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When Grandma Stopped Freaking Out: How Cannabis Went Mainstream (and Why Big Alcohol Is Mad About It)

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By OG Strain

There was a time — not that long ago — when admitting you used cannabis in polite company got the same reaction as announcing you kept a pet rattlesnake in your living room.

People would lean back slowly.

Eyes would widen.

Someone would whisper, “You mean… marijuana?” like they were saying the word demon.

But something interesting has happened over the past decade.

Cannabis didn’t just become legal in more places.

It became… normal.

And that might be the most shocking development of all.

The People You Never Expected

If you grew up in the 70s or 80s like many of us did, cannabis users were painted in a very specific light.

Lazy.

Unmotivated.

Living in a van.

Probably listening to Pink Floyd backwards trying to summon aliens.

But fast forward to today and look around.

Doctors are discussing cannabis with patients.

Rehab counselors are acknowledging its therapeutic potential.

Parents and even grandparents — the same ones who once believed a joint would turn you into a couch-bound criminal mastermind — are suddenly saying things like:

“Well… if it helps your back pain.”

They may not be lighting up themselves.

But they’re no longer acting like cannabis is chemically identical to crack cocaine.

Which, if you grew up during the “Just Say No” era, is honestly a pretty wild plot twist.

What changed?

Two things:

Reality.

And honesty.

Turns Out Cannabis Users… Function

Here’s the secret that decades of propaganda tried very hard to hide:

Most cannabis users are just… regular people.

They wake up.

Go to work.

Pay bills.

Raise families.

Handle responsibilities.

Some people even use cannabis to help them do those things.

For some, it helps with pain.

For others, anxiety.

For many, it simply helps them relax without wrecking their next morning.

And the more society has seen everyday cannabis users functioning normally, the more that old propaganda narrative has started to fall apart.

When someone spends years believing cannabis turns people into useless zombies…

…and then realizes their coworker, neighbor, and cousin all use it responsibly…

The math starts looking a little suspicious.

Enter the Last Major Opponent: Big Alcohol

At this point, most of the cultural resistance to cannabis has faded.

But there is one group that still seems extremely concerned about it.

And that group is the alcohol industry.

Now, let’s be honest for a second.

If you owned a billion-dollar industry and suddenly millions of people started replacing their evening drinks with edibles or a joint…

You’d probably be a little nervous too.

People are putting down the liquor bottles and saying things like:

“You know what? I think I’ll just take a gummy and watch a movie.”

And that trend has certain executives staring at profit charts the way a cat watches a laser pointer disappear.

The New Wave of Scare Tactics

Recently, media stories have started popping up highlighting every possible negative angle about cannabis.

Dramatic headlines.

Sensationalized statistics.

Terrifying buzzwords.

One of the latest media darlings?

A term called Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome, often sensationalized online as “scromiting.”

Yes.

“Screaming and vomiting.”

Which sounds horrifying until you remember something very important.

Alcohol has been making people throw up since approximately the invention of alcohol.

Yet nobody in history has coined a dramatic viral term like “alco-vomiting apocalypse syndrome.”

In fact, if we’re comparing the two honestly…

You are dramatically more likely to throw up after drinking a bottle of tequila than after eating a cannabis edible.

And everyone knows it.

Every college campus in America has at least one legendary story that begins with the sentence:

“Bro… I should not have had that last drink.”

The Gateway Argument That Never Made Sense

For decades, cannabis was also labeled the infamous “gateway drug.”

But that claim raises a simple question.

What substance do most people actually try first?

Spoiler alert:

It’s not cannabis.

It’s alcohol.

Yet when people talk about substance use, they say “drugs and alcohol.”

Notice the separation?

It’s like alcohol got grandfathered into respectability.

Meanwhile cannabis was treated like the rebellious cousin who shows up at family gatherings wearing tie-dye and telling the truth.

If we’re being logically consistent, alcohol would fit the “gateway” description far more often.

But culture doesn’t always follow logic.

Sometimes it follows marketing.

The Propaganda Era Is Ending

The biggest difference today compared to twenty or thirty years ago is simple.

People can see reality for themselves.

They know someone who uses cannabis responsibly.

They’ve seen patients benefit from it.

They’ve watched hardworking, productive adults incorporate it into normal life.

That firsthand experience is far more powerful than any old propaganda film.

And once people see the truth with their own eyes, fear loses its grip.

The Real Conversation

At this stage, the cannabis debate has shifted.

It’s no longer about whether the plant is pure evil.

Most people have already realized it’s… a plant.

The remaining friction mostly comes from economics.

Industries compete.

Markets shift.

Consumers make new choices.

