Arizona lawmakers are advancing legislation that would criminalize “excessive” marijuana odor detectable across property lines. Cannabis Lie Vol. 3 examines SB 1725 and SCR 1048, the proposed misdemeanor penalties, the legal implications of State v. Sisco, and why critics argue this is a backdoor attempt to reintroduce cannabis criminalization under the banner of nuisance law.
THE DEATH OF GONZO
A hard edged remembrance of Hunter S. Thompson that treats Gonzo as method, not costume, then drags that standard into the modern weed era. From political press pack corruption to the hypocrisy baked into cannabis legislation, this piece calls out the polite liars, the soft coverage, and the institutions that criminalized millions before trying to profit from “progress.”
The Federal Hemp Blueprint That Isn’t
A proposed federal hemp framework is being sold as long overdue clarity for a chaotic market. But beneath the promise of order, the structure reveals rigid caps, unresolved enforcement questions, and a quiet shift of power away from states and smaller producers. We break down what the proposal does, what it avoids, and why the difference matters.
Texas Moves to Ban Smokable Cannabis
Texas regulators are moving to eliminate smokable cannabis without passing a law. After lawmakers failed to ban THC products, state agencies rewrote testing standards and imposed crushing fees that push legal cannabis out of reach. The result is prohibition by process, driven by selective morality, political pressure, and regulatory maneuvering.
No Reset Required
As 2025 closes, cannabis reform headlines promised progress while delivering performance. Pot Culture Magazine looks back without celebration, without hype, and without illusions. This year did not resolve prohibition or fix power. It revealed who controls the narrative, who benefits from delay, and why cannabis culture keeps surviving without permission.
Reefer Report Card Vol. 28: The Rescheduling That Wasn’t
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.