NY’s Legal Weed Market Is Running Out of Weed

New York legalized cannabis and opened hundreds of stores, but regulators now warn the legal market may not produce enough weed to keep them stocked. With nearly 600 stores open and sales nearing $3 billion, the state is discovering that legalization alone does not guarantee a functioning market.

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.

Why Illegal Weed Thrives in Legal Cannabis Markets

Nevada’s legal cannabis market runs in plain sight, yet unlicensed sales keep pace because the rules still leave openings. Price gaps, compliance costs, patchy access, and limited places to consume make the illicit channel feel easier for many buyers. This feature tracks what the numbers show, why raids only disrupt, and what actually shrinks underground sales.

LOOK WHO JUST FIGURED OUT CANNABIS BEATS BOOZE

The New York Times has finally admitted that legal cannabis is eating into alcohol consumption across the country, after years of fear mongering that painted the plant as a public threat. Anyone inside weed culture saw this shift long before the paper caught on. As people replace booze with a calmer, less punishing option, the old narrative collapses and the Times scrambles to catch up

The South’s Quiet Cannabis Rebellion

Across Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama, quiet legalization is replacing old fear. Dispensaries open, hemp farms thrive, and police turn away from small possession. Lawmakers who once preached prohibition now profit from regulation. The Bible Belt’s cannabis rebellion is alive and growing, and the South is no longer waiting for Washington to catch up.

From Foam to Flower: THC Taps Are Rewriting Bar Culture

Bars in Wisconsin, South Carolina, and Minnesota are pouring THC from draft taps, replacing beer foam with cannabis fizz. With alcohol use hitting historic lows, low-dose THC drinks are reshaping nightlife rituals and exposing the hypocrisy of booze-friendly laws. The future of bar culture isn’t brewed in hops, it’s flowing from cannabis kegs.

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