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So I caught something interesting the other day. LeBron was playing against Houston, and after missing a layup he literally made this whole pantomime of smoking an imaginary joint, then pretended to pass it to Christian Wood. Pretty wild moment, and honestly it says so much about where we are now compared to even a decade ago.
The thing that got me thinking - this would have been absolutely nuclear if it happened back in the 2000s. Remember when Allen Iverson and Ricky Williams got absolutely hammered for marijuana stuff? The league was ruthless about it. But LeBron just does this on court and the NBA doesn't even blink. No fines, no statements, nothing.
Turns out there's a reason for that shift. Back in late March, the NBA actually made a deal with the players association to straight up end cannabis testing and penalties. Like, they just stopped. Baseball, hockey, the NFL - they'd already gone that direction, and the NBA finally caught up. It's wild when you think about it, especially since Ohio legalized recreational weed and LeBron's from there.
What really struck me though is what this moment actually represents. It's not really about whether LeBron smokes weed or not - honestly, the guy is obsessed with his body and fitness. It's more about the cultural moment itself. A generation ago, even joking about this would end careers. Now it's just entertainment, team chemistry stuff.
Meanwhile, you've got all these Hall of Famers who've been openly talking about cannabis for years. Iverson, Durant, Kareem, Al Harrington, Isiah Thomas - they've all been vocal about it. Some of them have actually gotten into the business side. Iverson partnered with Harrington on cannabis products, created his own line. These guys aren't hiding anymore.
The whole landscape changed. What used to be career suicide is now just part of the conversation. Whether it's LeBron's little on-court moment or former players building actual businesses around cannabis, you're watching a complete cultural reset happen in real time.