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Birth Behind Bars: Let’s Support This Canna Mom!
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Tokeativity Announces WOW: The Women Owned Weed Tour!
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PITCH IT! A series about learning to use your voice to speak up and speak out.
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WEEDTUBE.COM: Legal Cannabis Industry Launches Petition Demanding Updates to Instagram’s Community Guidelines
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GREEN GODDESS PODCAST: Canna-Feminism with Lisa Snyder & Tara Rose
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Birth Behind Bars: Let’s Support This Canna Mom!
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Yatesda started following GREEN GODDESS PODCAST: Canna-Feminism with Lisa Snyder & Tara Rose
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GREEN GODDESS PODCAST: Canna-Feminism with Lisa Snyder & Tara Rose
Yatesda commented on Lisa's blog entry in Tokeativity HQ Blog
This podcast sounds absolutely fascinating! I love the concept of exploring the feminine consciousness of cannabis and how it weaves into a global network for women. It's inspiring to see such intentional community building. This definitely gives me something to ponder while I'm trying to beat my high score on Slope Game! - Yesterday
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Legislators want to “change the law that they created, to clearly favor Wall Street corporations over Virginia farmers and small businesses.” By Charlotte Rene Woods, Virginia Mercury A legal cannabis market is set to take effect in Virginia next summer under the final state budget, but Mannassas-based Barbara Biddle has already given notice to her landlord to shut down one of her two hemp stores. As a purveyor of hemp-infused products, her District Hemp Botanicals shops sell creams, bath salts, infused drinks and gummies that contain CBD or THC—two chemical compounds found in both cannabis and hemp plants. Forthcoming federal hemp definition changes after Congress previously opened the door to broader hemp markets are set to take effect in November this year while Virginia’s potential legal cannabis market is set to take effect next July. While CBD, short for cannabidiol, does not produce a high, THC, short for tetrahydrocannabinol, does. Both components have been touted for their health benefits like soothing pain and relieving stress or anxiety. THC-infused drinks have also emerged as an alcohol alternative for people abstaining from the substance who don’t want to be totally sober. The concept has been a driving force in Virginia’s yearslong effort to establish a legal recreational cannabis market after first permitting a prescription-based medical one in 2018. While the nation’s patchwork cannabis laws have slowly sprouted, an enterprising hemp industry has taken root following Congress’s 2018 Farm Bill that enabled hemp products with up to 0.3 percent THC. Late last year, however, Congress reversed course and by November many products will become illegal. As of late June, some federal lawmakers are pursuing measures to support the hemp industry. “There’s so much in flux,” Biddle said. With a new baby on the way, she noted the scale down from two stores to one is not totally spurred by legal limbo in Virginia, but it certainly didn’t help, she said. As Biddle’s Leesburg location will soon shut down, Caroline County farmer Graham Redfern has been stressing about his crops amid his planting season. By fall, many of his products will be illegal, he said. “Cannabis, which hemp is, will produce cannabinoids,” Redfern said this spring while looking out at his fields on a rainy day that The Mercury visited. “It’s about impossible to create any industry in the industrial hemp world without taking the plant to maturity, which will then create cannabinoids, which will then now be marijuana.” Redfern and Biddle point to how they have already complied with strict restrictions on their industry within the state. The tighter guardrails were put in place after a spike in calls to poison control centers from children eating edibles they thought were candy or people becoming more high than intended. New potency thresholds and clearer labeling requirements have since been applied after 2023’s Senate Bill 903 made hemp laws in the state more stringent than federal ones. That meant child safety improvements to packaging, third-party lab testing and reformulations of products. It also entailed a chemical composition where products had to have 25 times the amount of CBD per every one part of THC. As one of the patrons of Virginia’s latest attempt to legalize cannabis, Sen. Lashrecse Aird, D-Henrico said in a statement that “closing the 25-to-1 loophole does not prevent farmers from continuing to grow industrial hemp or produce hemp products that comply with Virginia’s 2 milligram THC limit.” Instead, she said, it addresses “a loophole that has allowed intoxicating products to be marketed and sold as cannabis outside of a robust regulatory framework that protects consumers.” Biddle feels that classifying hemp businesses as “unregulated” is unfair to those within it that have complied with state and federal laws for years. “Now [legislators] change the law that they created, to clearly favor Wall Street corporations over Virginia farmers and small businesses,” Redfern