HEBRARIUM

The dirty market

Jirzankal — The Smoke at the Edge of the World

Cannabis, greed and the damage prohibition taught people to call normal

Cannabis did not invent
greed.

 

But prohibition gave greed a perfect room to grow.

When a plant becomes illegal, the plant does not disappear.
The trust disappears.

  • There is no label.
  • No receipt.
  • No lab test.
  • No complaint process.
  • No honest scale.
  • No safe supply.
  • No age control.
  • No product accountability.
  • No way to say “this is wrong” without exposing yourself.

So the market becomes personal.

  • A friend knows someone.
  • A cousin weighs something.
  • A dealer says it is “good”.
  • A buyer cannot verify it.
  • A desperate person accepts it.
  • A stronger person controls the terms.

And slowly, everyone learns the wrong lessons.

  • That cheating is normal.
  • That pressure is normal.
  • That secrecy is normal.
  • That poor quality is normal.
  • That lying about weight is normal.
  • That young people entering the chain is normal.
  • That fear is part of the price.

It is not normal.

It is what happens when a plant is pushed into a dirty market
and people are left to negotiate trust in the dark.

The plant is not the excuse

There is a lazy defence
cannabis people sometimes make.

 

“It is only a plant.”
That is true and not enough.

A plant can be surrounded by honest culture or rotten culture. The plant does not decide whether people steal on the scale, sell to minors, threaten someone over debt, lie about quality, spray unsafe products, mix unknown material, or use friendship as leverage.

Those are human choices.
But systems shape choices.

In a legal, transparent, accountable system, bad behaviour does not disappear, but it has fewer shadows to hide in. In an illegal system, every shadow becomes a business model.

The plant is not guilty.
But the market around the plant can become filthy.

The small dealer tragedy

The small dealer is often
romanticised.

 

  • The local guy.
  • The friend of a friend.
  • The harmless middleman.
  • The “survivor”.
  • The one who knows everyone.

Sometimes that person is just trying to get by. Sometimes the situation is more pathetic than evil.

But the structure itself is corrosive.
Because the small dealer lives from imbalance.

  • He knows more than the buyer.
  • He controls access.
  • He controls weight.
  • He controls timing.
  • He controls urgency.
  • He controls the story.

And when there is no transparency, even ordinary people become tempted.

A little less weight, a little higher price, a little weaker product, a little pressure, a little debt, a little threat. A little “you owe me”.

This is how ugliness enters ordinary life.
Not always through monsters.

LIBERA HERBA Cannabis VADEMECUM — Early Access

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LIBERA HERBA Cannabis VADEMECUM — Early Access

Join early.

Keep the
archive open.

The VADEMECUM is not just a book anymore. It is becoming a living archive of guides, tools, notes and practical plant knowledge.

Free member access. Join early. Keep the archive open.

The VADEMECUM is becoming a living archive of practical plant knowledge.

Free member access.