Though Trump has nominated Cabinet members that have been against legal marijuana in the past, a war on legal marijuana is unlikely. With anxiety levels on the rise for those selling recreational marijuana legally in states where it’s allow, I say switch from the Indica to a good Sativa and stay optimistic.

At this point, any attempt to reverse legalization would come with some major economic and political barriers.

“When you start taking away liberties that are already in place, there will be pushback.” says Beth Allen owner and operator of a small marijuana farm.

Trump has got to start picking his battles, and waging war on pot would be going against too many voters. Medical marijuana is now legal in 28 states and recreational marijuana is legal in 8 states. With that many states onboard holding close to a quarter of the world population, waging a war would be too much of a hassle with all the other fish there is to fry.

It’s pretty clear that public opinion on marijuana is headed in the opposite direction when it comes to prohibition. Sure the Democrats are typically more supportive than Republicans — however — both the Blue and Red states have embraced legal marijuana despite the federal government putting marijuana in the same class as heroin. Think about that, it takes major incentive on the state’s behave to make a stand in that environment. The publics support for medical marijuana is nearing 90%.

Trump has even said that he supports medical marijuana and that it’s up to the states to decide whether or not to legalize. Many years ago, he also said that all drugs should be legalized in order to take profits away from black-market players and produce tax dollars, and there is plenty that needs funding under Trump’s plans.

Jeff Session’s past comments is the reason there is sprouting anxiety in the industry. Sessions has said that reform would be a “tragic mistake” and that “Good people don’t smoke marijuana.” But fear not, Trump is really close to naming Jim O’Neil, a marijuana legalization advocate to head the FDA. O’Neil is also closely associated with billionaire Peter Thiel, who co-founded Paypal and is also a strong supporter of legalizing marijuana.

Plus there is even more good news, A bipartisan bill has been introduced by freshman House Rep. Tom Garrett (R-Va.), that would remove marijuana completely from the Controlled Substances Act, effectively decriminalizing cannabis under federal law. Garrett has promised to make cannabis reform a top priority. The bill Garret introduced would remove cannabis from the Controlled Substances Act and treat it similar to alcohol and tobacco.

There’s a lot of money in marijuana and it is predicted to grow quite a bit. If legal marijuana was to suddenly sees to existing, hundreds of small businesses would collapse and thousands of jobs would be lost and the black market would reap all the benefits. It would also piss off a lot of investors. The market for legal marijuana in the US is already worth $7 billion and quite possible worth $20 billion by 2020.

The Obama Administration issued several memos stating that if the States operate appropriately with regulations and keep it out of the hands of minors, the federal government would not interfere. Even if the Trump Administration decided that it wants to interfere, there are clear limitations, the federal government cannot require states to prohibit, nor can it force states to enforce federal law. The DEA could go into any state and arrest every dispensary owner — however– the state and local police would not be obligated to assist.

“Selling cannabis is one thing, but stopping people from growing their own is another. We must keep in mind that we’re talking about a plant here, not a dangerous synthetic drug like the ones prescribed daily” says Michael Charles co-founder of a GrowSpot an online marketplace where people rent space to growers.

With all that Trump is facing in just the few weeks of his presidency the question is how much pushback is he willing to take for the sake of enforcing a harmless drug that he has already expressed low concern over. Besides, the federal government is not the primary drug enforcer in this country, it is the states which hold the trump card.