:00 AM

    Very soon marijuana will be legal nearly everywhere in America. We the people will make it happen. Alcohol prohibition ended when jurors would no longer convict anyone of an alcohol related crime. Marijuana prohibition is ending the same way. It is getting harder and harder to get a conviction on a marijuana charge. Please check out the website of the fully informed jury association (fija.org).

  • Where's Patsy 01/08/2010 3:26:00 AM

    Patsy Rage McDullard must be very proud & excited to see journalism being exercised at the Weakly... shome mistake shurely....

 

Most Popular Stories

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy