Pete Davidson’s Weakness Is Not Weed’s Problem

Pete Davidson’s claim that weed is “too strong” isn’t just a personal meltdown, it’s ammunition for prohibitionists eager to push THC caps and bad laws. Cannabis culture has fought for decades to kill myths and lies, and we won’t let one unstable celebrity hand our enemies the soundbite they’ve been waiting for.

The Great Cannabis Con Job

Politicians whisper “maybe,” the markets jump, and the cannabis community cheers for a win that never comes. The Great Cannabis Con Job exposes the bait-and-switch of rescheduling talk, revealing how it stalls real reform, distracts from federal prohibition, and leaves prisoners behind. This is not progress; it is political theater dressed as change

The New York Times Wants to Scare the Sh*t Out of You

The New York Times is pushing a fear campaign on “cannabis poisonings” in kids, built on sloppy hospital coding, bad data, and lazy journalism. We break down the inflated numbers, call out the stupid motherf*ckers leaving edibles out, and show how real regulation not media panic protects children while exposing the NYT’s scare tactics

CRASH COURSE IN BULLSH*T: WHY THE WAR ON WEED DRIVING IS BUILT ON LIES

Fear based headlines claim cannabis is the new drunk driving threat, but federal data says otherwise. This hard edged investigation rips apart the science free panic, exposes the real crash culprit, alcohol, and explains how THC laws criminalize users for detection, not impairment. If you have weed in your system, you are guilty until proven sober.

Drunk Is Fine Weed Is a Crime

Alcohol kills over 3 million people worldwide each year and still gets a free pass. Cannabis kills no one, yet it remains criminalized across most of the globe. This hard-edged report dismantles the hypocrisy behind global drug policy and exposes how alcohol gets a halo while weed gets a sentence. The numbers are in, and the story they tell is deadly.

Sweden’s Prohibition Mirage: When “Drug Free” Becomes a Death Sentence

Sweden promised a drug-free society. Instead, it built a death machine. From overdose rates that dwarf Portugal’s to gang violence run by teenagers, this hard-hitting feature exposes the brutal cost of prohibition disguised as public health. Don’t call it a model. Call it a failure

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