What We Saw at Los Angeles' First Ever Marijuana Farmers' Market
Thousands celebrated their independence over the Fourth of July weekend by attending the first ever marijuana farmers' market in the Los Angeles community of Boyle Heights.
The California Heritage Market was organized by 22-year-old Paizley Bradbury, who also serves as the executive director of the West Coast Collective, a marijuana dispensary. Bradbury became concerned that patients were losing access to medicinal marijuana after Los Angeles voters passed Proposition D in 2013—a law which restricted the number of pot shops that could operate within city limits.
"We don't have a lot of dispensaries in Los Angeles and that kind of limits the amount of growers that people have access to," states Bradbury.
The concept proved popular with consumers—an estimated 2,500 people attended on the first day alone to purchase goods from over 30 vendors.
Bradbury maintains that the market is legal because the collective is grandfathered in under the Prop D law. To attend the market, patients must provide documentation that shows they are able to legally purchase marijuana in the state.
"This is exactly the way the law is written," says Bradbury. "Patients are supposed to be getting their medicine directly from the growers within the collective and that's exactly what's happening here."
Bradbury plans to continue staging the market each weekend.
Produced and shot by Alexis Garcia. Music by The Duckers.
Approximately 3 minutes.
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Well, helloooooo Paizley.
"This is exactly the way the law is written," says Bradbury. "Patients are supposed to be getting their medicine directly from the growers within the collective and that's exactly what's happening here."
"Exactly the way the law is written" doesn't always count, especially in the War on Drug Users.
the War on Drug Users
Nice
Paizley Bradbury?
Damn, I wish I was back in LA. I wonder how many shrewd food truck owners also attended. Mmmm kbbq tacos.
The chick selling the lubricant represents a lot of what's wrong with California. She only speaks for a few seconds and I'm sick of her already. Besides, wouldn't a cannabis lubricant reduce sensation in that area?
Is it how wide her mouth opens when she speaks? That's what really annoyed me about her.
and the nasal neo - alley Girl accent. "and it's all nat'ral."
Mmmm....Paizley. She's not Iranian, is she?
Concerning Lube Girl
She has that weird California accent where she kind of draws out that last sound of a word:
"A Cannabis-infused lubricant-TTT, designed for womenNNNNN."
And the upward inflection at the end of non-question sentences. Yeah, I see what you mean.
Why in the world would you think a topical would reduce sensation? No CB-1 receptors in the skin. That's also presuming that we're not just talking about seed oil.
Contrary to the claims of the uninformed idiot prohibitionists there are lots and lots of applications for cannabis products that don't get you high.
If a woman needs a lubricant she needs to learn how to find a partner who actually arouses her. Or maybe get some therapy for her anhedonia.
Oooh, I need to track down South Bay Din-Din-A-Go-Go again.
The author of this production has impressive credentials.
Other than that, how important is a marijuana market to the survival of the nation?
Is this a history or political message/lesson of some sort where the rulers keep the peasants happy and "sedated"?
Where in the world do people get the idea that the fans of cannabis are compliant with government fiat? Really Mandalay, you must have your eyelids closed and your fingers in your ears. Perhaps your brain is just disconnected.
Why in the world are you trotting the straw man of the "survival of the nation" as if that's some kind of requirement before something is legal? How important are Internet comments columns under media articles to the survival of the nation?
If you think that survival is the only consideration you get a double dose of pity because your life must be very, very empty.
"Other than that, how important is a marijuana market to the survival of the nation?"
Absolutely vital. Without Liberty, we have no country worth living in anyway.
You really got to commend the marijuana dispensary operators, especially high-profile ones like Oaksterdam. They just keep on operating despite banking headaches, security concerns from running a cash-intensive business and federal enforcement actions.
Seriously, without them taking all this risk, it'll be slightly more difficult for me to find pot.
When I first moved to Whittier, I didn't know anybody so didn't know where to get pot. So, I asked some homeless guy in the parking lot of a convenience store "Know anybody that's got some pot?" And he did. 🙂
When playing the bucky balls magnetic construction toys, you have to use not only the space imagination and creativity, but also your logical thinking ability, and even mathematical knowledge, making it possible to exercise both side of the brain.