Las Vegas sold tourists the illusion of legal cannabis while fake dispensary style hemp shops operated near the Strip. Vegas Knew, Vegas Looked Away exposes how Nevada’s casino separation rules, weak hemp oversight, delayed Clark County action, and tourist confusion created a loophole economy hiding in plain sight.
CANNABIS LIES Vol. 10: The Medical Lie
For decades, federal policy claimed cannabis had no accepted medical use while opioid prescriptions moved through the health care system by the tens of millions. Cannabis Lies Vol. 10 exposes the contradiction behind Schedule I, blocked research, medical cannabis patients, and the institutions that spent years pretending politics was medicine.
Cannabis Lies Vol. 9: The Reform Lie
The federal move to Schedule III is a masterclass in bureaucratic maintenance. While corporations celebrate tax relief, the core structure of the drug war remains untouched. This analysis deconstructs the Reform Lie, exposing how the state uses symbolic gestures to professionalize a privilege for the few while keeping the machinery of punishment active for everyone else.
The Digital Cage: Saint Lucia’s Traceability Trap
Saint Lucia has selected GrowerIQ as its national seed-to-sale traceability backbone, effectively finalizing a digital surveillance grid for its cannabis industry. By mandating enterprise software before establishing licensing frameworks, the government risks automating the exclusion of legacy farmers. This move trades cultural sovereignty for state-managed control, turning the cannabis industry into an extension of the database.
Gov. Abigail Spanberger’s Virginia Sabotage
Virginia legalized possession, but Governor Abigail Spanberger sabotaged the retail market. By delaying sales until 2027 and gutting equity provisions, the Commonwealth institutionalized a half-legal trap. Consumers now navigate a system that treats possession as a right but supply as a crime, fueling an unchecked illicit market while abandoning promised reform. Spanberger’s public safety rhetoric is clearly a mask for obstruction.
4/20 is Dead
4/20 has been hollowed out by branding, corporate silence, and a culture that forgot its own history. While the industry sells holiday merch, Singapore executed a man for cannabis. The movement that once fought for autonomy now treats the plant like a commodity. This piece examines the cost of that betrayal and the culture left behind.