Cannabis Lies Vol. 11 dismantles the claim that adult-use legalization created a runaway teen cannabis crisis. Federal and state data show a more complicated reality: youth use has not exploded, but prevention still matters, especially around vaping, high THC products, mental health, and vulnerable teens.
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.
Jersey’s New Cash Crop
Jersey reinvented itself. A forty-five square mile island once known for offshore finance is now exporting pharmaceutical-grade cannabis into Germany’s booming medical market. With strict regulation, heavy investment, and a government eager for diversification, Jersey has become an unlikely European powerhouse. The contradiction between local policing and global commerce tells the real story.
A State of the Union on the State of Cannabis Media
Cannabis media is undergoing a predictable institutional decay. The movement’s original architects have transformed from revolutionary contributors into defensive gatekeepers, protecting their legacy rather than fostering future growth. This manifesto examines the four archetypes of decay: the Gatekeeper, the Mercenary, the Scavenger, and the Shill, that currently stifle the industry’s independent voice and threaten the future of cannabis culture.