I’ll walk through the surprising origin of 420, how modern cannabis has changed since the 1970s, the growing medical and social risks tied to high-potency products, the persistent black market and organized crime angle, and why dependence is more common than many admit.
The origin story of 420 is almost laughably small-town. In 1971 a group of San Rafael high school kids used 4:20 as a code while hunting for a rumored patch of marijuana at Point Reyes, meeting after school by a Louis Pasteur statue. The shorthand caught on with local music crowds and eventually turned into the date itself, April 20, becoming a cultural shorthand for stoner culture.
The truth behind the legend is even simpler and a little meaner: there was no magical crop. The older guy who sent them on the treasure hunt likely thought it was a funny prank and forgot about it, while the kids spent weeks rifling through poison oak for their non-existent pot. I’ve just been informed that today is April 23. Sorry.
1. This isn’t your parents’ marijuana. What people remember from the 1970s is a mild plant with low THC, but the market has been engineered and bred into something far stronger. Typical flower now often tests in the mid-teens for THC, and concentrates can run much higher, delivering a potency that would have been unrecognizable to earlier generations.
2. The psychosis link is real — and better established now. Journalist Alex Berenson flipped from skeptically dismissing risk to investigating after a casual comment from his then-wife: “Of course he’d been smoking pot his whole life.” Of course? That exchange sent him down a path that produced a book titled “Tell Your Children.” Clinical research now ties heavy, frequent, and high-potency use to increased risk of psychotic illnesses for a vulnerable minority.
That evidence doesn’t mean everyone who uses marijuana will develop mental illness, but it does change the calculus policymakers and parents should be using. Studies show the association strengthens with dose and frequency, and normalization through legalization makes exposure and experimentation more likely. This trade-off rarely shows up in marketing or in casual conversation.
“Chinese organized crime has come to dominate the illegal marijuana trade across the country.” The promise that legality would wipe out the illicit market has not come true in many states. Illicit operators avoid taxes and testing, undercut prices, and sometimes use banned, dangerous pesticides to maximize yields, creating a parallel market that still feeds consumers and, at times, legal dispensaries.
Because enforcement priorities focus elsewhere, the illegal market remains an attractive business for criminal networks that are willing to exploit workers and cut corners. That exploitation includes trafficking and labor abuses tied to growing operations that fly under the regulatory radar. Legal markets that are over-taxed or over-regulated simply leave room for these criminal entrepreneurs to thrive.
4. “Not addictive” is not really true. Saying weed is non-addictive ignores how habits form and how modern products amplify the risk of dependence. Research estimates roughly three in 10 users develop cannabis use disorder, a number that climbs for daily users and those using high-potency products. The result is often a slow narrowing of motivation and attention that a lot of people, and a lot of policy debates, underestimate.
