Cannabis is often labeled addictive, but the science tells a more precise story. This piece breaks down cannabis use disorder, how it is defined, and why mild, moderate, and severe cases get flattened into one fear-driven narrative. The result is a distorted public understanding of risk that fuels policy, perception, and misinformation.
The Cannabis Lie: Vol. 4 — The Crime Wave Lie
Politicians and pundits warned that legal cannabis would unleash a crime wave. The data tell a different story. From Colorado’s violent crime trends to DOJ time-series research and statewide arrest declines, the evidence shows no consistent long-term surge tied to legalization. The numbers never matched the panic.
Cannabis Lie Vol. 4: The Legalization Design Lie
Cannabis legalization was sold as the end of the illicit market. Instead, stacked taxes, licensing limits, and local bans created price gaps that allowed underground sales to survive. From California’s cultivation tax to Illinois pricing and Michigan’s price compression, this installment of Cannabis Lie examines how policy design, not the plant, determines who wins and who stays in the shadows.