Week of December 7 through December 13, 2025
Filed Under: The Week in Weed

This was the week the system stopped pretending. Regulators exposed themselves. Politicians contradicted themselves. Media narratives cracked. From Washington to Massachusetts to New York, cannabis reform showed its real shape: uneven, defensive, and allergic to accountability. Nothing collapsed, but the mask slipped.
STATEHOUSE HEADLINER

The federal hemp fight refused to die. After language buried in a spending bill threatened to effectively ban most intoxicating hemp products, Senate lawmakers moved to reverse course, floating replacement language framed as regulation instead of prohibition. Industry advocates called it a scramble to undo damage already done.
The U.S. Hemp Roundtable warned that the original language could erase up to 95 percent of intoxicating hemp products, endanger a 28.4 billion dollar market, and threaten more than 300,000 jobs. Growers and retailers were not reassured. They were confused. The fight exposed a Congress that legislates by panic, then backpedals when the fallout becomes inconvenient.
Grade: D
GOVERNMENT CLOWN CAR AWARD

New York earned this one without competition. The state’s cannabis agency spiraled after dropping enforcement actions, losing leadership, and leaving license holders in limbo. Pot Culture Magazine documented a regulator that talked tough while its own cases fell apart.
Raids continued. Licenses stalled. Accountability vanished. The state that promised the most equitable cannabis market in the country now struggles to prove it can run one at all. New York did not just fumble legalization. It showed what happens when politics outrun competence.
Grade: F
REGULATOR ROULETTE

Massachusetts delivered a quiet but dangerous reminder of how regulation can distort reality. Law enforcement claims and selective testing data sparked renewed panic over THC potency, despite well-known limitations in testing methods and batch variability.
Pot Culture Magazine’s reporting showed how potency numbers are averages shaped by sampling practices, lab incentives, and regulatory pressure. Treating them as proof of consumer danger ignores science and context. Regulators did not clarify the issue. They amplified confusion.
Grade: C minus
PATIENT RIGHTS WATCH

The damage from panic policy landed where it always does, on workers and patients. Legal cannabis employees continued facing discrimination. Medical users remained vulnerable to workplace punishment. Veterans still waited for federal institutions to acknowledge reality instead of stigma.
Pot Culture Magazine’s reporting on why weed shops don’t hire heads exposed a deeper truth. The industry increasingly excludes the people who understand the plant, replacing lived experience with checkbox compliance. Patients lose when culture is treated like a liability.
Grade: D
INTERNATIONAL HEAT CHECK

Abroad, reform sent mixed signals. Germany stalled on implementation. Brazil expanded cannabis research through its agricultural agencies. Other markets talked innovation while dragging their feet on execution.
The global market no longer believes legalization alone guarantees success. Infrastructure, credibility, and regulatory sanity matter more than announcements. This week revealed which governments are learning that lesson and which are still struggling to grasp it.
Grade: C
FINAL GRADE

This was a week of exposure. Hemp policy whiplashed. New York unraveled. Massachusetts blurred science with enforcement theater. Patients absorbed the consequences. International reform crept forward without conviction.
Cannabis did not fail this week. Governance did.
Final Grade: D
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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
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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