In Transaction Denied, Rainey Reitman argues that cannabis was never merely underbanked. It was pushed to the margins by a financial system willing to punish businesses, writers and entire communities for getting too close to the plant.
For years, the cannabis industry has been fed some version of the same story.
The banking mess is unfortunate. The payment problems are complicated. The account shutdowns are compliance issues. The paranoia is understandable, but this is just what happens when a federally illegal industry tries to behave like a normal business.
Rainey Reitman’s new book, Transaction Denied: Big Finance’s Power to Punish Speech, has a sharper read on all of it. In her view, what happened to cannabis was not just inconvenience or risk management. It was part of a broader pattern of financial censorship, where banks and payment processors gained the power to punish lawful speech, marginal businesses and politically inconvenient communities without ever having to plainly say that was what they were doing.
That argument runs through the whole book, which arrives April 7 from Beacon Press, but one of its most effective chapters is the one centered on cannabis. Reitman does not treat the industry as some strange carveout or regrettable exception. She treats it as one of the clearest examples of how easily the financial system can become a gatekeeper for what kinds of commerce, journalism and culture get to move freely in public.
That framing matters. Cannabis readers already know what debanking feels like. They know the drill: accounts disappear, payment tools get twitchy, payroll becomes a puzzle, and companies keep backup relationships because they never fully trust the first one to survive. Reitman’s contribution is to say that this should be understood as something more than operational friction. It is punishment, often delivered without transparency and with almost no meaningful recourse.
The strongest part of the cannabis chapter is also the most maddening. It centers on journalist Jackie Bryant and her newsletter Cannabitch, and it gets at something uglier than ordinary corporate caution. According to the book, Stripe took issue not because Bryant was selling cannabis, but because her journalism linked to sites that did. Reitman reproduces a message in which Stripe said Bryant would need to “audit” her blog and remove links to sites selling cannabis or cannabis supplies before the company would re-review the page.

Bryant’s response, as quoted in the book, gets right to the point: “It’s censorship, and I’m not selling anything.”
That detail gives the chapter its pulse. A payment processor was not simply policing a transaction. It was edging into editorial territory, effectively suggesting what a journalist should and should not link to in her own reporting. Reitman is especially sharp here because she understands that hyperlinks are not decorative. They are part of the work. They let readers trace sourcing, test claims and follow a story outward instead of keeping it trapped in one place. Strip those away and you do not just make cannabis writing less useful. You make it easier to isolate.
There is also a bitter little irony in the story that Reitman does not miss. Stripe had apparently made money off Bryant’s work for years before deciding her cannabis-adjacent links had become a problem. Bryant says in the book, “They’ve been taking money for four years from me.”
Then came the part every cannabis journalist will recognize. Public pressure did what private appeals could not. After Bryant went public, attention snowballed. High Times entered the picture when reporter Clare Sausen reached out to Stripe for comment and published a story on the account closure. Reitman writes that the same day Sausen’s article ran, Bryant got word that her Stripe account had been reinstated.
That sequence helps explain why the book lands. Reitman is not floating some abstract thesis about speech and democracy above the mess of real life. She is showing how corporate power behaves when nobody is looking, and how quickly that certainty can wobble once public scrutiny arrives. In her telling, publicity is often the only thing that exposes what is really driving these decisions. Not law. Not principle. Not necessity. Discretion.
The chapter also reaches backward into history, especially around Operation Choke Point, the Obama-era Justice Department initiative that cannabis operators still bring up whenever financial institutions start acting skittish. Reitman presents it as one of the clearest examples of government pressure helping push legal but disfavored industries toward the financial margins. That history gives the cannabis chapter backbone. The point is not that every account shutdown is the result of some grand coordinated campaign. In fact, Bryant tells Reitman she sees a lot of it as the product of “decades of prohibition and stigma” and misunderstanding.
That line matters because it keeps the book from flattening the issue into something too neat. Not every bad decision comes from a smoking-gun directive. Sometimes an industry gets squeezed because enough institutions have absorbed the same stigma, copied the same risk assumptions and decided it is easier to shut the door than explain why they left it open in the first place.
That is part of what makes the cannabis section worth reading even for people who feel like they already know this story. Reitman does not simply recount the usual indignities of being near the plant. She reframes them. The issue is not only that cannabis businesses have been treated like a headache. It is that journalists, advocates and entrepreneurs can all wind up facing the same invisible veto from companies that control access to money.
The book’s scope is broad, moving across very different communities and forms of exclusion. In the cannabis chapter, that wider lens works. It places the industry inside a much larger story about who gets pushed to the financial margins and why.
That is why the Jackie Bryant section lands so hard. It turns the whole argument into one absurd, revealing image: a payment processor trying to shape cannabis journalism one hyperlink at a time.
And that, more than any abstract policy fight, gets to the heart of what Reitman is saying. When banks and payment processors decide cannabis speech is too risky, they are not only making life harder for businesses. They are helping decide what kind of culture gets oxygen, what kind of journalism stays connected and who gets to participate in public life without first asking permission from the people handling the transactions.
For cannabis, that has never been a side issue. It has been part of the story the whole time.