said. As the medical marijuana industry has been established in the state for years, with donations made to legislators, he worries small business locals like he and Biddle’s are getting left out in favor of corporations. Redfern said that he and others have been in touch with lawmakers and the governor about their concerns. He said that they’d felt reassured until recently. “We are left with zero pathway and will not survive until July 2027 without a grace period,” Redfern said. State lawmakers and the governor have been at odds for months over the state budget over a debate about taxes for data centers ahead of a looming July 1 deadline to have it implemented or face a government shutdown. After the legislature passed agreements to the governor last week, the body convened Monday to approve her amendments. This story was first published by Virginia Mercury. Photo courtesy of Brendan Cleak. The post Virginia Hemp Farmers And Businesses Worry About Changes Included In Newly Passed Marijuana Market Legislation appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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“Republicans didn’t make cannabis go away—they just made it unsafe and untaxed. People will still find it, whether that means driving to Illinois or buying from someone with no license and no lab test.” By Sam Stockard, Tennessee Lookout As Tennessee’s new ban on popular hemp products takes effect Wednesday, two Democratic lawmakers are reigniting a drive to legalize marijuana and use the proceeds to patch craters in highways across the state. The “Pot for Potholes Act,” sponsored by Sen. Heidi Campbell and Rep. Aftyn Behn, both Nashville Democrats, would make pot use legal, set regulations and take the revenue to maintain roads and bridges. The legislation hasn’t made any headway in the Republican-controlled legislature, but Campbell and Behn say they will continue to seek hearings and bring back their bill in 2027. Attitudes also could be shifting as the federal government goes through the process for rescheduling medical marijuana, classifying it differently from drugs such as heroin and cocaine when contained in an FDA-approved product or allowed by state governments. Recreational marijuana remains a Schedule I drug at the federal level, defined as having no acceptable medical use and a high risk of abuse, although 24 states have legalized weed and more allow medical marijuana. Stores are being required to remove products containing THCA from their shelves following action by lawmakers in 2025, just seven years after the legislature bolstered the hemp market, enabling cannabis stores to pop up statewide. THCA products, which have been regulated by the state, contain less than .3 percent of the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, but when burned, the THC level increases, leading some lawmakers to complain that the state had set up a market for legal marijuana. Despite complaints that banning THCA products would cost the state an estimated $180 million in revenue, lawmakers forged ahead with the prohibition, which critics say will lead to the death of the hemp industry in Tennessee. Campbell said in a Tuesday statement that Tennessee residents who rely on hemp products to relieve pain, anxiety and chronic conditions will lose those products while small business owners who followed the state’s rules will have to shut down. “Republicans didn’t make cannabis go away—they just made it unsafe and untaxed,” she said. “People will still find it, whether that means driving to Illinois or buying from someone with no license and no lab test.” Campbell contends the “Pot for Potholes Act,” which would allow people 21 and older to use marijuana legally and create a regulatory framework for growing, testing and selling. Businesses would be required to obtain state licenses, and a 15 percent tax would be charged on pot sales, with the revenue going toward a $58 billion backlog of highway and bridge projects. “This ban is a self-inflicted wound,” Behn said. “We’re putting Tennessee small businesses under and cutting off patients who use these products to manage real medical conditions, all so Republicans can score culture-war points.” Behn said states with legal cannabis are making a combined $4.5 billion in tax revenue to go toward needs such as schools and infrastructure. Immediately after the federal government loosened cannabis restrictions last year, Democratic Sen. London Lamar of Memphis and Republican Rep. Jeremy Faison called for the state to reform marijuana laws. But Lt. Gov. Randy McNally (R), a pharmacist by trade who is leaving the legislature this year, said he has “no interest” in changing how the state schedules marijuana and called it a “dangerous drug with little demonstrated medicinal efficacy.” This story was first published by Tennessee Lookout. The post Tennessee Democrats Step Up Push To Legalize Marijuana As State Hemp Product Ban Takes Effect appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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This Massive Woman Owned Weed Company Will Lift your Love Higher By Samantha Montanaro
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When We Normalize Cannabis for Moms, We Normalize Cannabis for All – Samantha Montanaro
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Social Equity Policy Initiatives in Cannabis Are All the Buzz… But, What Defines Equitable Policy?
