Reefer Report Card: The Week in Weed, RatedJune 22, 2025 – Vol. 02

Pot Culture Magazine returns with Vol. 02 of Reefer Report Card, our new Saturday breakdown of weed-world chaos. Florida moves to strip cards from patients with past charges, a Queens dispensary submits a fake FDNY letter, Missouri wants weed sold like beer, and North Carolina takes two very different paths on policy. Grade incoming.

How Local Weed Rules Are Making Legalization Meaningless

They said it was legal, but forgot to mention the local bans, zoning traps, and phantom policies blocking access at every corner. This is the real face of fake legalization, from small town shutdowns to legal gray zones that keep cannabis just out of reach.

Reefer Report Card: The Week in Weed,June 15, 2025 – Vol. 01

From Florida’s latest crackdown on medical cannabis patients to MedMen’s final financial faceplant and a wave of ridiculous stoner gifts flooding New York dispensaries, Pot Culture Magazine launches its new weekly series grading the chaos, comedy, and contradictions of the cannabis world. It’s opinionated, researched, and raw. Welcome to the Reefer Report Card.

North Carolina’s Quiet Legalization

Governor Josh Stein didn’t legalize weed, he just moved the goalposts. By creating a Cannabis Advisory Council stacked with experts, enforcers, and tribal leaders, North Carolina is skipping the legislature and designing legalization from the top down. This isn’t a bill. It’s a blueprint, and it might be the only way forward in a state stuck in denial.

Fear, Fraud, and the Flower They Framed

From Hearst’s racist headlines to DEA funded junk science, cannabis has been framed, smeared, and scapegoated for over a century. This feature exposes how lies became law, how fear fueled policy, and how the truth got buried under headlines. It's not just history, it’s a damn indictment.

$24.7 Billion Later, Legal Weed’s Massive Tax Haul Is Getting Harder to Ignore

Legal cannabis has generated nearly $25 billion in tax revenue, with $4.4 billion collected in 2024 alone. States benefit significantly, funding various community programs. However, equity issues remain, as many who contributed to legalization are still marginalized. The promise of justice is overshadowed by bureaucracy and economic barriers for legacy growers.

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