Louisiana Rebuilds the Weed War

Louisiana says HB 568 protects schools. Critics see something older beneath the language: another expansion of marijuana enforcement through invisible school-zone boundaries. As lawmakers rebuild cannabis penalties around geography and fear, the state’s long relationship with punishment politics comes roaring back into view.

Freeway Ricky Ross: Vault Series and the Street Lie

Vault Series brings an unpublished October 2011 phone interview with Freeway Ricky Ross into the record, using the tape to examine the crack era, Gary Webb, federal punishment, prison literacy, and the street lie that sold easy money while hiding the years it would steal. Ross is not absolved or buried.

CANNABIS LIES Vol. 12: The Lazy Stoner Lie

The lazy stoner stereotype was never science. Cannabis can impair performance, and heavy use can cause real problems, but global data, workplace research, motivation studies, and impairment science do not support treating every cannabis user as lazy, unsafe, or broken. Cannabis Lies Vol. 12 separates real risk from recycled prohibition propaganda.

A State of the Union on the State of Cannabis Media

Cannabis media is undergoing a predictable institutional decay. The movement’s original architects have transformed from revolutionary contributors into defensive gatekeepers, protecting their legacy rather than fostering future growth. This manifesto examines the four archetypes of decay: the Gatekeeper, the Mercenary, the Scavenger, and the Shill, that currently stifle the industry’s independent voice and threaten the future of cannabis culture.

Missouri Tightens Grip On Hemp Sales

Missouri legalized cannabis, then moved to squeeze intoxicating hemp into the dispensary system. HB 2641 is being sold as consumer protection, but critics say it protects licensed marijuana operators while threatening hemp retailers, growers, and small businesses across the state.

MISS. LIMITS MEDICAL CANNABIS WHERE IT MATTERS MOST

Mississippi maintains strict limits on medical cannabis after Governor Tate Reeves vetoed expansion bills on March 26, 2026. Patients remain unable to use cannabis in hospitals while eligibility and access rules stay tightly controlled. This feature examines what the veto blocks, how it affects patients, and what it means for the state’s growing cannabis market.

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