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The Flower Power Tokeativity Social: Music to Toke to & Photo Booth Pix
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Marijuana Moment: North Carolina Senate Passes Bill To Restrict Hemp THC And Kratom Products
Tokeativity posted a topic in Marijuana Moment
“If there are folks that want to legalize marijuana, then they can introduce that bill, we will talk about that.” By Brandon Kingdollar, NC Newsline On their last day before heading home for nearly a month, North Carolina senators voted to ban most cannabis products currently being sold in the state. The version of House Bill 328 the Senate approved would ban all intoxicating hemp products in North Carolina. Intoxicating hemp products are defined as any with a total THC content of more than 0.4 milligrams. THC is the compound responsible for the psychoactive effects of cannabis. Hemp business owners have said that limit would ban nearly all products on the market. The bill would also ban the sale of any hemp consumables to anyone under 21, and ban xylazine and synthetic kratom, two other emerging substances that have prompted health concerns. Natural kratom sales would also be limited to people 21 and over. It’s the latest action in a back-and-forth between the state House and Senate over what regulatory scheme to impose on substances that have become extremely prevalent in the past few years. Highly potent kratom and hemp derivatives can be found on the shelves of nearly any gas station or vape shop in the state. The House had already packed up when senators voted to pass the bill. But Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger (R-Rockingham) said the crisis posed by these substances was too pressing to wait until lawmakers return at the end of July. “The personal loss that has occurred across the state of North Carolina as a result of these products is such that we just could not and should not delay any further,” Berger told members of the media after session Thursday. “We have gotten to such a point where doing nothing was not an option.” The lack of regulation around hemp derivatives, which hit the market en masse after federal regulations allowed them to be sold in 2018, has sparked bipartisan concern, reflected in the 43-6 vote to pass the bill in the Senate. Sen. Paul Lowe (D-Forsyth) said on the floor that he supports the bill because the hemp industry is in dire need of regulation. “Some of these products that are sold in these stores, they come from other countries, they can’t even be sold in the country that they come from,” Lowe said. “I have no problem voting this bill at all, because I don’t think this stuff is safe.” The state’s child fatality task force reported in 2025 that there has been a 600 percent increase in emergency room visits for minors related to cannabis since 2019. Rep. Jimmy Dixon (R-Duplin) cited the case of a 14-year-old hospitalized after purchasing an intoxicating hemp product when the House debated its own version of the bill last month. Senate Democratic Leader Sydney Batch (D-Wake) said she primarily supported the bill because of its restrictions on “gas station drugs that are really harming our constituents,” such as kratom, which has led to its own increase in health emergencies. She was more skeptical about its approach to hemp, raising concerns that it could ensnare non-intoxicating products that have legitimate medical uses. “What I hope that we can do is move forward, with regards to the next month that we’re not going to be here, to sit down, give them our ideas, see if they can incorporate it in a conference report that addresses a lot of North Carolina farmers who are growing hemp so that they don’t go bankrupt,” Batch said. The bill follows a federal ban on intoxicating hemp products that was enacted as part of the Farm Bill last year, but which has not yet taken effect. Hemp industry lobbyists have since rallied to overturn the ban before it takes effect in November. Those efforts appear to be paying off—in a letter to Congress last month, the Trump administration urged Congress to reverse itself and keep these hemp products legal. Berger said passing a ban at the state level ensures North Carolinians will be protected regardless of what the federal government does. “What we have put in place—or what we’re trying to put in place, hopefully the House will pass the conference report—is a ban on intoxicating hemp products,” he said. “And if the feds decide that they don’t want to do that as we go forward, North Carolina would still have a ban on intoxicating products.” He left the door open to the relaxation of some restrictions in the future. “If there are folks that want to legalize marijuana, then they can introduce that bill, we will talk about that,” Berger said. “If there are folks that want a specific regulatory scheme of some sort on some of these things that would allow folks over 21 to purchase them, let them introduce a bill and let’s see about it.” The Senate version of the bill goes further than the House version, which would have set an age limit of 21 years old for hemp-derived consumables but otherwise left the market undisturbed, by banning a large swath of hemp-derived products currently being sold. The Senate also requires consumers to be 21 for the products that remain legal. Even proponents of loosening restrictions on marijuana supported the bill. Sen. Bill Rabon (R-Brunswick), the architect of the bill that nearly succeeded in legalizing medical marijuana in North Carolina, delivered a fiery rebuke of the hemp products being sold all across the state on Friday. “I’ve had the epiphany that the big players and the people who want to make the money can’t make the money they want to make, can’t prey upon the people whom they want to prey upon, in a regulated product way,” Rabon said. “So if that’s the case, we have to do away with all of it. There’s no other option.” The House will have the opportunity to take up the Senate’s version of the bill when they return to session on July 27. It is unclear whether they will agree to do so. This story was first published by NC Newsline. The post North Carolina Senate Passes Bill To Restrict Hemp THC And Kratom Products appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net -
