THE PRODUCT THEY NEVER TEST

Hospitals increasingly diagnose Cannabinoid Hyperemesis Syndrome without testing the cannabis products involved. This investigation examines how cartridges, edibles, and other cannabis materials are excluded from medical evaluation, despite known contamination risks, leaving patients with diagnoses based on symptoms and self reported use rather than verified evidence.

Holiday Survival with Cannabis, Not Chaos

The holidays hit harder than they should. Travel turns messy, families spark arguments, and the season demands cheer nobody actually feels. Cannabis becomes the counterweight, steadying people through the noise while alcohol keeps causing wreckage. This feature cuts through the lies, the pressure, and the culture, showing how the plant helps people survive December without falling apart.

The Thanksgiving Cannabis Surge

Thanksgiving creates the biggest cannabis buying spike of the year, driven by crowded airports, long drives, and the pressure of full houses. People reach for familiar flower, quiet edibles, and discreet vapes to stay steady through travel delays and family tension. This feature explores why the holiday triggers a national rush for calm and how smart choices make the season smoother.

Don’t Get Your Pets High

A viral clip of a man getting his dog high exposes a cruel new corner of cannabis culture. Weed that heals humans can cripple pets, yet thousands keep posting “stoned animal” videos for laughs. From THC toxicity to fake CBD treats, this hard-edged report calls out ignorance, greed, and the betrayal of animal trust.

High Anxiety: New York’s ER Panic Over Cannabis

New York ER visits tied to cannabis have doubled since legalization in 2021, with more than 135,000 cases logged in 2023. Prohibitionists call it a crisis, but the truth is education gaps, black-market products, and a botched rollout. Cannabis is not killing people; propaganda is. Outlaw culture says regulate, educate, and stop the panic.

Blow Me: The Feds Claim They Can Smell THC On Your Breath

Federal researchers say they’ve detected THC in breath after edible use, but the science is flawed and the implications are dangerous. With no proven link between THC levels and impairment, this tech risks becoming another tool of biased enforcement especially against communities already targeted under cannabis laws

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