The Green Machine’s Black Market
Both legal and illegal marijuana sales are thriving under the fledgling years after Prop 64’s passage.
It’s official: California is now the world’s largest market for legal marijuana, estimated to pull in a record $3.1B in legal cannabis sales in 2019. Unfortunately, under Proposition 64—which decriminalized the personal possession and use of marijuana back in 2016—marijuana has been so strictly regulated and expensive to produce that the black market has flourished. By year’s end, it’s estimated that people will spend $8.7B on illegal marijuana. Critics blame Prop 64’s stringent regulations, which have created a strange offset of stats.
As of today, there are 583 licensed shops and 263 licensed home-delivery firms in the state, yet 76% of cities and 69% of counties have banned stores. As modifications are made to taxes and more companies learn their way around the regulations, pundits expect those numbers to even out, with projections that the legal market will surpass illicit sales around 2024.
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One Man’s Journey From Los Angeles to Tijuana in a Kayak
When Andrew Szabo, a 46-year-old Manhattan Beach entrepreneur, told his wife that his midlife crisis involved the purchase of an ocean kayak and the desire to paddle from MB to Tijuana, her reaction was simple: “Have a good trip, and make sure your life insurance premiums are paid.” What followed were three months of intense preparations, a life-changing journey and becoming part of the global battle to raise awareness for tuna overfishing.
Monday Moods: “Strings Attached”
Your weekly playlist, curated by California.



