Selling weed is never just about weed.
It is about incentives, risk, trust, enforcement, and the invisible rules that govern markets operating in the shadows of legality. Drawing from lived experience, economic reasoning, and hard-earned observation, On Selling Weed examines how informal markets actually function-and what they reveal about power, money, and human behavior.
This is not a guide, a manifesto, or a morality play. It is a sober, analytical look at how people navigate constrained systems, how value moves when institutions fail, and why attempts to control markets so often produce the opposite of their intended outcomes.
Clear-eyed and unsentimental, On Selling Weed is a study of trade under pressure-and a lens into how all markets, legal or not, really work.