Pot farm owner Joy Hollingsworth is “100 percent” behind the proposed law. Credit: COURTESY OF HOLLINGSWORTH CANNABIS COMPANY

Pot farm owner Joy Hollingsworth is “100 percent” behind the proposed law.

Pot farm owner Joy Hollingsworth is “100 percent” behind the proposed law. COURTESY OF HOLLINGSWORTH CANNABIS COMPANY

The United States has a cruel relationship with weed. When pot was illegal everywhere, African Americans were arrested for pot crimes at far higher rates than white people. Now white people are raking in billions of dollars in weed revenue while Black people are largely shut out of the legal pot system.

Nowhere is this cruel reality more true than in Washington State, where Black people were 280 percent more likely to get arrested for pot than a white person during the war on drugs. Black people currently own only 4 percent of the state’s weed retailers and 1 percent of the state’s pot farms, according to data from the Washington State Liquor and Cannabis Board (WSLCB).

Lester Black is a former staff writer for The Stranger, where he wrote about Seattle news, cannabis, and beer. He is sometimes sober.