Berner, Twista And Chris Webby Discuss Racial Bias In Cannabis Arrests

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This post was originally published on The Fresh Toast.

A couple of years ago, Chicago-native Twista, holder of the 1992 Guinness World Record as the fastest rapper in the globe and frequent Kanye West collaborator, was arrested for cannabis possession. After the ordeal, the artist issued a statement arguing that being arrested for holding small amounts of weed in the U.S. in 2016 was comparable to being detained for jaywalking.

Data shows that, even despite the massive shift in public opinion in relation to cannabis, with surveys showing that more than 65 percent of the American population now supports legalization, a lot of people are still being arrested for pot-related offenses. And this holds particularly true for minorities.

According to the ACLU, cannabis consumption levels are pretty similar among black and white people. However, black people are almost four times more likely than white people to get arrested for possession.

ā€œBy now, most of the world is aware that the war on drugs was racially targeted,ā€ Larisa Bolivar of the National Diversity and Inclusion Cannabis Alliance (NDICA) explained. ā€œThe disparity in the number of arrests for nonviolent cannabis offenses tells the story pretty clearly, as do the historical campaigns against cannabis.

ā€œEven more compelling is the ongoing disparity and targeted arrests in legal states like Colorado, [where] blacks are three times more likely than whites to be arrested for cannabis. If you look at the total demographics of the state with Hispanics making up 21.3 percent, blacks only making up 4.5 percent, and whites 87.5 percent, it seems really unfair and targeted when almost 90 percent of the [legal] cannabis industry is white and the majority of their consumer base is white.ā€

When prompted about his own experience, Twista told The Fresh Toast that he is ā€œdefinitely glad to see a lot of states legalize cannabis, because legalization stops some of the excuses for law enforcement agencies to act in ways that may be considered racially-biasedā€”like racial profiling.ā€

Twista believes ā€œcannabis has been used over time to criminalize marginalized sectors of the society; to do stuff to people that didnā€™t necessarily deserve it.ā€

Adding to this point is Berner, a rapper of Latinx heritage whoā€™s known for his love of weed, his multiple, successful cannabis businesses, and the famous strains heā€™s responsible for having developedā€”like Girl Scout Cookies and Gelato. He said: ā€œWe know for a fact that the police racially profile people every day, whether itā€™s Latinos, blacks, or whatever... Thereā€™s just this crazy stigma that will never go away.