Ice cream maker Ben & Jerryâs took advantage of the 420 weekend to call for the reform of marijuana laws and the expungement of past convictions for cannabis possession. In a tweet and accompanying video posted on Saturday morning, the Vermont-based company called attention to the racial disparity in the enforcement of cannabis laws.
âItâs hard to celebrate 4/20 when so many people of color are still being arrested for pot,â the tweet reads. âWe have to do better.â
The campaign continues on the Ben & Jerryâs website, where the famously socially conscious company noted that marijuana policy reform has made great strides in recent years and that âfans of cannabis can celebrate 4/20 openly and in style in more places than ever before.â
Even in states that havenât yet legalized cannabis, 420 celebrants are unlikely to be hassled by the cops, the company says, âif youâre a white person.â
Ben & Jerryâs also noted that people of color are underrepresented in the growing cannabis industry while facing criminal charges more often.
âIf you love pot AND youâre white, everything is totally awesome these days. In 2017, 81% of cannabis executives were white. Meanwhile, even in states where pot is legal, and even though Black people and white people use pot at similar rates, Black people are still arrested way more often than whites. We love 4/20 and we love legalization, but thatâs not OK.â
Even in states that have legalized cannabis, African-Americans are disproportionately facing charges for cannabis offenses, notes Ben and Jerryâs.
âTake a look at Alaska, Colorado, and Washington, DC, all of which have legalized pot. In Alaska, Black people are still being arrested 10 times more often than whites. In DC, theyâre arrested 4 times more. In Colorado? Three times.â
Ben & Jerryâs also notes that the fledgling cannabis industry is predominately owned and managed by whites, including former Speaker of the House John Boehner, who was âunalterably opposedâ to legalization when he was in office. Even after changing his stance and investing in and becoming a board member of cannabis firm Acreage Holdings, Boehner said that âthe whole criminal justice part of this, frankly, it never crossed my mind.â
Ben & Jerryâs is asking the public to join them in the call for the reform of cannabis laws by launching a petition calling on Congress to expunge prior marijuana convictions and provide amnesty or pardons to offenders. The petition can be signed on the companyâs website and as of Monday morning had garnered more than 30,000 signatures. The company praised cities including Seattle and San Francisco that are proactively expunging convictions in their jurisdictions and urged that the trend be continued nationwide.
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