Reefer Report Card Vol. 25: November 22-29, 2025


Filed Under: The Week in Weed
Psychedelic green and orange Reefer Report Card Vol. 25 cover with a large cannabis leaf in the center, bold yellow lettering, and the full website address PotCultureMagazine.com displayed at the bottom along with Pot Culture Magazine branding.

The week felt tight from every angle. Federal pressure grew, states scrambled, courts loomed, and the global market wobbled. Cannabis users and workers felt squeezed by decisions made in back rooms and committee halls. Everyone waited for someone in power to blink, yet nothing gave.


STATEHOUSE HEADLINER

The fallout from the federal hemp-derived THC crackdown accelerated. The U.S. Hemp Roundtable continued sounding alarms about language that could erase up to 95 percent of intoxicating hemp products, devastate a 28.4 billion dollar sector, and wipe out more than 300,000 jobs. State lawmakers in Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan, and Texas kept demanding clarity because the proposal collides with the 2018 Farm Bill that legalized hemp in the first place. Industry groups warned that a sudden federal reversal could trigger closures, layoffs, and crop abandonment through the winter. The uncertainty is the point, not the byproduct.
Grade: D


GOVERNMENT CLOWN CAR AWARD

New York remained the nation’s loudest cautionary tale. The state kept raiding unlicensed shops while its legal market crawled forward at a pace only a bureaucrat could admire. Social equity applicants complained that promises from three years ago still had not materialized. Lawsuits kept stacking up, regulators kept insisting progress was near, and city leaders fought for harsher enforcement instead of smarter planning. The state wants credit for reform while running a system that barely functions.
Grade: D plus


REGULATOR ROULETTE

The industry watched the federal courts with real fear this week as attention turned toward the upcoming Supreme Court challenge that could redefine federal prohibition. Analysts warned that a ruling in either direction could unleash historic consequences. A narrow ruling could lock the industry into confusion for years. A broad ruling could invalidate existing state frameworks overnight. States prepared statements, lawyers sharpened their language, and investors stood still. Reform built its world around workarounds. Now the workaround might be on trial.
Grade: C minus


PATIENT RIGHTS WATCH

Medical patients and veterans faced a double burden this week. The VA continued sitting on research that does not reflect real-world veteran needs. Advocates accused federal agencies of stalling progress while veterans live with daily pain, anxiety, trauma, and insomnia. In legal states, employers continued firing or disciplining medical users because THC tests cannot distinguish impairment from lawful use. The gap between policy and patients widened again, and no institution stepped forward to fix it.
Grade: D


INTERNATIONAL HEAT CHECK

Brazil moved forward with a significant step as its national agricultural research agency authorized cannabis research for the first time. The decision hinted at a new frontier for Latin America. Germany continued struggling with the implementation of its cannabis club model while blaming administrative burdens for delays. Thailand kept floating contradictory signals about whether cannabis should remain semi-legal or be pushed back into criminal territory. Global reform kept moving, but every country showed hesitation, fear, or disorganization.
Grade: C


FINAL GRADE

Pressure built across the entire cannabis landscape. The federal government leaned harder on hemp. New York showed what happens when policy outruns planning. Courts are prepared to weigh the future of legalization. Veterans waited for care that matched their needs. International reform moved, but rarely with confidence. A tense week that felt like the slow tightening of a vise.
Final Grade: D


©2025 Pot Culture Magazine. All rights reserved. This content is the exclusive property of Pot Culture Magazine and may not be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without prior written permission from the publisher, except for brief quotations in critical reviews.

F O R T H E C U L T U R E B Y T H E C U L T U R E

The Drug Test Lie Finally Cracks in New Mexico

New Mexico’s Senate Bill 129 challenges the long standing assumption that a positive cannabis test equals impairment. By separating outdated drug testing from actual workplace safety, the bill aims to protect medical cannabis patients from job discrimination while preserving employer authority over real on the job risk and misconduct.

How Cannabis Can Cost You Your Gun

Federal law still allows cannabis use to strip Americans of firearm rights without proof of danger or misuse. As the Supreme Court weighs United States v. Hemani, courts are confronting whether the government can continue punishing people based on status rather than conduct in a country where cannabis is legal in most states.

Reefer Report Card Vol. 32: Kicking the Can Again

This week’s Reefer Report Card tracks a familiar pattern in cannabis policy: delay dressed as progress. Federal lawmakers punted again on hemp regulation, states flirted with dismantling legal markets, and patients were left waiting. Oversight weakened, accountability faded, and reform stalled. Another week in weed, graded.

WHEN THE UN CAN’T STOP LEGAL WEED

As cannabis reform accelerates worldwide, the UN’s International Narcotics Control Board continues warning that decades old drug treaties still apply. This feature examines the INCB’s actual authority, the limits of treaty enforcement, and why global legalization is advancing despite institutional resistance rooted in prohibition era frameworks.

The Federal Hemp Blueprint That Isn’t

A proposed federal hemp framework is being sold as long overdue clarity for a chaotic market. But beneath the promise of order, the structure reveals rigid caps, unresolved enforcement questions, and a quiet shift of power away from states and smaller producers. We break down what the proposal does, what it avoids, and why the…

Reefer Report Card Vol. 31: The Retreat Becomes Routine

Reefer Report Card Vol. 31 examines a week where cannabis reform quietly retreated. Ballot rollbacks gained traction, federal action stalled, and patients remained unprotected. Legal weed stayed popular, but oversight weakened and accountability slipped. Another week where legalization survived while governance failed


Discover more from POT CULTURE MAGAZINE

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a comment

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑

Discover more from POT CULTURE MAGAZINE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading