Texas Hemp’s Turning Point: From Panic to Partnership
The Quiet Majority Has Spoken—Now It’s Time to Act Like It
Texans are not confused about hemp. They’re tired of chaos. Poll after poll shows most voters—Democrats, Republicans, rural, suburban, and urban alike—support legal hemp and cannabis when framed around order, safety, and responsibility. They don’t want bans; they want boundaries.
Yet for three sessions, a loud minority has controlled the narrative through fear. They talk about “protecting kids,” while ignoring that regulation—not prohibition—is what actually protects them. That’s the paradox of Texas hemp politics: the prohibitionists have passion, the reformers have numbers—but numbers don’t matter if they’re quiet.
This week’s Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission stakeholder meeting is our chance to flip the script.
The TABC Rules: A Baseline, Not a Ceiling
Governor Abbott’s Executive Order GA-56 set a clear standard: no sales of consumable hemp products to anyone under 21, and mandatory ID verification for all transactions. Simple. Clear. Enforceable.
But clarity without capability is a setup for failure. That’s why CRAFT—the Cannabis Retailers Alliance for Texas—proposes something beyond compliance: a model for aggressive, auditable self-regulation.
In our submission to TABC, we laid out a framework to make age-gating foolproof . Every certified 21+ retailer would use electronic ID scanning tied to point-of-sale systems that physically block hemp product SKUs until an ID passes verification. Every clerk would be trained and tested. Every store would face quarterly “mystery shops” and real-time compliance audits through an open portal. Every fake ID, every failed attempt, every disciplinary action would be logged within 24 hours and summarized monthly for regulators.
This isn’t optional compliance theater—it’s an industry-run firewall against under-21 access, designed to complement state enforcement rather than dodge it.
Our message to TABC is simple: trust, but verify—and we’ll give you the data to do it.
The Real Problem: Counterfeits, Chaos, and Criminals in Disguise
Let’s be honest about the elephant in the dispensary.
Texas’ hemp marketplace has been flooded with counterfeit, mislabeled, and untested “hemp” lookalikesmasquerading as legitimate products. They’re made in unsanitary facilities, imported in bulk, and sold in corner stores with no quality controls, no lab reports, and no idea what’s actually inside.
We’ve seen so-called “THCA” gummies test positive for fentanyl analogues and synthetic cannabinoids. We’ve seen gas station “vapes” with no QR codes or fake Certificates of Analysis—just cheap packaging mimicking legitimate brands. Some products are flat-out counterfeits of reputable companies’ SKUs, complete with stolen COAs.
This isn’t the hemp industry. It’s the black market in drag.
When parents, sheriffs, and senators see these products, they think “hemp.” And that’s what fuels prohibition. Every unregulated fake product becomes another talking point for Dan Patrick and Charles Perry. Every child harmed by a bootleg “delta” cartridge becomes a soundbite on the evening news.
That’s why CRAFT’s certification and audit system matters. It draws a bright line between legitimate, accountable businesses and the parasites pretending to be part of our sector.
If we don’t regulate ourselves—and fast—Texas will regulate us out of existence.
Regulation as Reassurance
In my political analysis, I wrote that Texans aren’t demanding bans—they’re demanding reassurance . They don’t oppose cannabinoids; they oppose confusion.
When asked whether the legislature should “ban hemp-THC to protect children,” a narrow majority agrees. When told it means shutting down small businesses and killing jobs, support collapses. The difference isn’t ideology—it’s trust.
CRAFT’s model builds that trust through proof.
Proof that every sale is age-gated.
Proof that every product is tested and traceable.
Proof that when something goes wrong, it’s caught and corrected—not covered up.
Texans respond to visible responsibility, not slogans. They want to see rules, oversight, and accountability.
The Political Battlefield: Intensity Over Ideology
Inside the Texas GOP, the divide is nearly even: 45% oppose bans, 35% support them, and the rest shrug . The prohibitionists may be smaller, but they’re louder and more disciplined. They show up. They dominate hearings. They frame the story.
Our side? We’re running businesses, paying taxes, and raising families—but if we don’t match that intensity, we’ll keep losing policy to panic.
The winning message isn’t “freedom” or “choice.” It’s safety, order, and discipline. CRAFT’s self-regulation model gives lawmakers something to point to—a system that actually works.
The Way Forward
If TABC adopts these rules and recognizes certification as a “best practice,” we can create a statewide framework that separates real hemp from the knockoffs. Within 90 days, we’ll have hundreds of certified stores publishing compliance dashboards that regulators can access at any time.
This will make Texas the national leader in responsible hemp governance—a market that doesn’t wait for Washington or Austin to tell it how to behave.
Because the truth is, Texas doesn’t need another ban—it needs proof that good actors can self-govern.
The Closing Argument
We’ve let the loudest voices define us for too long. It’s time to take back the narrative.
The prohibitionists claim chaos. We’ll show order. They claim danger. We’ll show safety. They claim lawlessness. We’ll show data.
The counterfeiters and impostors have had their run. Now it’s time for the professionals to lead.
Texas hemp can’t survive as a gray-market punchline. It must evolve into a certified, audited, and transparent industry. That’s what Texans expect—and it’s what will finally end the cycle of moral panic and legislative overreach.
We’re past the panic.
Now comes the partnership.
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