And sometimes those choices make older industries uncomfortable.

That’s not a moral crisis.

That’s capitalism.

A Cultural Turning Point

The most fascinating part of cannabis going mainstream isn’t legalization.

It’s the change in perception.

Parents are reconsidering old assumptions.

Medical professionals are exploring therapeutic uses.

Even people who don’t use cannabis themselves are becoming more supportive of those who do.

When that many perspectives shift at once, it’s a sign of something larger than a trend.

It’s a cultural correction.

And like most corrections, it happened slowly — one conversation, one patient, one honest user at a time.

Final Thoughts

If you ask most everyday cannabis users about their experience, you’ll hear a wide range of answers.

But overwhelmingly, many describe positive impacts:

Relaxation.

Pain relief.

Better sleep.

A healthier alternative to other substances.

That doesn’t mean cannabis is perfect or risk-free.

No substance is.

But the days of pretending it’s some civilization-destroying menace are fading fast.

At this point, the biggest remaining opposition often sounds less like concern…

…and more like competition.

And when an entire culture starts laughing at old propaganda instead of fearing it, you know the conversation has finally changed.

  • OG Strain

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Facebook Suspended Me Again: How Much Power Are We Willing to Give One Platform?

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Facebook Wants My ID, My Face, and My Patience… But Still Can’t Explain What I Did Wrong

Well, it happened again.

Facebook restricted my account.

And honestly, at this point, the restriction itself isn’t even the most frustrating part.

The biggest problem is the lack of clear answers.

When a platform that holds years of your memories, connections, conversations, and communities suddenly limits your access, you deserve to know why.

Instead, I found myself going through a digital obstacle course.

First, Facebook asked me to verify my identity by submitting my driver’s license.

I did it.

I did that too.

Then came the codes.

Code after code after code.

And somehow, the process still didn’t work.

For a platform used by billions of people around the world, that experience leaves a lot of questions.

Security is important.

Protecting accounts is important.

But so is transparency.

When users are asked to prove who they are, the platform should also explain clearly what problem caused the restriction in the first place.

The “Crime” Was Criticism

Now let’s talk about what led up to this situation.

I wasn’t threatening anyone.

I wasn’t trying to harm anyone.

I wasn’t doing anything dangerous.

I expressed frustration.

I filed a complaint.

I criticized the way I felt my issue was being handled.

Yes, my words were sarcastic.

Yes, I was frustrated.

But criticism is part of running a business.

Every major company receives complaints.

Every major company has unhappy customers.

A strong company listens.

A strong company improves.

A strong company understands that criticism can be valuable feedback.

When customers feel like speaking up creates problems instead of solutions, trust begins to disappear—especially when childish Facebook employees restrict your account illegally because they got overly emotional about your complaint and criticism of them, sought revenge, and restricted your account solely for revengeful purposes.

When Users Feel Like They Don’t Have a Voice

Nobody expects every employee at a company to be perfect.

Mistakes happen.

Miscommunication happens.

But when a company has billions of users, the responsibility to communicate clearly becomes even more important.

A customer saying, “Your service needs improvement,” should be seen as an opportunity to fix something.

These are the types of employees Facebook is known for hiring, and I’ve been working very hard, with some success, to get these types of employees terminated.

Lawsuits are being filed, and we have big-time attorneys working on this case as we speak.

The internet changed the relationship between companies and consumers because people finally had a public voice.

But what happens when the platforms that give us that voice also have the power to limit our ability to use it?

That is a question worth asking.

The Promise of “Free”

One of the biggest reasons Facebook became such a powerful platform is because people trusted it.

From the beginning, Facebook built its reputation around being free.

People joined because they wanted to connect with friends, share family moments, build communities, and communicate without paying a monthly fee.

People trusted Facebook with something extremely valuable:

Their memories.

Their photos.

Their personal connections.

Their history.

For many users, Facebook became a digital scrapbook of their lives.

They may feel like they are losing access to pieces of their own history.

Family photos.

Important conversations.

Years of memories.

Business connections.

That is why transparency matters so much.

When people invest years of their lives into a platform, they deserve to understand what happens when that platform limits their access.

The Verification Question

Facebook offering paid verification is a business decision, and companies have the ability to create premium services.

The question many users are asking is what happens to the people who choose not to pay.

If users begin feeling that the best experience, better support, or easier solutions are connected to paying, it creates concerns about whether the relationship between the platform and its users has changed.

The word “free” means something to people.

Trust is built on expectations.

When expectations change, companies need to communicate clearly.

They are purposely causing chaos for unverified accounts in an attempt to get you to pay for verification, making their original claim that “Facebook will always be free” a flat-out lie.

