Community
Censored, Not Silenced: Why the Canna Community Needs to Evolve Beyond Facebook
By OG Strain
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Hey Canna family—it’s OG Strain here.
Let me keep it real with you right from the jump… if you’re reading this, it’s because I can’t post it where most of you are used to seeing me: Facebook.
Yeah. Again.
At this point, getting restricted on Facebook as a cannabis content creator feels less like a violation and more like a weekly subscription service—except nobody signed up for it, and the customer service is about as responsive as a brick wall with Wi-Fi.
But this article isn’t just about me being locked out. This is bigger than that. This is about all of us—the entire cannabis community—and the position we keep putting ourselves in by relying on platforms that clearly don’t support us.
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The Reality We Keep Ignoring
Let’s call it what it is.
Facebook does not support cannabis culture.
And it definitely doesn’t prioritize free expression when it comes to our community.
Between automated moderation systems flagging harmless content and bad actors reporting posts, creators like myself are constantly walking a tightrope. One wrong move—or one strategically offended person—and boom… you’re locked out of your own platform.
And here’s the wild part: sometimes it’s not even strangers.
Sometimes it’s people who follow you… engage with you… laugh with you… and then report you.
Yeah. That part.
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When Support Turns Two-Faced
Recently, I found myself restricted because someone who had been actively engaging with my content suddenly decided to take offense—over a simple tag.
Not a callout.
Not disrespect.
A tag.
Instead of reaching out like a normal human being—“Hey man, can you remove that?”—they went straight to reporting. Not just the post… the account. The whole thing.
Now I’m dealing with the fallout.
And while I’m choosing not to name names (because I don’t operate at that level), the situation highlights something important:
There are people who will privately support cannabis culture—but publicly run from it.
And worse… some will protect their image at the expense of your livelihood.
That’s not community. That’s cowardice.
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The Bigger Problem: Platform Dependence
Here’s where I need you to really lock in.
As long as we keep building everything on Facebook, we are putting our voices, our businesses, and our movement in the hands of a system that can shut us down at any moment.
That’s not strategy—that’s vulnerability.
Think about it like this:
If your entire grow was in one tent… and that tent had a habit of randomly catching fire…
Would you keep putting all your plants in there?
Exactly.
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It’s Time to Diversify—And Migrate
This is why I’m urging all of you—creators, supporters, smokers, growers, enthusiasts—to start branching out.
I’ve recently stepped onto a new platform: X (formerly Twitter).
And from what I’ve seen and been told, it’s far more open to cannabis content and free expression.
Now listen—I’m not saying it’s perfect.
But what I am saying is this:
We need options.
We need spaces where we can speak, share, educate, and build—without constantly worrying about being silenced.
Because let’s be honest…
You can’t grow a movement if every post feels like you’re sneaking snacks into a movie theater.
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OG Strain Isn’t Going Anywhere
Let me make one thing crystal clear:
I’m not stopping.
Not because of a report.
Not because of a restriction.
Not because of any platform.
I will continue:
• Writing for The Plugs Pages Magazine
• Creating content on my YouTube channel “Strain’s Strain Reviews (Talk Cannabis)”
• Expanding onto new platforms like X
• Advocating for this plant and this culture every single day
Facebook might slow me down…
…but it will never shut me up.
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A Message to the Real Ones
If you truly support:
• Cannabis culture
• Free expression
• Independent creators
Then now is the time to act.
Follow me on other platforms.
Stay connected beyond Facebook.
Build accounts elsewhere before you need them.
Because trust me…
The way things are going, it’s not if Facebook comes for you…
…it’s when.
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Final Hit (You Knew This Was Coming)
Look, I love this community.
But we gotta stop acting like Facebook is the plug… when they’ve been cutting our supply this whole time.
It’s like going back to the same dealer who keeps shorting your eighth and saying,
“Maybe this time he’ll respect me.”
Nah.
We deserve better platforms.
We deserve real support.
And we deserve to speak freely about a plant that’s changing lives every day.
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Stand Together or Stay Stuck
Together, we stand. Divided, we fall.
So let’s stand smart.
Let’s stand prepared.
And most importantly…
Let’s stand somewhere they can’t keep muting us.
⸻
– OG Strain
Canna Advocate | Strain Reviewer | Voice of the Northeast
(Follow links and platform info below to stay connected beyond Facebook.)
https://twitter.com/ogstraincontent?s=11
https://youtube.com/@ogstraintheoriginalog?si=N0pJfCOcydE2d1l9
Community
THE PLATFORM THAT DECIDES WHO GETS HEARD
Why Millions of Users Feel Facebook Has Lost Its Neutral Ground — and Why I’m Calling for a One-Day Shutdown on August 15
Facebook was once the digital town square.
A place where voices could be heard, communities could grow, and information could spread instantly across the world. It was built on the idea of connection.
