Reefer Report Card Vol. 23:

This week’s Reefer Report Card exposes the hemp industry's battle for survival in the face of a proposed federal THC ban that threatens the entire hemp market. From state-level chaos to Congress playing politics with small farmers and patients, the hemp economy struggles to breathe. No real wins, just industry confusion and political games.

Reefer Report Card Vol. 22: The Global Grind Week of November 2 – 8, 2025

From Florida’s ballot grind to Thailand’s backpedal and Germany’s retreat, the world talked reform while tightening control. Pot Culture Magazine’s Reefer Report Card Vol. 22 grades the week in weed — a reality check on promises, policies, and politics that keep legalization crawling instead of sprinting. Global momentum stalled, but the culture keeps moving.

The War on Scottish Hemp

Scotland’s farmers are ready to revive hemp, but Westminster says no. This feature exposes how outdated UK drug laws cripple sustainable agriculture and block economic opportunity. From ruined leaves to crushed profits, it’s a bureaucratic war on a zero-high crop. Farmers, researchers, and rebels are pushing back with seed, science, and stubbornness.

Reefer Report Card: The Week in Weed, Rated Vol. 21 — October 25 to November 1, 2025

This week, the global cannabis movement faced storms, setbacks, and scattered progress. Jamaica’s farmers reeled from Hurricane Melissa, U.S. politicians revived outdated fears about senior stoners, and Florida tangled its medical system in red tape. South Africa finally legalized personal use, while Congress kept banking reform buried. A chaotic week graded

Jamaica, Ganja, and the Eye of the Storm

Jamaica cannabis law, Dangerous Drugs Amendment 2015, Rastafari sacrament, Cannabis Licensing Authority, Hurricane Melissa, Jamaica Red Cross, Food For The Poor, UNICEF Jamaica, Direct Relief, GlobalGiving, Tourism economy, Crop loss, Climate resilience, Caribbean storms, Medical cannabis Jamaica

Singapore Still Hangs for Cannabis

Singapore still executes people for cannabis under its decades-old Misuse of Drugs Act. Officials call it deterrence. Critics call it fear. With public approval topping 90 percent, reformers face a government that equates mercy with weakness. This is a nation that kills for control and calls it safety.

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