Filed under: Weekly Burn

Texas tried and failed to kill hemp. Cities in Ohio are slow-rolling legalization with paper bans. Nebraska is tightening the screws before a single patient gets relief. Overseas, Switzerland inches toward national retail while Thailand swears in the very man who first pushed decriminalization as its new Prime Minister. Let’s grade the week in weed.
STATEHOUSE HEADLINER

Texas Fails to Ban THC. Vapes Get Axed. Confusion Wins.
The big ban push fizzled. The Texas Senate passed a prohibition bill, then it died in the House. Result. Most hemp-derived THC products remain legal in Texas. There is still no statewide age limit on gummies or beverages. At the same time, a new vape law kicked in on September 1. It bans the sale and marketing of cannabinoid vapes, including delta-8 and CBD pens, and creates Class A misdemeanor penalties for sellers. Possession is not a crime. Retailers and lawyers are already calling the law a drafting mess that invites wrongful arrests and does nothing to control the broader market. The Legislature ended its special session without touching hemp rules. That is how you protect chaos.
Grade: D

LOCAL TRAINWRECK
Ohio Towns Throw Up Do Not Enter Signs
Adult-use cannabis is legal statewide. Local politicians are busy pretending it is not. As of September 4, there are 145 cities and townships with moratoriums blocking adult-use businesses. That is almost fifteen percent of the population living under local bans. The state collects taxes. Border towns watch money leave. Consumers keep buying in the gray. This is legalization on paper and prohibition by ordinance.
Grade: F

REGULATOR ROULETTE
Nebraska Tightens Medical Rules Before Patients See Products
The Nebraska Medical Cannabis Commission advanced stricter emergency regulations this week. Advocates say the new package is stricter than the June rules and will restrict access before the program begins. The board passed the changes unanimously and moved them toward final approval. Patients are still waiting. Bureaucracy is not.
Grade: F

INDUSTRY SCORECARD
Ohio Finally Gets Pre-Rolls On Shelves
After months of waiting, regulators cleared the way for pre-rolled cannabis products. Operators began manufacturing and bringing them to market. It is not revolutionary, but it represents significant progress in a major Midwestern market. Consumers get convenience. Retailers get volume and margin.
Grade: B
INTERNATIONAL HEAT CHECK

Switzerland Drafts A National Retail Law While One Canton Drags Its Feet
Switzerland moved a draft law that would expand adult-use cannabis sales beyond pilot projects into a tightly regulated national system. Meanwhile, the canton of Valais continues to block trials. One country. Two speeds. Reform in public health language. Resistance in local politics.
Grade: B

Thailand’s “Cannabis King” Becomes Prime Minister
Thailand elected Anutin Charnvirakul, the architect of the 2022 cannabis decriminalization, as its new Prime Minister. He secured 311 parliamentary votes, well above the 247 needed. His rise puts cannabis reform back in the political spotlight. Reform could stabilize under his leadership or face new battles depending on how coalitions align, but for now, the architect of legalization is back in power.
Grade: B-
FINAL GRADE: D+

Texas left most THC products intact but made vapes a legal minefield. Ohio is sabotaging the rollout one town at a time. Nebraska tightened rules before patients got medicine. Switzerland offers a cautious path. Thailand put the face of decriminalization back in charge. Another week where politics beat patients and paperwork beat progress.
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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
Zurich’s Black Market Problem
Zurich’s Züri Can pilot is giving cannabis reformers something stronger than slogans. New interim findings show regulated, nonprofit access reduced several reported health problems while pulling demand away from the illegal market, giving Switzerland fresh evidence for national cannabis reform and putting prohibition panic on weaker ground.
Vegas Knew, Vegas Looked Away
Las Vegas sold tourists the illusion of legal cannabis while fake dispensary style hemp shops operated near the Strip. Vegas Knew, Vegas Looked Away exposes how Nevada’s casino separation rules, weak hemp oversight, delayed Clark County action, and tourist confusion created a loophole economy hiding in plain sight.
CANNABIS LIES Vol. 10: The Medical Lie
For decades, federal policy claimed cannabis had no accepted medical use while opioid prescriptions moved through the health care system by the tens of millions. Cannabis Lies Vol. 10 exposes the contradiction behind Schedule I, blocked research, medical cannabis patients, and the institutions that spent years pretending politics was medicine.
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