Florida Blocked the 2026 Weed Vote

Florida’s ballot system claims to give voters power, yet the 2026 election cycle shows how procedural barriers can quietly shut the door on citizen initiatives. Signature thresholds, geographic distribution rules, and court challenges blocked every measure from reaching voters, revealing how cannabis legalization fights are often decided by bureaucratic design long before election day.

South Africa Legalized Weed, But Not the Market

South Africa recognized private adult cannabis use and home cultivation, but never built a legal domestic market around them. With buying and selling still largely outside the law, the illicit trade remains dominant while regulators scramble to set limits, draft rules, and prepare a broader Cannabis Bill that could finally address commerce.

NY’s Legal Weed Market Is Running Out of Weed

New York legalized cannabis and opened hundreds of stores, but regulators now warn the legal market may not produce enough weed to keep them stocked. With nearly 600 stores open and sales nearing $3 billion, the state is discovering that legalization alone does not guarantee a functioning market.

Cannabis Study Sparks Fear Among the Uninformed

A McMaster led analysis of two Canadian mental health surveys is getting recycled as a weed panic story, even though the design can only show association. This piece breaks down what the data can actually support, what it cannot prove, and how headlines turn survey correlations into causal claims that fuel stigma, bad policy, and lazy coverage.

Medical Marijuana and the Paycheck

Workplace Wars continues in New Jersey, where Senate Bill S3452 would protect registered medical cannabis patients from metabolite-only drug test punishment. The proposal shifts the burden to employers, requiring proof by a preponderance of the evidence that lawful medical use caused on-duty impairment, backed by specific articulable symptoms. It also keeps the written notice and three-day explanation or retest process.

Weed, Guns, and “Unlawful User”

Federal law bans gun ownership for anyone labeled an “unlawful user” of cannabis, but it never clearly defines what that means. The result is a shifting standard that changes by circuit, by evidence, and by prosecutor. This feature breaks down the legal fog, the enforcement leverage, and why vagueness is the real power play.

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