This week’s Reefer Report Card cuts through the hype around cannabis “rescheduling,” exposing how a label change left federal prohibition fully intact. Arrest authority, workplace punishment, and immigration penalties remain untouched. Headlines claimed progress. Reality delivered none. A week defined by performance over policy, and reform that never arrived.
Hemp Industry Strikes Back
Congress slipped a hemp ban into a shutdown bill and triggered a nationwide fight that threatens farmers, small operators, veterans, and a twenty eight billion dollar market. Hemp Industry Strikes Back exposes the misinformation behind the vote and the yearlong battle now forming in courts, statehouses, and rural communities across the country.
Guns For Everyone Except You
A federal appeals court cracks the wall between cannabis medicine and the Second Amendment, ruling that patients shouldn’t be stripped of their gun rights. This pivotal decision signals the beginning of the end for decades of federal hypocrisy and outdated prohibition logic.
Too High to Fly: TSA Dogs Don’t Care
Every summer, Reddit stoners spiral into panic about TSA dogs and airport cannabis busts. This feature separates myth from reality, breaking down what drug dogs actually detect, what TSA really cares about, and where your weed could land you in deep trouble. If you think peanut butter tricks will save you, this is your pre-flight gut check.
High Stakes: The DEA’s Potent Gamble on Cannabis Destiny
In a moment teeming with potential, the DEA contemplates a monumental shift in cannabis's legal status, sparking debates and hopes across the nation. Will this move herald a new era of recognition and research for cannabis, or will it be another missed opportunity in the ongoing struggle for rational drug policy?
A New Era for Cannabis: Federal Documents Support Shift to Schedule III Status
Unveiling a pivotal shift in drug policy, newly released federal documents advocate for cannabis's reclassification to Schedule III, acknowledging its medical validity and lower abuse potential. This potential reclassification could mark a turning point in cannabis research and commerce, easing long-standing federal restrictions. Dive into the comprehensive analysis that could redefine the future of cannabis in America.