These lawsuits, if successful, will offer proof that Facebook is currently using a “create restriction and chaos” campaign against unverified Facebook accounts in an attempt to force users into paying for verification so they can avoid future problems intentionally caused by Facebook to their accounts.

The Bigger Problem: Depending on One Platform

But the biggest lesson here may not just be about Facebook.

It’s about how much power we give any single platform.

Many creators, businesses, artists, and everyday people have built their entire online presence in one place.

That creates a dangerous dependency.

The solution is not necessarily to leave one platform completely.

The solution is to have options.

Build your own website.

Build an email list.

Use multiple platforms.

Keep backups of important memories and information.

Do not build your entire digital life in one location.

Don’t Hand Away Your Digital Freedom

This isn’t about telling everyone they need to hate Facebook.

It’s about understanding the importance of having choices.

Freedom comes from options.

The internet was built on the idea that people could connect, communicate, and create.

That power belongs with the users.

The more platforms and communities we support, the less control any single company has over our digital lives.

Exploring Legal Options

Because of the concerns raised in this article, I am currently exploring what legal options may be available and have begun discussing these issues with attorneys.

If you believe you have experienced similar problems with Facebook, including account restrictions, loss of access, communication issues, business impacts, or other situations where you feel you were treated unfairly, I encourage you to preserve your documentation.

Save screenshots.

Save emails.

Keep records of dates, account issues, financial impacts, and any communication you had with Facebook.

Every documented experience helps create a clearer understanding of what users are experiencing.

This is incredibly important when generating a lawsuit that has potentially a massive payout and could easily turn into a class-action lawsuit against Facebook, which could force Facebook to pay for lost wages, lost time, communication with loved ones, failed businesses, and could amount to billions of dollars that Facebook could be forced to pay out with the success of this lawsuit.

This is about accountability, transparency, and making sure users have a voice when dealing with platforms that have become such a major part of our personal lives, businesses, and communities.

Final Thoughts From OG Strain

Facebook changed the world.

That cannot be denied.

It helped people reconnect with old friends, build communities, grow businesses, and share moments that otherwise might have been forgotten.

But with great influence comes great responsibility.

A platform this powerful should be able to handle criticism.

It should communicate clearly.

It should respect the people who helped build it into what it is today.

The bigger lesson goes beyond Facebook.

Never give one platform complete control over your voice, your memories, and your community.

Don’t be a sheep!

Try X and other, better platforms that actually respect freedom of speech and constitutional rights, unlike Facebook.

Technology should be a tool.

Not something that controls your ability to connect with the world.

Your voice belongs to you.

Not to an algorithm.

Not to a corporation like Facebook.

To you!

Join me and this lawsuit against Facebook to keep your voice yours!

  • OG Strain

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THE VOICE OF NEW YORK CANNABIS: WHY I BELIEVE OG STRAIN HAS BECOME ONE OF THE STATE’S MOST TRUSTED GRASSROOTS AMBASSADORS

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Every cannabis community has certain individuals who become recognized as more than just content creators.

They become storytellers.

They become educators.

They become familiar faces that people associate with the culture, the movement, and the people who continue pushing the industry forward.

In my opinion, every major cannabis state has those personalities who have helped shape the modern cannabis conversation.

In California, many people recognize Dope As Yola as one of the most influential cannabis creators of his generation. Through years of videos, reviews, and community engagement, he has become a recognizable name far beyond California’s borders.

In Colorado, there is Matt White, the creator behind The Strain Show, whose educational approach has helped countless people better understand cannabis, cultivation, genetics, and the science behind the plant. Matt’s work represents the importance of education in an industry that continues evolving every year.

And here in New York, I believe we have that same type of passionate grassroots voice in OG Strain.

Not because someone gave him a title.

Not because he asked for one.

Because he earned the respect of the community through consistency, passion, and genuine dedication to the people building New York cannabis.

At The Plug’s Pages, we have had the privilege of watching that journey happen firsthand.

When Herbert Greenstein and I opened our platform to OG Strain, we recognized something immediately: this was someone who wasn’t simply interested in talking about cannabis.

He was interested in celebrating the people behind it.

That difference matters.

His work has never just been about products.

It has always been about people.

That has been his greatest strength.

OG Strain doesn’t simply show up with a camera and ask what a company sells.

He wants to know who they are.

Why did they start?

What challenges did they overcome?

What makes their product special?

What are they contributing to the community?

Those are the questions that create meaningful stories.

And meaningful stories are what build an industry.

He drives the miles.

He creates the content.

He builds the relationships.

