Legacy growers fought for legalization, only to be pushed aside by the system they helped create. This feature exposes how red tape, taxes, and policy failures are locking out the real pioneers while corporate weed cashes in. It’s not just exclusion—it’s cultural erasure. And if we’re not careful, the soul of cannabis will vanish under glossy branding and mediocre bud.
Pot Was Never Meant to Be Polite
Weed didn’t survive because it was polite. It survived because it was radical, risky, and rebellious. This cultural editorial calls out the corporate whitewashing of cannabis and drags the worst offenders, including Seth Rogen, for turning the movement into a lifestyle brand. Pot Was Never Meant to Be Polite is a wake-up call for anyone who forgot where this all started.
Title: Roots of Rebellion: The May 2025 Pot Culture Magazine Cover Story
May isn’t just a month of planting. It’s a season of rebellion. This cover story digs into the deep roots of cannabis activism, labor, and legacy. From May Day to World Bee Day, we explore the voices and movements that shaped cannabis culture long before legalization. Because rebellion isn’t a moment—it’s the soil this industry grew from.
DEA Stalls on Cannabis Rescheduling: What’s the Hold-Up?
The DEA is dragging its feet on cannabis rescheduling despite over 43,000 public comments and a formal Schedule III recommendation from HHS. What’s the hold-up? This deep-dive exposes the legal limbo, political stall tactics, and why America’s weed policy is still frozen in time.
Cannabis vs. Cancer: New Study Finds Overwhelming Scientific Support
A massive new meta-analysis reviewed over 10,000 cannabis-related cancer studies and found that nearly 75% showed therapeutic benefit. From nausea relief to potential tumor suppression, the science is no longer fringe. This isn’t a breakthrough—it’s a reckoning with decades of delay, stigma, and denial. The question now is: what’s still standing in the way?
420 in the Age of Legalization: What’s Left to Fight For?
The celebration of 4/20 has shifted from its original meaning of rebellion and community to a commercialized event reflecting empty promises. Despite legalization in many states, disparities persist, with ongoing arrests and barriers for marginalized communities. True significance lies in honoring the past and the fight for genuine justice in cannabis culture.