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 Jamaica’s farmers reeled from Hurricane Melissa, U.S. politicians revived outdated fears about senior stoners, and Florida tangled its medical system in red tape.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

No One’s Giving Away $60 Gummies, Karen

Each October, the same urban legend returns: strangers handing out weed candy. NORML and UVA Health say it’s pure fiction. No one’s giving away $60 gummies, but accidental ingestion is real, driven by bad packaging and lazy storage. The true Halloween threat isn’t monsters or dealers, it’s fear and ignorance disguised as public safety.

Omaha Tribe Legalizes Cannabis While Nebraska Says No

The Omaha Tribe legalized cannabis and created its own governing body to regulate cultivation, licensing, and sales. Meanwhile, Nebraska still criminalizes flower. This is a story about sovereignty, survival, and state resistance. The border is more than a line. It is a trap. Cross it with weed and you're no longer legal.

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

Stop Scaring Senior Stoners

The San Francisco Chronicle’s new article warns that cannabis is dangerous for older adults, but the science says otherwise. Studies show benefits for pain, sleep, and muscle spasticity when used responsibly. The real risk comes from misinformation, fear, and the unregulated hemp market, not from seniors using cannabis with care.

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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