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  2. The mention of Women Grow and Tokeativity is like a breath of fresh air. I love how women are using social media and meetups to not only push for cannabis legalization but also gender equality. Flux 2
  3. Today
  4. LoganStockdill

    Venue Search

    Okay, venues, venues everywhere! Searching the globe, eh? Reminds me of organizing my sister's surprise party. Finding the right spot was a total headache! We almost settled for a bowling alley. I remember when I had a similar location issue. I was planning a charity event and the initial venue fell through just weeks before. It was crazy trying to find a replacement that fit our budget and style. My friends thought I needed a Love Tester just to handle the stress. Let's hope you have better luck than I did then!
  5. Just saw this Oregon Cannabis Industry Meetup announcement. Sounds like a great opportunity to network. Wonder if the guest speaker will drop some knowledge bombs, maybe even reveal a hidden strategy, like mastering the angles in 8 Ball Pool for business success. If anyone's going, let's connect beforehand!
  6. This Tokeativity Q&A with Laganja Estranja is fascinating! Learning about her journey from drag to cannabis advocacy is inspiring. It's amazing how she balances art and activism. Makes you think about challenging norms, like trying that difficult level in Snow Rider . Her story shows how being true to yourself can lead to success in unexpected fields. Tokeativity provides a great platform for these conversations.
  7. Yesterday
  8. The U.S. House of Representatives has approved a spending bill that would continue protecting state medical marijuana programs from federal intervention—while excluding a provision that previously advanced to block the Justice Department from rescheduling cannabis. Following bicameral negotiations on the appropriations package, the House advanced it in a 397-28 vote on Thursday, sending it to the Senate for consideration. Advocates and industry stakeholders were encouraged to see the rescheduling language stripped from the final deal after it had been approved by the House Appropriations Committee last year, as well as the preservation of a longstanding rider preventing DOJ from using its funds to interfere in state medical marijuana laws. The legislation that’s now advancing to the Senate covers Fiscal Year 2026 spending for Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies (CJS), Interior, Environment and Energy and Water Development. The move comes weeks after President Donald Trump issued an executive order directing Attorney General Pam Bondi to expeditiously complete the process of moving marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA). Here’s the language of the provision advanced by the House but excluded from the latest agreement: “SEC. 607. None of the funds appropriated or other wise made available by this Act may be used to reschedule marijuana (as such term is defined in section 102 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 802)) or to remove marijuana from the schedules established under section 202 of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. 812).” GOP senators have separately tried to block the administration from rescheduling cannabis as part of a standalone bill filed in 2023, but that proposal did not receive a hearing or vote. Meanwhile, on Monday, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) said a marijuana rescheduling appeal process “remains pending” despite Trump’s executive order. The House-passed appropriations package also contains a rider that’s been annually renewed since 2014 barring the Justice Department from using its funds to interfere in the implementation of state medical marijuana laws. However, for reasons that are unclear, the rider that lists each state that would be protected excludes Nebraska. Here’s the text of that provision: “SEC. 531. None of the funds made available under this Act to the Department of Justice may be used, with respect to any of the States of Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming, or with respect to the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, or Puerto Rico, to prevent any of them from implementing their own laws that authorize the use, distribution, possession, or cultivation of medical marijuana.” Missing from the latest version is an addition to that rider that the House previously included that would have authorized enhanced penalties for sales near schools and parks. That provision specifically stipulated that the Justice Department could still enforce a section of U.S. code that calls for increased penalties for distributing cannabis within 1,000 feet of an elementary school, vocational school, college, playground or public housing unit. However, a joint explanatory statement for the spending package also says Congress “directs the Department to appropriately enforce the Federal Drug-Free School Zones Act (2 1 U.S.C. 860), to ensure that areas with young children, including schools and playgrounds remain drug-free.” That appears to be related to a report from the Senate committee that was released last year stating that the medical marijuana protection rider “does not explicitly preclude” U.S. attorneys from enforcing a federal statute on selling or manufacturing controlled substances in “areas with young children, including schools and playgrounds.” The bill