Reefer Report Card: The Week in Weed, Rated, October 4, 2025 – Vol. 17


Filed under: Weekly Burn
Promotional image for Reefer Report Card Vol. 17 by Pot Culture Magazine. The design features a bold retro backdrop of swirling orange, green, and red patterns reminiscent of 1970s psychedelic posters. A detailed cannabis leaf is centered over the words ‘REEFER REPORT CARD VOL. 17’ in large gold lettering. At the bottom, the website PotCultureMagazine.com and the ©2025PotCultureMagazine/ArtDept credit appear in matching gold text

California finally put intoxicating hemp under the same roof as licensed cannabis. Nebraska found a new way to stall a voter mandate. Florida courts told cops the smell of weed is not a blank check. Oregon lawyers are aiming at the walls around interstate commerce. The feds started tracking hemp adverse events. Let’s grade it.


STATEHOUSE HEADLINER

California folds intoxicating hemp into the regulated market
The governor signed a bill bringing intoxicating hemp products into licensed dispensaries with age checks and testing, ending the gas-station loophole, and aligning hemp with cannabis retail. Progress with teeth, and a rare moment of policy coherence in the nation’s biggest market.
Grade: B


GOVERNMENT CLOWN CAR AWARD

Nebraska blows a hard deadline on medical cannabis
The Medical Cannabis Commission missed the October 1 licensing deadline, and a state senator is now challenging rules he says defy voter intent. Medical cannabis patients are still waiting while appointees rewrite the mandate they were given.
Grade: F


COURTROOM REALITY CHECK

Florida court says “smell alone” is not probable cause
A Florida appeals court ruled police cannot search a vehicle based only on the odor of cannabis. Legal hemp and medical programs changed the calculus. Rights matter, even when the car smells like skunk.
Grade: A-


POLICY PUSH

Oregon case targets the ban on interstate cannabis
An Oregon marijuana business filed a fresh federal lawsuit arguing the state’s blockade on interstate cannabis and hemp commerce is unconstitutional. If the courts crack that door, the entire supply map changes.
Grade: B


FEDERAL WATCH

FDA starts tracking adverse events for hemp cannabinoids
The FDA updated its reporting system so doctors and consumers can flag adverse events tied to hemp-derived cannabinoids. Real oversight finally meets a runaway market.
Grade: C+


FINAL GRADE: C

Two courts and one governor moved the ball. One state tried to hide it. The federal move is a start, not a solution. Better than last week, still not good enough.


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Reefer Report Card Vol. 28: The Rescheduling That Wasn’t

This week’s Reefer Report Card cuts through the hype around cannabis “rescheduling,” exposing how a label change left federal prohibition fully intact. Arrest authority, workplace punishment, and immigration penalties remain untouched. Headlines claimed progress. Reality delivered none. A week defined by performance over policy, and reform that never arrived.

THE SCHEDULE III SCAM

Federal officials claim cannabis is moving forward, but Schedule III changes nothing that matters. This investigation breaks down what rescheduling actually does, what it deliberately avoids, and why prohibition logic remains intact. Arrests continue. Markets remain conflicted. Reform language replaces reform action. The system shifts labels while preserving control.

LEGAL WEED, OLD RULES

Legalization promised freedom but preserved prohibition logic. This investigation examines how cannabis reform left arrests, racial disparities, job punishment, medical blame, and equity barriers intact. By tracing enforcement, employment law, healthcare practice, and licensing rules, it shows how legalization changed the label without dismantling the system.


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