But today, many users—including myself—feel that something fundamental has changed.
And whether people agree on the reasons or not, the feeling is becoming more common: Facebook no longer feels neutral.
As a cannabis advocate, journalist, and contributor to The Plug’s Pages Magazine, I’ve experienced repeated content restrictions tied to cannabis-related posts—even when those posts contain no sales, no offers, and no transactions of any kind.
No “buy now.”
No “DM for purchase.”
No exchange of goods or services.
Just journalism. Just reporting. Just culture.
Yet posts can still be flagged or restricted simply because they contain cannabis-related language or references.
And I want to be clear about what that means from my perspective:
It creates the feeling that even discussing a legal or emerging industry can put your voice at risk.
Many users across different communities share similar concerns—not just in cannabis, but in politics, health discussions, and controversial topics in general. Whether through automated systems, keyword triggers, or moderation policies, people often report experiencing sudden restrictions, removals, or account limitations that feel unclear and difficult to appeal.
And one of the most frustrating parts, according to many users, is what happens next.
In some cases, restrictions are lifted later without explanation. Content is restored. Accounts are reactivated. But the question remains:
Why was it removed in the first place?
This lack of transparency leaves creators, journalists, and everyday users trying to guess where the invisible lines are drawn.
For some, it feels like walking through a system where the rules are not always visible until they are suddenly enforced.
For others, it raises a deeper concern: who decides what information is allowed to circulate in the first place?
I’m not saying Facebook is the only platform with moderation policies. Every major platform has them. But what I am saying—based on my experience and what many users express—is that the scale of influence Facebook holds makes these decisions feel especially impactful.
Because when a platform that large restricts content, it doesn’t just affect one post.
It affects reach.
It affects income.
It affects conversations.
It affects visibility.
And it affects whether certain topics are even seen at all.
That’s why this is not just about frustration. It’s about choice.
On August 15, I am calling for a peaceful, voluntary 24-hour break from Facebook.
Not a deletion.
Not a permanent exit.
Just one day.
A pause.
A moment for users to step back and explore other platforms like X, independent media, direct communities, and alternative spaces where conversation continues without interruption.
The goal is simple: awareness.
To show what happens when users choose where their attention goes.
To remind people that no single platform is the only option.
And to demonstrate that collective action—no matter how small it seems individually—can create a message when done together.
If you rely on Facebook for communication, you can return the next day.
If you use it for business, your work continues.
If you use it for community, your community will still be there.
But for one day, we step outside the system and observe it from the outside.
Because sometimes, the most powerful statement users can make is simply this:
We can log off.
Whether you agree with every concern raised here or not, the larger question remains worth asking:
How much control should any single platform have over global conversation?
And what happens when users decide to explore what else exists beyond it?
On August 15, we find out.
— OG Strain
The Plug’s Pages Magazine
Community
Why August 15 Must Become the Day We Remind Big Tech Who Really Holds the Power
By OG Strain
There is a dangerous illusion that has taken hold in America.
Millions of people believe they need Facebook.
The truth is the exact opposite.
Facebook needs us.
Every post.
Every comment.
Every photograph.
Every business page.
Every creator.
Every advertiser.
Every minute we spend scrolling.
That is the fuel that powers one of the largest corporations on Earth.
And yet somehow, many of us have accepted the idea that we should simply sit quietly whenever that corporation decides what is acceptable, what is unacceptable, who gets heard, and who gets ignored.
I reject that idea.
I reject it completely.
This article isn’t about one account.
It isn’t about one creator.
It isn’t about one disagreement.
It’s about a growing frustration shared by countless people who feel that massive technology companies have become too comfortable, too powerful, and too disconnected from the very people who made them successful in the first place.
For years, users have watched pages disappear.
Businesses lose reach.
Creators lose audiences.
Communities vanish.
Meanwhile, the people affected are often left with little explanation and even fewer answers.
At some point, every American has to ask a simple question:
How much power are we willing to hand over before we decide enough is enough?
Our ancestors did not build this country on the belief that powerful institutions should never be questioned.
They built it on the exact opposite principle.
Question authority.
Challenge power.
Speak your mind.
Stand up when you believe something is wrong.
Whether that power comes from a government, a corporation, or any other institution makes no difference.
Power without accountability eventually becomes arrogance.
And arrogance grows when nobody pushes back.
That is why I am calling for a peaceful, nationwide Facebook walkout on August 15.
Not forever.
Not for a month.
Not even for a week.
One day.
Twenty-four hours.
One simple message.
We are not powerless.
On August 15, log out.
Step away.
Create an X account if you don’t already have one.
Explore other platforms.
Spend one day proving to yourself that Facebook is not the center of your digital world.
Then on August 16, come back and tell people why you participated.
Tell your friends.
Tell your family.