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“In that former model, not only did it not allow for the potency but also the delivery methods that many of those patients are interested in consuming.” By Alander Rocha, Georgia Recorder A new state law that took effect Wednesday fundamentally changed Georgia’s medical cannabis program. The new law, named “Putting Georgia’s Patients First Act,” significantly eases barriers that advocates and physicians said have hindered access to medical cannabis and hampered interest for patients. Georgia lawmakers first opened the door to medical cannabis in 2015 and created what has been called the state’s low THC oil program ever since. Under the bipartisan measure passed during the 2026 legislative session, Georgia’s program will have a new straightforward name–medical cannabis–and new rules. Gary Long, the CEO of Botanical Sciences, a Georgia-based company that grows, processes and sells its products in its five dispensaries, with a sixth opening late summer in Augusta, said the new law “modernizes the state’s program and brings it in line with other states.” “We’ve been in that ‘low THC oil’ place, and it has limited the interest of the people that are out there,” said Long, who predicted the new changes could triple the number of patients by mid-2027. As of Tuesday, there were nearly 36,600 active patients enrolled. “In that former model, not only did it not allow for the potency but also the delivery methods that many of those patients are interested in consuming,” he added. Under the new law, Georgia will drop the “low THC” label, which capped products at a 5 percent THC limit, and adopt a milligram system, which allows patients to buy up to 12,000 milligrams of product at a time. The new law also allows patients over 21 to purchase oil and products for dry herb vaporization. Smoking cannabis is still prohibited by state law. The new law also adds new qualifying conditions, such as lupus and irritable bowel disease, and it gets rid of the requirement that certain conditions, like cancer and AIDS, must be “severe or end stage” to qualify. And coupled with April’s rescheduling of medical cannabis on the federal level, which allowed independent pharmacies to then start selling medical cannabis products, the state’s new law will ease access by allowing pharmacies that were previously prohibited from selling products due to being within a certain distance from schools and places of worship to participate in the program. The new law also decreases that distance for dispensaries, bringing them in line with stores that sell alcoholic drinks. Dr. Tiffanni Forbes, an internal medicine physician and certified cannabis doctor based in Fayetteville, said she’s most excited about the rebranding of the program that does away with the “low THC” name and the caps based on percentage. She said the old system led to confusion among patients who are used to medications being dosed in milligrams. “People got very confused about what to take, how to take it, is this potent, is this not so potent, so we’re doing away with all of that,” Forbes said. “There will be certain things that are more potent based upon how much THC versus others, but you don’t also have this percentage sitting here, which means really nothing to us. It was just how the law was written.” While the new law is seen as a win for increased access to medical cannabis, advocates said the work is not finished. Yolanda Bennett, who is a patient herself and has advocated for the program’s expansion over the years as the co-head of the Georgia Medical Cannabis Society, an organization that advocates for medical cannabis access and educates patients, said she was excited about the changes. But she also said advocacy in the next lawmaking session will focus on pushing for insurance coverage, protecting patients who live in public housing and overturning restrictions on consuming medical cannabis outside a patient’s home. “I realized that consistency and advocacy do work when you have legislators that are listening, and since we were a part of moving the needle with this, it really and truly feels pretty good, even though I know that we have a long way to go. I want to make sure that the legislators know that this is not the finish line, and you shouldn’t forget about the patients, because this is a start,” Bennett said. Steph Sherer, founder and president of Americans for Safe Access, a national organization advocating for federal policy to make medical cannabis safer and more accessible, said that advocates hope the rescheduling of medical cannabis will lead to federal changes and more uniform laws across the country. “Now that registered medical cannabis patients have a stronger basis to assert protections under the Americans with Disabilities Act and other civil rights laws and do not have to fear losing their jobs, homes, healthcare or basic rights, we expect a groundswell of advocacy demanding equal access nationwide,” Sherer said. This story was first published by Georgia Recorder. The post Georgia’s Newly Expanded Medical Marijuana Law Could Triple The Number Of Registered Patients Within A Year appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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The Canna Moms Tokeativity Social 2021: Recap, Photo Booth Pix & Music to Toke to
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New BIPOC Collective Seeks To Shift Psilocybin Therapy Movement Towards Inclusion
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SB 519: Decriminalization and Healing for Californians
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