Cannabis prohibition in the United States no longer survives on raids and panic films. It survives through ballot thresholds, legislative rewrites, regulatory choke points, and lobbying disclosures. This documented audit follows the filings behind legalization war chests, opposition strategies, and the institutional structures that still shape cannabis policy even after voters move on.
OHIO’S LEGALIZATION FIGHT IS ABOUT CONTROL, NOT CANNABIS
Ohio voters approved adult use cannabis with 57 percent support in 2023. Two years later, lawmakers narrowed that framework through Senate Bill 56. A referendum campaign now seeks to overturn those revisions, requiring roughly 248,000 valid signatures statewide. This piece breaks down what changed, who changed it, and what voters are being asked to decide next.
No Reset Required
As 2025 closes, cannabis reform headlines promised progress while delivering performance. Pot Culture Magazine looks back without celebration, without hype, and without illusions. This year did not resolve prohibition or fix power. It revealed who controls the narrative, who benefits from delay, and why cannabis culture keeps surviving without permission.
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.
THE CON OF CANNABIS REFORM
Cannabis rescheduling keeps resurfacing in headlines, then vanishes without action. This feature breaks down how federal officials repeatedly float reform language, let deadlines pass, and leave the law untouched. By tracing the mechanics behind the stall, the piece exposes why delay is intentional, who benefits from it, and why cannabis reform remains trapped in federal limbo.
365 Days to Save the $28 Billion Hemp Industry
Congress inserted language into the shutdown bill that threatens to eliminate a 28 billion market relied on by veterans, older adults, people living with chronic pain, and those avoiding alcohol. The Hemp Beverage Alliance and NORML warned that this crisis is the result of political maneuvering rather than safety concerns. The next 365 days will decide the future of these products.