Psychedelic eMagazine ISSUE #3 | Page 10

10 HEMP sociates bartered, using cannabis once again as a kind of currency. Just as commonly, members of the underground economy traded cannabis for favors, knowing that their friends would get them back when and if they could. The same spirit carried forward through the 60s and 70s, with generations of hippies unknowingly acting out the same pattern of sharing economy which they inherited from the great Harlem jazz musicians who preceded them. But now, with state regulations in Washington and Colorado strictly regulating the cannabis industry, the long history of using the commodity in the place of money has come under threat. Rules like the 25% excise tax of Washington state only contemplate the value of cannabis as a product exchanged for cash, a paradigm harshly reinforced by license applications prohi bitive liquidity for any would-be entrepreneur attempting to enter the business. It’s a new paradigm. Who knows what may happen? With such massive shifts happening in the cannabis market, perhaps even a long-honored tradition like cannabis for currency could be regulated out of existence. ARTICLE 11 Follow Jeremy Jeremy Daw, J.D. is the editor, with Chris Conrad, of The Leaf. A 2008 graduate of Harvard Law School, he worked as editor-in-chief of Cannabis Now Magazine until 2013. Besides Cannabis Now and the Leaf, his writings have been featured on Salon. com, SFGate.com, AlterNet Drugs, and numerous other outlets in print and online. His book Weed the People: From Founding Fiber to Forbidden Fruit (2012), a 400-year history of cannabis policy in North America, has been acclaimed as “one of the best accounts of the early US hemp industry” by Michael Aldrich, PhD, and was declared “fascinating and incredibly well researched” by Danny Danko, senior cultivation editor at High Times. Jeremy is also a professor at Oaksterdam University in Oakland, California, where he teaches Politics & History as well as Economics. He lives in Berkeley, CA.