Hey Snoop! What's hopping? I am from a new podcast
called RUDE, rudethepodcast.com
And we have an episode on the
legalization of weed and social justice
impacts of that. So, kind of to
bounce off that question that that other
person asked: in a room like this that is
made up of the people that it is, I'm wondering what you would say
to young Black and Indigenous youth who
have been criminalized for marijuana in
Canada or the States? Because I think
it's so interesting who is now able to
take up this space when, like you
mentioned, so many people have been
incarcerated for something that is now
going to become legal. [SNOOP] That's an
amazing question, by the way. I feel like I want to be their voice. You know I don't want to
be the one that just makes money off of
it and profits off of it, with them being
incarcerated. As a Black man. Because I
understand that we were profiled when we
were put in jail in the first place
because I went to jail many times for
marijuana. And its documented. So now I'm sitting back making money off of
marijuana. But then you got some other
Black men that are being incarcerated
still and not being looked at. And if
you're gonna really reform you got to
reform them first and foremost. So I
will be the voice and I'll say that
right now and I hope your team is taping
this shit
so y'all be take it and put it in y'all
documentary, or y'all podcast. And state
that Snoop Dogg is the voice for the reform. 
LET 'EM OUT!
