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Cultivate & Motivate
Learnings, teachings, tips & tricks for anyone to reference during difficult times, stressful workdays, or moments when manifesting your true self.
BUILDING BLOCKS
“These statutes provide the statutory scaffolding for establishing a comprehensive Agriculture Therapy and Veteran Reintegration Program in collaboration with Cooperative Extension services, research universities, and veteran-focused institutions.”
PRINCIPLED RESISTANCE: The Legacy of Robert Randall & Alice O’Leary Randall
“Principled Resistance is the connective tissue between the Randalls and us.
It’s how we remember.
It’s how we reclaim.
It’s how we rise.”
7. “Foreign influence and optics.”
#FundedAbroadDeniedAtHome
#VeteransAreNotExpendable
#CannabisIsPatriotic
#WeFoughtForThisLandLetUsHealOnIt
6. “The VA is already overwhelmed.”
#VAIsCapable
#Don’tBlameTheToolForTheNeglect
#VeteransDeserveBetter
#NotOverreach—Oversight
#TheGreenPaperIsAccountabilityInPrint
5. “Cannabis Use Disorder (CUD) is real and rising.”
#CannabisIsTheExitWound
#HealingIsDisruption
#FollowTheReliefNotTheRevenue
#TheyProtectThePills
#WeProtectEachOther
4. “This opens the floodgates to full-scale legalization.”
#NotCrazy
#JustCorrect
#FixTheLie
#VeteransDeserveStructureNotSpin
3. “The Controlled Substances Act (CSA) is the law of the land.”
“Congress, DEA, FDA, NIDA, VA, HHS—all had a hand in building the machine… now, none of them want to be the one to dismantle it.”
2. “Veteran stories are powerful but anecdotal.”
#WeAreTheEvidence
#LivedExperienceIsData
#CoincidenceMyAss
#PublicHealthIsNotActivism
1. “The science isn’t settled.”
“…when veterans are dying by suicide, overdose, and despair—suppression becomes complicity.”
I Told ChatGPT To Attack Our Position: Here’s What It Said
“These aren’t fair critiques—but they’re real ones. And they’re already circulating in policy circles, conservative think tanks, and federal agencies.”
Smokescreens and Citations: How MAPS Burned Veterans to Get Federal Weed Money
“This is not just about one study. It’s about decades of gatekeeping, controlled access, and performative allyship.”
"We Have the Receipts": A Report on Federal Medical Cannabis Suppression and the Testimonies They Tried to Bury
“This report is just the beginning of what must be a national reckoning. Veterans, patients, and physicians have spoken the truth for generations. It’s time we stop pretending we don’t know it.”
Buried by the State: How the U.S. Government Suppressed Medical Marijuana Testimonies—and Gaslit Its Own Citizens
“One patient, a veteran with AIDS, was quietly provided cannabis grown by the federal government and distributed through the Audie L. Murphy VA Hospital. He may be the only person (aside from Lynn Pierson) to ever officially receive federal marijuana through the VA system. “
You Were Warned: What Co-Opting Means in Mental Health Care
“Veterans were trotted out like mascots—photo ops for white coats and nonprofit execs who needed a “face” for their movement. But the second we stepped out of the narrative they wrote for us? The door slammed shut. “
“The U.S. Government Knew in 1976: Veterans, Glaucoma, and the Lost History of Federal Medical Marijuana”
“ The judge declared it was a matter of “medical necessity.” And what did the feds do? They started quietly shipping him marijuana cigarettes grown at the University of Mississippi.”
Fear and Loathing in the Garden: The Penguins Go to War
“The plan was simple: Take the sanitized, citation-soaked research portfolio MAPS submitted to the FDA, drag it out into the daylight, and expose it for what it was—an erasure campaign dressed as progress.”
The Ghosts in the Files: How the Feds Buried Medical Cannabis and Called It Science
“Years ago, I found myself elbow-deep in archival documents—forgotten files Alice O’Leary Randall entrusted to me, back when she was laying groundwork for Project 50. The kind of documents you don’t expect to find unless someone wants you to find them.”
Arizona Garden Month: A Bloom Rooted in Healing, Heritage, and Civic Power
At the heart of this movement was a simple challenge:
What can we do—tangibly, collectively—to support healing and reconnection in our communities?