also maintains protections for state industrial hemp research programs under the 2014 Farm Bill: “SEC. 530. None of the funds made available by this Act may be used in contravention of section 7606 (‘Legitimacy of Industrial Hemp Research’) of the Agricultural Act of 2014 (Public Law 113–79) by the Department of Justice or the Drug Enforcement Administration.” Advocates may welcome the exclusion of the rescheduling provision and inclusion of medical marijuana protections in the CJS bill, but many cannabis stakeholders have protested Trump’s signing of a separate appropriations measure in November that includes provisions to ban most consumable hemp products. However, when the president issued the marijuana rescheduling order last month, he also directed Congress to reevaluate that policy and ensure that people can continue to access full-spectrum CBD products. A federal agency will also be moving to cover such products for certain patients under Medicare and Medicaid. The post US House Passes Bill Protecting State Medical Marijuana Laws And Rejecting Attempt To Block Trump’s Rescheduling Move appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
  9. Massachusetts election officials have scheduled a hearing to investigate a complaint challenging the signature gathering process for a proposed ballot initiative to roll back the state’s marijuana law. This comes about two weeks after the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s Elections Division confirmed that the anti-cannabis campaign collected enough valid signatures to send the measure to lawmakers for consideration ahead of potentially being placed on the November ballot. Opponents of the initiative submitted a complaint to the secretary’s office last week, arguing that the campaign “obtained signatures fraudulently.” The State Ballot Law Commission has now put a pre-hearing conference on the calendar for January 12, and a formal hearing will take place on January 13. “Paid signature gatherers at Trader Joe’s in Hanover, Market Basket facilities in Plymouth, Whole Foods in Weymouth and in parking lots around Gillette Stadium in Foxborough have misled voters with respect to what they were signing and thus obtained signatures fraudulently,” the filing states. “Among the misleading statements were assertions that the law proposed on the petition blanks they were signing would get fentanyl off the streets, provide affordable housing in their communities or fund public parks,” the filing, which was first reported by State House News Service, says. “Each of these assertions would be apt with respect to one or more of the other initiative petitions approved by the Attorney General, but have nothing to do with Initiative Petition 1E.” “The paid signature gatherers in question often provided voters only the backside of Petition 1E to those whose signatures they obtained. The backside does not bear the summary of the proposed law. All those circulating the signatures for payment were assigned numbers that would enable them to be identified and collected signatures from multiple cities and towns.” “All signatures collected in the manner described above, whether by the particular individuals who gathered signatures at the locations described above or by other circulators are the subject of this objection,” the complaint, filed by attorney Thomas Kiley, concludes. Wendy Wakeman, the chair committee backing the anti-cannabis proposal, told State House News Service that petitions were “collected with integrity.” “We stand by the number,” she said. Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin (D) said that the complaints are “based on the people who now are in retail cannabis businesses.” “They’ve got to come up with enough signatures knocked off to disqualify the petition. It has to be based on evidence, it can’t be assertions. So it’s going to be a challenge,” he said. “You’re talking tens of thousands of signatures, to come up with enough that are going to be disqualified in a short period of time, because the Ballot Law Commission is time limited, 10 days, I think. So good luck. I hope they have a nice time.” The state last month certified 78,301 signatures for the petition, titled “An Act to Restore a Sensible Marijuana Policy.” The initiative would still let adults 21 and older possess and gift up to an ounce of cannabis, but it would repeal provisions of the voter-approved legalization law allowing for commercial sales and home cultivation by adults. The medical cannabis program would remain intact under the measure. As detailed in the recent complaint, the campaign has been marred with controversy over allegedly misleading signature gathering tactics. There have been claims that paid petitioners used fake cover letters for other ballot measures on issues like affordable housing and same-day voter registration. The state attorney general’s office has confirmed it’s received complaints to that end. And an association of state marijuana businesses urged voters to report to local officials if they observe any instances of “fraudulent message” or other deceitful petitioning tactics. The campaign has denied the allegations. Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell’s (D) office—which cleared the campaign for signature gathering in September—has stressed to voters the importance of reading their summary, which is required to go at the top of the signature form, before signing any petitions. The Massachusetts legislature received the initiative for consideration on Wednesday when the 2026 session kicked off. Unless it’s invalidated, lawmakers have until May 5 to act on the proposal. If they choose not to enact it legislatively, the campaign would need to go through another round of petitioning and get at least 12,429 certified signatures by July 1 to make the November ballot. Meanwhile, the head of Massachusetts’s marijuana regulatory agency recently suggested that the measure to effectively recriminalize recreational cannabis sales could imperil tax revenue that’s being used to support substance misuse treatment efforts and other public programs. Whether the cannabis measures make the cut is yet to be seen. Voters approved legalization at the ballot in 2016, with sales launching two years later. And the past decade has seen the market evolve and expand. As of August, Massachusetts officials reported more than $8 billion in adult-use marijuana sales. Meanwhile, Massachusetts lawmakers recently assembled a bicameral conference committee to reach a deal on a bill that would double the legal marijuana possession limit for adults and revise the regulatory framework for the state’s adult-use cannabis market. Last month, state regulators also finalized rules for marijuana social consumption loungues. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — The state Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) recently launched an online platform aimed at helping people find jobs, workplace training and networking opportunities in the state’s legal cannabis industry. State lawmakers have also been considering setting tighter restrictions on intoxicating hemp-derived products and a plan to allow individual entities to control a larger number of cannabis establishments. Also in Massachusetts, legislators who were working on a state budget butted heads with CCC officials, who’ve said they can’t make critical technology improvements without more money from the legislature. Massachusetts lawmakers additionally approved a bill to establish a pilot program for the regulated therapeutic use of psychedelics. And two committees have separately held hearings to discuss additional psilocybin-related measures. Photo courtesy of Chris Wallis // Side Pocket Images. The post Massachusetts Officials Will Review Complaint That Anti-Marijuana Campaign ‘Fraudulently’ Collected Signatures For Ballot Initiative appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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  13. Cannabidiol (CBD), a non-intoxicating compound in marijuana, “holds substantial promise as an anti-tumor agent” in addition to its other anti-inflammatory properties, a new scientific review Scientists explored CBD’s effect on many types of cancer—including some of the most aggressive ones, such as glioblastoma, which affects the brain. They also noted it can help suppressing the growth and metastasis of other cancers, including breast, lung, colorectal, ovarian and prostate, among others. “CBD exhibits multi-targeted anti-tumor effects by disrupting key cancer hallmarks,” they found. The paper, funded by National Natural Science Fund of China, was designed as a systematic review of previous studies evaluating the cancer fighting qualities of CBD. The idea behind much of the research is to study how cancer cells survive by hijacking normal biological signals like growth cues, stress responses and immune pathways. The novelty scientists found was that CBD doesn’t seem to target just one of these systems and instead nudges several of them at once, pushing cancer cells toward collapse through overlapping and complementary effects. In colon cancer models, for example, CBD interferes with a receptor called GPR55, which helps tumors grow and migrate. Blocking that receptor weakens a pathway cancer cells rely on to divide quickly, and in some cases makes tumors more responsive to chemotherapy. Other experiments show CBD dialing down genes linked to aggressive growth while switching on stress-related pathways that slow things down. Lung and breast cancers appear to respond in related but slightly different ways. In non-small cell lung cancer, combinations of CBD and THC reduce tumor growth by interfering with epithelial-mesenchymal transition, the process that allows cancer cells to spread. In breast cancer models, CBD has been shown to stop cells mid-cycle, trigger programmed cell death and activate autophagy, the cell’s internal recycling system turned destructive. “Cannabidiol (CBD), an FDA-approved and well-tolerated compound, demonstrates promising antitumor effects by inhibiting cancer growth, metastasis, and angiogenesis, while also alleviating cancer-related symptoms such as pain and nausea.” There are also practical challenges, however. CBD is poorly absorbed when taken by mouth and is heavily metabolized, which means only a fraction may reach tumor tissue. To get around this, scientists are exploring nanoparticle-based delivery systems designed to improve absorption, target tumors more precisely and minimize side effects. Looking ahead, researchers say progress will depend on careful, methodical work. Tools like single-cell sequencing could help clarify how different tumor populations respond to CBD. Well-designed clinical trials will be essential to determine whether the effects seen in the lab translate into benefits for patients, especially when