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Re: Tduggylolz post# 1119

Friday, 01/17/2020 4:40:25 PM

Friday, January 17, 2020 4:40:25 PM

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Green Thumb Industries (GTI) - “Prohibition has been used as a tool to target African Americans and other minorities ... The NFL’s policy on #cannabis is just another extension of those laws that needs to be eradicated.” - Eugene Monroe, GTI partner and diversity consultant






Former Ravens Star Eugene Monroe on How the NFL Could Destigmatize Cannabis

https://merryjane.com/culture/former-ravens-star-eugene-monroe-on-how-the-nfl-could-destigmatize-cannabis

BY RAJ CHANDER
JAN 13, 2020

“Prohibition has been used as a tool to target African Americans and other minorities,” says Monroe. “The NFL’s policy on cannabis is just another extension of those laws that needs to be eradicated.”

Eugene Monroe knows weed.

Picked eighth overall in the 2009 draft, the 6’5, 300-lb offensive lineman was the first active NFL player to ask the league to consider the benefits of medical cannabis in March 2016. The following June, he’d planned to file pro football’s first-ever medical exemption for marijuana, but the day before his agent could send the paperwork, the Baltimore Ravens cut him. The team’s official reason was “unreliability” due to injuries, but many speculate his advocacy for the plant was a factor.

Monroe fielded offers from other teams, but ultimately decided to listen to his body and retire at 29 due to injury concerns. In the last two years, the early retirement model was followed (slightly more controversially) by other NFL pros like Andrew Luck and Rob Gronkowski, who left football at the same age.

He has something in common with the latter — both are former football stars who are now active in the cannabis industry. Gronk made headlines recently for smashing a Lego bust of Steve Harvey, and stating that he’ll return to the NFL if the league officially allows players to use CBD. But Monroe prefers a different approach for talking about the plant.

He doesn’t shy away from self-promotion, but he likes the behind-the-scenes stuff, too. A self-labeled “nerd” who’s into anime and Call of Duty, Monroe obtained a degree in Sociology from the University of Virginia before entering the NFL. On the phone, he speaks with an easy confidence about complex, nuanced cannabis issues that many lawmakers don’t even understand.



Monroe’s involvement in the industry goes far beyond the role of a typical athlete spokesperson. He is a partner and diversity consultant with Green Thumb Industries (GTI), an Illinois-based cannabis consumer packaged goods company and one of the nation’s largest cannabis manufacturers. He serves on the board of Doctors for Cannabis Regulation, a national association of physicians advocating for the end of cannabis prohibition. The former NFL pro also regularly contributes time and money to cannabis advocacy organizations like the Drug Policy Alliance and Students for Sensible Drug Policy.

MERRY JANE caught up with Eugene Monroe by phone to talk about drug testing in pro sports, how cannabis could be used to address racial equity, and his thoughts on the many, many athletes who’ve recently jumped on the CBD bandwagon.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

1578952749849_eugene-monroe-legal-pot.jpg

MERRY JANE: Thanks so much for doing this Eugene! The MLB announced last month that it would no longer test players for cannabis. What’s your take on this news?

Eugene Monroe: MLB players really haven’t been punished for cannabis like NBA and NFL athletes. It’s basically been their policy already; now it’s just in an official capacity. It’s good to see one of the big professional sports leagues making that change definitively… it’s a sign that it’s acceptable in pro sports. It’s about time the NFL and NBA — who do test and punish their players [for cannabis] — make that change, as well.

It’s so interesting how different sports leagues are in their approach to cannabis. The NHL has a counseling-based drug policy. If a player tests for high levels of a “drug of abuse” — including THC — they are referred to a substance abuse program. Tom Brady and Jerry Jones recently implied that the NFL’s policy could change — do you see a similar drug counseling policy as the league’s first step to cannabis acceptance?



I don’t think that’s a model that needs to be adopted. What does a player need to seek counseling for if they decide to choose a healthier medicine? If anything, they need to follow the MLB’s example… there’s no point in creating some sham system where you have a player who’s just trying to play better, but you’ve got him in there preaching that it’s wrong. We know that it’s not. Let’s be adults and move past these ancient ways of handling these policies.

Since Kaepernick’s protest, it seems like sports and race relations are more entwined than ever. What role do you see cannabis playing in terms of social justice in pro sports?

Eliminating the stigma that our black athletes are these evil people who are disobeying the rules. We need to change that narrative. The enforcement of those policies seems to be skewed one way, because we know cannabis usage is similar across all populations and demographics. Both of those sports [NFL and NBA] are dominated by African-American athletes, and those leagues are also the ones upholding harsh penalties.

Things need to change. You talk about social justice? This is a social justice issue within the NFL as it continues to punish players, African American players in particular, for using a substance that other professional sports organizations are now removing from their banned substances list.

It seems like you’re implying that not only could the NFL allowing cannabis destigmatize its use among athletes, but among the black population in general.



Yeah. We know through the prohibition of cannabis how it’s been used as a tool to target African Americans and other minorities specifically. The NFL’s policy [on cannabis] is just another extension of those laws that needs to be eradicated.

I think the biggest change will happen when we see a white quarterback, one who is the face of a franchise, speak out about it… Then, I think people will start to look at it very differently. Right now, you really just see the black athletes who are usually tied to cannabis in a negative way. It’s no mystery that those [white NFL players using cannabis] are out there, too.



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