Tell your followers.
Tell Facebook.
Because silence changes nothing.
Action changes everything.
Some people will say one day doesn’t matter.
History disagrees.
Every movement starts with a first step.
Community
LOVE HIM OR HATE HIM, YOU CAN’T IGNORE HIM
Hudson Valley Green, Higher Beings, and the Man Behind the Buzz
If you’ve spent any amount of time in New York’s cannabis community, chances are you’ve heard the name Danni Burns.
And depending on who you ask, you’ll get one of two reactions.
One group will tell you he’s one of the most knowledgeable and successful people in the game.
The other group will roll their eyes so hard they almost spill their grinder.
Welcome to cannabis.
Let’s be honest—this industry is full of strong personalities. Put enough growers, breeders, vendors, smokers, hash makers, and self-proclaimed “flower experts” in one room and you’ll have enough opinions to fill a pound jar.
Danni isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.
Or, more appropriately, everyone’s infused lemonade.
His confidence can come across as cocky. He’s passionate about his products. He’s vocal about what he believes is good flower and what he believes isn’t. Sometimes that rubs people the wrong way.
But here’s the thing:
Whether you love him, dislike him, agree with him, disagree with him, or simply avoid Facebook comment sections altogether…
The results speak for themselves.
Hudson Valley Green has built one of the most recognizable and successful cannabis brands in New York’s legacy market. Their product selection is enormous, their quality is consistently impressive, and their pricing remains among the most competitive you’ll find anywhere in the state.
Those aren’t opinions.
Those are facts.
Now, do I personally agree with every statement Danni has ever made about other people’s flower?
No.

Cannabis is subjective. There are plenty of talented growers throughout New York producing exceptional products. This community is loaded with skilled cultivators who deserve recognition.
But I’m also not here to tell another businessman how to run his business or market his products.
What I can tell you is this:
The confidence didn’t appear out of thin air.
Confidence usually comes from results.
And Hudson Valley Green has produced plenty of those.
The Man Behind the Reputation
Here’s something many people don’t realize.
The Danni Burns people talk about online isn’t always the same Danni Burns you’ll meet in person.
Underneath the confidence is a guy who genuinely cares about helping people.
He’s passionate about cannabis.
He’s passionate about providing affordable access to quality products.
And he’s passionate about building something that lasts.
Sometimes confidence gets mistaken for arrogance. Sometimes success attracts criticism. Sometimes people decide whether they like someone before they’ve ever actually met them.
Cannabis users should understand this better than anyone.
After all, how many strains have we all judged by the name only to discover it absolutely slapped?
The same principle applies to people.
Higher Beings Powered by Hudson Valley Green
One of the biggest reasons for Hudson Valley Green’s continued success is the partnership behind Higher Beings Powered by Hudson Valley Green.
While Danni serves customers in the Hudson Valley region near Newburgh, his partner Kevin has become a familiar face throughout Upstate New York and the 518 community.
If you’ve attended enough pop-up events, chances are you’ve seen Kevin somewhere.
And if you haven’t, don’t worry.
Give it another weekend.
He’ll probably be at three events before you finish reading this article.
Together they’ve created a network that covers a huge portion of New York State, making quality products accessible to consumers from multiple regions without requiring a cross-state road trip that ends with you explaining to your GPS why you’re suddenly in the middle of nowhere.
Why I Stand Behind Them
Full disclosure:
I’m not employed by Hudson Valley Green.
I’m not a partner.
I’m not getting paid to write this article.
Nobody handed me an envelope full of cash, a suitcase of samples, or a magical jar that never runs out.
This is simply my honest experience.
Every product I’ve personally purchased from Hudson Valley Green or Higher Beings has impressed me.
Every single one.
Not most of them.
Not almost all of them.
All of them.
As someone who reviews cannabis products regularly, that’s not something I say lightly.
I’ve purchased products from enough companies to know that consistency is one of the hardest things to achieve in this industry.
Yet somehow Hudson Valley Green continues to deliver.
That’s why I’m comfortable putting my own name behind this recommendation.
Final Hit
At the end of the day, cannabis should be about one thing:
The product.
Not the rumors.
Not the drama.
Not the comment sections.
Not who likes who.
The product.
And when judged on the quality of the flower, variety of offerings, accessibility, consistency, and value, Hudson Valley Green has earned its place among New York’s most respected cannabis brands.
So if you’ve never tried Higher Beings Powered by Hudson Valley Green, maybe it’s time.
Set aside the opinions.
Ignore the noise.
Try the flower.
Because whether you’re a longtime supporter or a skeptic looking to prove everyone wrong, one thing is certain:
The cannabis doesn’t care which side of the argument you’re on.
It just wants to get you elevated.
And from everything I’ve seen so far, Hudson Valley Green knows exactly how to make that happen.
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