CBD is used alongside standard treatments. The study’s authors, who are affiliated with medical schools throughout China, noted the need to further explore the promise of CBD’s anti-tumor properties. “Future trials must stratify patients by tumor type and molecular markers to establish correlations between dosing, timing, and efficacy,” they wrote. The paper, which was not peer reviewed, was published in the December 2025 issue of the scientific journal Phytomedicine. The new study follows a series of encouraging discoveries related to CBD’s properties. In 2025, for example, a paper published in the journal Pharmacology & Therapeutics, assessed a range of clinical and preclinical findings that the efficacy of chemotherapy drugs can be enhanced by medical marijuana. In a sign of greater acceptance of medical applications of cannabis, President Donald Trump’s choice to serve as the next White House drug czar has called medical marijuana a “fantastic” treatment option for seriously ill patients and said she doesn’t object to legalization, even if she might not personally agree with the policy. Also last year, a study found that “patients with cancer using cannabis report significant improvements in cancer-related symptoms.” The post CBD Has ‘Substantial Promise’ To Combat Tumors From Cancer, Scientific Review Shows appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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  15. Retailers sold more than $836 million in recreational cannabis products last year, while medical marijuana sales exceeded $233 million. By Megan Henry, Ohio Capital Journal Ohio’s recreational marijuana sales surpassed more than $836 million in 2025, the first full year recreational sales were legal. Recreational sales started in August 2024 and the state’s total recreational marijuana sales were $1,091,250,807, as of January 3, according to the Ohio Department of Commerce Division of Cannabis Control. Ohioans voted to legalize marijuana in 2023 and recreational sales totaled more than $242 million in 2024. Ohio’s medical marijuana sales started January 14, 2019, and the state’s total medical marijuana sales were $2,293,970,758, as of January 3, according to the Division of Cannabis Control. Medical marijuana sales brought in more than $233 million in 2025. Ohio’s average marijuana prices are a bit lower now than they were compared to last year at this time. The manufactured sales average was $23.83 for the week ending in Jan. 3 compared to $26.66 for the week ending of January 4, 2025, according to the Division of Cannabis Control. There are 190 dual-use marijuana dispensaries in Ohio, meaning they can sell medical and non-medical marijuana, according to the Division of Cannabis Control. More than 130 Ohio municipalities and townships have moratoriums in place banning the sale of adult-use cannabis as of December 2, according to Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law. Senate Bill 56 Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) signed a bill into law last month that made various changes to the state’s voter-passed marijuana law, including adding crimes such as making it illegal to bring legally purchased marijuana from another state back to Ohio. DeWine signed Ohio Senate Bill 56, which is set to take effect in March. The bill also bans intoxicating hemp products. On the marijuana side, it will reduce the THC levels in adult-use marijuana extracts from a maximum of 90 percent down to a maximum of 70 percent, cap THC levels in adult-use flower to 35 percent, and prohibit smoking in most public places. The bill gets rid of protections against discrimination for housing, employment, and organ donation. It also allows police to have probable cause during traffic stops if someone is a known user of marijuana. The bill prohibits possessing marijuana in anything outside of its original packaging and criminalizes bringing legal marijuana from another state back to Ohio. It also requires drivers to store marijuana in the trunk of their car while driving. Ohioans for Cannabis Choice recently launched a referendum effort in an attempt to stop the law from taking effect. The initial signatures were submitted so now Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (R) must verify the signatures and Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost (R) will also have to certify the petition summary is fair and truthful. If the petition passes those hurdles, organizers can begin canvassing to collect signatures. They’ll need 6 percent of the total number of votes cast in the most recent gubernatorial election (248,092). The group will also need 3 percent of an individual county’s gubernatorial turnout in 44 of Ohio’s 88 counties. Organizers will have 90 days from the date the governor filed the law with the secretary to collect the required signatures. The last referendum that passed in Ohio was when voters overturned an anti-collective bargaining law in 2011. This story was first published by Ohio Capital Journal. The post Ohio Dispensaries Sold More Than $1 Billion Worth Of Legal Marijuana In 2025 appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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  17. If federal officials follow through on President Donald Trump’s recent executive order directing the reclassification of marijuana, it could free up Washington, D.C. to finally legalize recreational cannabis sales after a years-long congressional blockade. Moving cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) would not federally legalize marijuana, but it would have significant policy implications. While much of the industry and public attention has focused on how the reform would affect tax and research issues, the move could have an outsized impact on local policy in the nation’s capital. According to congressional analysts and other experts, a Schedule III reclassification would mean that D.C.