Pardon People, Not Turkeys
Biden should exercise his pardon power to help some of the people whose lives his criminal justice policies destroyed.
Biden should exercise his pardon power to help some of the people whose lives his criminal justice policies destroyed.
Until next year's, because capitalism is always making things better.
The ACLU of Oregon is calling on other state governors to follow suit.
Local governments are considering rules that could force "psilocybin service centers" to locate near highways and go through expensive, discretionary permitting processes.
Plus: The editors consider what type of fresh attacks the marijuana legalization movement is likely to encounter.
Nearly 20 months after the state legalized recreational use, no licensed pot shops have opened, but the black market is booming.
To be eligible for a pardon, patients will have to obtain cannabis from other states and document their diagnoses and purchases.
Legalization is unlikely in the foreseeable future, but banking reform and expungement could be feasible.
"People die from hard physical labor and inability to access medical treatment that they need," said one former inmate.
It's best to avoid sparking up a doobie on a spaceship, but there are other ways to consume substances in the cosmos.
Lighter regulation is one likely explanation.
People with money on the line try harder than pundits to be right, and they adjust quickly when they've made a mistake.
Proposition 122 is the broadest liberalization of psychedelic policy ever enacted in the United States.
Two more states legalized recreational marijuana on Tuesday, while decriminalization of five natural psychedelics looks like a winner in Colorado.
Some reformers opposed the initiative, deeming it anti-competitive and needlessly prescriptive.
A 2020 initiative was overturned by the courts, and this year's version was rejected by voters.
Early polling showed a majority favored the change, but support fell in the face of opposition from leading Republicans and conservative groups.
Even people who use cannabis for medical purposes risk severe penalties for daring to exercise their Second Amendment rights.
Since approving medical marijuana by a wide margin in 2016, North Dakotans have said no twice to allowing recreational use.
Voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing adults 21 or older to use cannabis and instructing legislators to authorize commercial production and distribution.
Plus: California's latest faux-trafficking sting, judge suspends New York gun restrictions, and more...
California police seized more than $17,000 from Vera and Apollonia Ward and accused them of laundering drug money, all without charging them with a crime. The two sisters were trying to start a dog-breeding business.
The damage done by the original guidelines, including undertreatment and abrupt dose reductions, could have been avoided if the CDC had not presumed to advise doctors on how to treat pain.
The ballot initiative also would authorize state-licensed "healing centers" where adults could obtain psychedelics for supervised use.
The unsubstantiated threat that strangers with cannabis candy allegedly pose to trick-or-treaters is an urban legend that never dies.
The WNBA player's nine-year sentence was upheld on Tuesday, paving the way for her transfer to a Russian penal colony.
While Biden's mass pardons for those with low-level marijuana possession convictions were greeted with cautious optimism, protesters expressed frustration over Biden's lack of action to actually release those imprisoned for nonviolent drug crimes.
A protest at the White House calls attention to the thousands of federal cannabis offenders who remain incarcerated.
"Keep safe from COVID by following CDC advice to wear a mask."
Myths about drug-laced Halloween candy just won't go away—no matter how stupid they become.
The black market for drugs empowers bad actors while imposing serious burdens on innocents.
As part of a new partnership, Green Thumb Industries will lease space from 10 convenience stores to build dispensaries.
The Golden State promises a progressive, environmentally conscious, labor-friendly war on weed.
U.S. citizens traveling through legal ports of entry—not undocumented immigrants—are primarily to blame for fentanyl inflows.
Extreme taxes and regulations are hampering legal marijuana markets.
That seemingly large number represents a tiny share of simple possession cases, which are rarely prosecuted under federal law.
From immigration to drug reform, there is plenty of potential for productive compromise.
The president supports the law that could send his son to prison for lying about his personal habits while buying a firearm.
Even as he pardons thousands of marijuana users, the president stubbornly resists legalization.
Plus: Why China didn't liberalize, rescheduling marijuana could take years, and more…
Plus: The editors wade into the conversation surrounding the modern dilemmas men face.
If you aren't a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident, you're out of luck.
Cannabis has long been classified as having "high potential for abuse" and "no currently accepted medical use." That makes it harder to study and, therefore, harder to reclassify.
Plus: A judge may recognize a poly romance, the Nobel Prize goes to economists "for research on banks and financial crises," and more...
The war on drugs conspires with the war on guns to make a mockery of justice.
Given widespread public support for legalization, he could easily go further.
In fact, most were caught on federal property with small amounts of pot.