He supports the people who deserve recognition.

And perhaps the most important thing he brings cannot be measured by numbers.

Trust.

When people meet OG Strain, they quickly understand that his passion is real.

He isn’t interested in tearing people down for attention.

He isn’t interested in creating unnecessary drama.

He wants to see good people succeed.

That authenticity is something the cannabis community recognizes immediately.

Have we helped introduce his work to a wider audience?

We believe we have.

But the credit belongs to him.

We did not create his passion.

We did not create his work ethic.

We did not create the relationships he built.

We simply gave a talented writer and passionate cannabis advocate an open microphone and watched him use it.

And he has made the most of that opportunity.

As long as The Plug’s Pages continues to grow, OG Strain will always have a place here.

Now, we are excited to take that partnership even further.

Over time, we have witnessed something remarkable.

Many have experienced tremendous success after being introduced to our audience.

Could those companies have succeeded without us?

Absolutely.

Great companies with great products deserve recognition.

But we cannot ignore the pattern we have witnessed.

When we believe in a company, and when OG Strain believes in a company, the cannabis community listens.

Maybe it is because people trust our platform.

Maybe it is because OG Strain has developed a reputation for being honest and genuine.

Maybe it is because consumers are looking for real recommendations from real people instead of traditional advertising.

Whatever the reason, the results have been undeniable.

If you are a cannabis company, a new brand, a cultivator, a processor, or an entrepreneur building something meaningful, we want to hear your story.

But there is one thing that will never change:

We do not support everything.

We never have.

Our reputation is built on trust, and that trust is more valuable than any paycheck.

Before we ever put our name behind a company, we want to understand who you are, what you represent, and what you bring to this industry.

Quality matters.

Integrity matters.

Passion matters.

Through professional articles.

Through video content.

Through interviews.

Through event coverage.

Through social media promotion.

Through the combined reach of OG Strain and The Plug’s Pages.

Traditional advertising can cost businesses thousands upon thousands of dollars, and many cannabis companies simply do not have those resources.

What we offer is something different.

Authentic storytelling from people who actually care.

They want connection.

They want honesty.

They want to know the people behind the products.

That is where OG Strain and The Plug’s Pages come in.

We are not here just to promote cannabis.

We are here to document the people who are building its future.

So if you are a cannabis company looking for a team that understands this industry, understands this community, and understands the importance of trust, we invite you to connect with us.

Show us what you are creating.

Tell us your story.

If you are doing things the right way, we want to help the world know your name.

Because at the end of the day, cannabis has always been about more than the plant.

It is about the people.

The relationships.

The passion.

The community.

And in my opinion, few people represent those values in New York cannabis better than OG Strain.

We are honored to have him as part of The Plug’s Pages family.

We are excited to see where his journey continues.

And we cannot wait to see whose story he tells next.

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HIGH ON FRIENDSHIP: HOW THE CANNABIS COMMUNITY BECAME MY SECOND FAMILY

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“You know what’s funny? People still ask me, ‘What’s the best thing you’ve found since getting into cannabis?’ They expect me to say a strain… a rosin… maybe some ridiculously terp-loaded flower. They’re always shocked when I answer… ‘The people.’”

When I first started Strain’s Strain Reviews (Talk Cannabis), I thought I was reviewing cannabis.

Turns out… I was reviewing humanity.

Now before anybody starts passing me tissues instead of joints, hear me out.

I have a background in sales and earned a degree in Psychology—the study of human behavior. Between that education and years of working with people, I’ve developed a pretty decent instinct for reading character. No, it’s not foolproof. Sometimes I miss. Sometimes people surprise me. But I’ve learned one thing that holds true in every industry…

Some people have huge hearts.

Some people just have huge wallets.

The cannabis industry is no different.

I’ve met people chasing dollars, and I’ve met people chasing purpose.

Guess which ones I keep around?

Exactly.

From Dispensaries to Dinner Tables

My journey started by walking into local dispensaries with nothing more than curiosity, a camera, and enough enthusiasm to make a budtender slightly nervous.

One of the first people who welcomed me was Joe Rosen from Electric City Cannabis Company, along with his superstar budtender, Sheena. They treated me like I belonged before I ever had a reason to think I did.

Along the way I met amazing budtenders like Kevin at The People’s Joint, Connor and Amy at Cannabis City, and Mirk and his outstanding team at Stage One, including my buddy Scotty Knox.

These aren’t just people handing over eighths across a counter.

They’re educators.

They’re guides.

They’re ambassadors for this plant.

The Event Family

Eventually I started attending Cannabis Cups and community events.

That’s where the family tree really started growing.