—which for over a decade has been barred from using its appropriated funds to allow marijuana sales, despite voter approval of of a noncommercial legalization initiative and local elected officials’ support for adding retail sales—could finally create a regulated adult-use market. In a report published in 2024, the Congressional Research Service (CRS) said that while federal cannabis prohibition would still be the law of the land, it “would permit the District government, as a matter of local law, to authorize the commercial sale of recreational marijuana, establish market regulations, and levy marijuana taxes, among other policy options.” The reason that D.C. is restricted from enacting that regulatory reform—even as nearly half of the states in the U.S. have established adult-use cannabis markets—is because of a congressional spending bill rider championed by prohibitionist Rep. Andy Harris (D-MD) that deprives the District of the ability to expend its appropriated dollars to set up such a system. The rider specifically states that D.C. can’t use its own local funds to “legalize or otherwise reduce penalties associated with the possession, use, or distribution of any schedule I substance.” Moving marijuana to Schedule III would mean that part of the rider would no longer be applicable to cannabis. There is a complication, however, because the congressional provision that’s been annually renewed since 2014 also stipulates that the District of Columbia can’t use funds to legalize or reduce penalties for “any tetrahydrocannabinols derivative.” But that term isn’t clearly defined in the rider or anywhere else in federal law. “The continued prohibition on legalization of tetrahydrocannabinols derivatives by the District could lead to interpretive questions about whether a particular substance is legally marijuana, hemp, a tetrahydrocannabinols derivative, or something else,” the 2024 CRS report says. “Certain synthetic tetrahydrocannabinols remain illegal for recreational use under D.C. law, but it is not clear whether these synthetic substances would constitute derivatives,” it says. “In addition, although federal law defines marijuana and hemp to be exclusive of each other, a substance could conceivably be both a tetrahydrocannabinols derivative and marijuana or hemp as a matter of law.” One of the nation’s top cannabis advocacy groups, NORML, also posted an analysis in 2024 arguing that rescheduling could “open a door” for D.C. to finally legalize adult-use marijuana sales. The group suggested that the term tetrahydrocannabinols derivative “is unlikely to be interpreted by a court as inclusive of marijuana generally.” In 2021, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) separately responded to a congressional inquiry and affirmed that, even with the D.C. marijuana sales ban in place, local lawmakers there can still take steps to prepare for the potential creational of a regulated recreational marijuana market. Medical cannabis sales are already legal in D.C. Last March, the White House claimed that marijuana reform in Washington, D.C. is an example of a “failed” policy that “opened the door to disorder.” The Trump administration last year asked a federal court to dismiss a lawsuit from a D.C. hemp business challenging the federal government over the congressional budget restriction preventing cannabis sales. About three months after Capitol Hemp filed the suit in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the Justice Department in September submitted a motion requesting dismissal of the case, largely on procedural grounds. The court agreed the next month. The post Trump’s Marijuana Rescheduling Order Could Let Washington, D.C. Finally Legalize Recreational Sales appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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  21. NH marijuana legalization bill passes; HI proposal for cannabis on ballot; FL medical marijuana patients’ parental rights; New Year’s resolution poll Subscribe to receive Marijuana Moment’s newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. It’s the best way to make sure you know which cannabis stories are shaping the day. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: Your support makes Marijuana Moment possible… Free to read (but not free to produce)! We’re proud of our newsletter and the reporting we publish at Marijuana Moment, and we’re happy to provide it for free. But it takes a lot of work and resources to make this happen. Kelly Pedrick of Flok: “At Flok, we believe exceptional regulatory technology starts with a deep understanding of the legislative environment shaping cannabis programs nationwide. We pledged our support to Marijuana Moment because timely, accurate insight into cannabis policy and legislation is essential for helping regulators navigate an evolving and complex landscape. By staying closely informed, we are better positioned to design trusted, adaptable solutions on Salesforce that meet regulators where they are, and where policy is heading.” If you value Marijuana Moment, invest in our success on Patreon so we can expand our coverage and more readers can benefit: https://www.patreon.com/marijuanamoment / TOP THINGS TO KNOW Congressional Cannabis Caucus Co-chair Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) is urging Sara Carter Bailey, who was confirmed this week as director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, to back fully legalizing marijuana—going beyond the rescheduling order that President Donald Trump signed. The New Hampshire House of Representatives passed bills to legalize marijuana and allow medical cannabis dispensaries to convert to for-profit businesses. The chair of the Hawaii House Judiciary and Hawaiian Affairs Committee said he plans to file legislation to put marijuana legalization on the ballot for voters to decide after bills to enact the reform have repeatedly failed in recent sessions. A Florida representative filed a bill to protect medical cannabis patients’ parental rights, making it so courts could not “deny or otherwise restrict a parent’s custody of a child or the parent’s visitation rights or parenting time with a child based solely on the parent’s status as a qualified patient.” A new poll on New Year’s resolutions shows that more Americans intend to quit or reduce their use of alcohol or tobacco than want to abstain from or cut down on marijuana consumption in 2026. / FEDERAL The House bill to designate psychedelic therapy centers of excellence got one new cosponsor for a total of 22. / STATES Wisconsin lawmakers discussed the prospects for marijuana reform. A Nebraska senator said a proposed constitutional amendment to make it harder for lawmakers to amend voter-approved ballot initiatives would make it very difficult to implement medical cannabis legalization in a way that advocates support. A Delaware representative spoke about his bill to decriminalize public marijuana consumption. A Colorado House candidate founded a cannabis social equity organization. Illinois officials are accepting applications for $50 million in marijuana revenue-funded grants to support projects to aid communities harmed by the “negative consequences of the war on drugs.” New Jersey regulators sent a reminder about meetings this month to gather input on how cannabis social equity revenue should be allocated. California regulators sent updates on various cannabis issues. — Marijuana Moment is tracking hundreds of cannabis, psychedelics and drug policy bills in state legislatures and Congress this year. Patreon supporters pledging at least $25/month get access to our interactive maps, charts and hearing calendar so they don’t miss any developments. Learn more about our marijuana bill tracker and become a supporter on Patreon to get access. — / INTERNATIONAL A Czech Republic cannabis legalization law took effect. Thai officials are planning to enact further restrictions on cannabis dispensaries. / SCIENCE & HEALTH A review concluded that “cannabinoids, especially CBD, may improve anxiety and sleep disturbances.” A study found that medical cannabinoids “exert multi-target neuroprotection in ischemic stroke.” A study concluded that “mushrooms have learned twice independently how to make the iconic magic mushroom natural product psilocybin.” / BUSINESS TerrAscend workers are accusing the company of unfair labor practices. Make sure to subscribe to get Marijuana Moment’s daily dispatch in your inbox. Get our daily newsletter. Email address: Leave this field empty if you're human: The post Trump drug czar pushed to back full cannabis legalization (Newsletter: January 8, 2026) appeared first on Marijuana Moment. View the live link on MarijuanaMoment.net
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  26. Alright, so Instagram's still harshing the mellow of cannabis businesses, huh? Seems pretty unfair when so many places have legalized it. Makes you wonder about their consistency, doesn't it? Crazy how policies lag behind reality. We absolutely need this petition; it will force Instagram to re-evaluate its policies, let's become drift hunters and help make that happen. I remember when my friend's small CBD business got shut down on Facebook for seemingly no reason a few years back. It was a total headache and felt like they were being unfairly targeted.
  27. Zakrookes

    Tokeativity Member of the Month – Erica Fuller

    It's amazing to see members like Erica getting recognized for their dedication since 2018! Attending 37 events is no small feat. Her work connecting people in Oregon sounds inspiring, and running for the School Board shows real commitment to the community. Sometimes when the stress of local politics gets too high, you just need a fun game like kick the buddy to blow off some steam! Wishing her the best of luck in the upcoming election!
  28. Yatesda

    What Do Abortion and Cannabis Have in Common?

    It's fascinating to see how social issues like abortion and cannabis can spark such intense discussions. They both highlight the complexities of personal choice and the role of government in our lives. Just like exploring new perspectives, recreational activities can also provide a sense of freedom. Speaking of fun, if you're looking for a thrilling online experience, check out the Slope Game at Slope Game!
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