I met Damn Sam—better known as Rob Robinson—along with Emily Harper, whose events have brought together some of the best people I’ve met.

The Growers Who Grow More Than Cannabis

Then came the growers.

And wow…

Growers are a different breed.

They’re patient.

They’re passionate.

They’re perfectionists.

Sometimes they’ll spend twenty minutes explaining one terpene profile while you’re standing there wondering if you accidentally enrolled in Cannabis University.

My journey started with Tokalotapot Seeds, followed by Cannafaded, and then I met Kiley and the incredible crew at Lazy Day Farm. Kiley welcomed me in, and I also became close with Anne MacPherson, who keeps the administrative side of the farm running while somehow managing to keep everyone else organized too.

Another cultivator I’ve grown close with is John Gilboy of Gilly’s Greens, a grower whose passion for quality shows in every harvest.

Then there are the small-batch legends I proudly call friends today—Jason Longhi, Melissa Dopp, and Andy and Bill from No Mountain Higher.

These aren’t just growers.

They’re artists.

Their canvas just happens to smell amazing.

The CrisXotics Crew

One of the biggest blessings has been getting to know the family surrounding CrisXotics.

Of course there’s Cris, but that’s only the beginning.

There’s JMO from The Gas Station.

Key from Keepin’ Edibles Yummy.

Frank and Noelle from Blissful Confections.

Mullet from Adekrondack.

The always-awesome Amy and Bernie from Buddah Brothers.

The Candy Cartel.

Bud Master.

And honestly… I’m probably forgetting somebody, and if I am, forgive me. My memory occasionally gets higher than I do.

Friends That Became Family

I’ve known Danni Burns from Hudson Valley Green and Kevin from Higher Beings for a couple of years now.

Those guys have become family.

Especially Will Roman.

I’m convinced Will could roll a joint using a phone charger, a receipt, and positive thinking.

Cross joints?

Easy.

Art?

Absolutely.

Magic?

Possibly.

Good people make good content.

It’s really that simple.

The Syracuse Brothers

Years ago I met Jus from The Basement Chronicles when they opened for Afroman.

I’ll be honest…

They stole the show.

I’ve been a fan ever since.

The People Making a Difference

I’ve also had the privilege of getting to know Jon Dow, and I look forward to honoring his late brother and celebrating the impact he made on this community.

I’ve become better friends with Ivan from Central Oddities, whose elite cold-cure rosin and ever-present RSO have made quite an impression on me.

Then there’s Adam Hagadone, known online as the Bipolar Grower.

Adam doesn’t just grow cannabis.

He grows hope.

He makes RSO to help people who need it—especially those who can’t afford it.

That’s the kind of heart you don’t forget.

Speaking of giant hearts…

Beyond New York

This journey hasn’t stopped at state lines.

I’ve met incredible growers across the country like Geoff Feff, whose garden photographs make cannabis lovers stop scrolling every single time.

I’ve built friendships online with people I still can’t wait to meet in person, including the crew at TorKd Farms, especially Josh Cooper.

One collaboration I’ll never forget was working with OG Granny, proving once again that passion for cannabis has no age limit.

And yes…

Getting endorsed by Afroman?

That was one of those “Is this real life?” moments.

This Community Changed Me

If I forgot someone, please know it wasn’t intentional.

That’s the downside of meeting so many incredible people.

You worry about leaving someone out who made a real impact on your life.

The truth is…

Every handshake…

Every interview…

Every collaboration…

Every shared joint…

Every conversation over a dab rig…

People reach out asking me to review products.

Some want honest feedback.

Some hope for the famous OG Strain Approved stamp.

Some even ask for endorsements.

Here’s the thing…

I’ve never accepted money to endorse cannabis.

Never.

And I never will.

If I recommend something, it’s because I actually use it.

Because I actually love it.

Because I’d tell my own friends to buy it.

Trust is worth more than sponsorship money.

That’s a hill I’ll happily smoke on.

I’m Not Chasing Clout—I’m Chasing Community

I’ve never wanted to be the loudest voice in cannabis.

I just wanted to be an honest one.

I carved out my own lane.

I’m not trying to be somebody else.

I’m not chasing clout.

I’m chasing conversations.

I’m chasing friendships.

I’m chasing laughter.

I’m chasing authenticity.

Looking back, I realize I didn’t just build a YouTube channel.

I didn’t just become a cannabis reviewer.

Somewhere along the way…

I found a second family.

Thank you.

Because the greatest thing I’ve discovered in cannabis wasn’t hidden inside a jar.

It was standing right beside it.

Stay lifted… stay genuine… and never underestimate the power of good people.

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