Majority of Public Comments Support Descheduling or Legalizing Marijuana
While lawmakers remain resistant to change, most of the public thinks it's high time to stop treating marijuana as dangerous.
While lawmakers remain resistant to change, most of the public thinks it's high time to stop treating marijuana as dangerous.
The presumptive Democratic nominee has a more liberal drug policy record than both the president and the Republican presidential nominee.
The agency claims DOI and DOC have "a high potential for abuse" because they resemble other drugs it has placed in Schedule I.
The president's decision to drop out after insisting he never would continued a pattern established by a long career of politically convenient reversals.
Defending the federal ban on gun possession by drug users, the government's lawyers seem increasingly desperate.
Every year, thousands of U.S. residents are deported for drug-related activity, including minor offenses and conduct that states have legalized.
The Manhattan Institute's Charles Fain Lehman misleadingly equates a survey's measure of "cannabis use disorder" with "compulsive" consumption that causes "health and social problems."
The majority and the dissenters agree that the drug was "central" to "the opioid crisis," even though there is little evidence to support that thesis.
Although the FBI never produced evidence that Ali Hemani was a threat to national security, it seems determined to imprison him by any means necessary.
The now-dead bill would have permitted three counties to establish pilot programs in which military veterans could take psilocybin under the supervision of medical professionals.
The state has thousands of unauthorized shops but fewer than 200 licensed marijuana sellers.
As the DEA relentlessly tightens regulations on pain meds, the FDA refuses to approve a safer alternative already being used in similar countries.
The Ben Kredich Act, named for a young man killed by an allegedly impaired motorist, overcorrects in response to a tragic incident.
The president's son, who faces up to 25 years in prison for conduct that violated no one's rights, can still challenge his prosecution on Second Amendment grounds.
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The panel's recommendation, based on several concerns about two clinical trials, is a serious setback for a promising PTSD treatment.
The president's son, who is charged with crimes that violated no one's rights, theoretically faces up to 25 years in prison.
The former and possibly future president hopes voters will overlook his incoherence.
The state's gun permit policy underlines the absurdity of assuming that cannabis consumers are too dangerous to be trusted with firearms.
Since he favors aggressive drug law enforcement, severe penalties, and impunity for abusive police officers, he may have trouble persuading black voters that he is on their side.
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Rescheduling does not resolve the conflict between federal pot prohibition and state rejection of that policy.
It looks like Attorney General Merrick Garland overrode the agency's recalcitrant drug warriors in deciding to reclassify the drug.
The vice president's exaggeration reflects a pattern of dishonesty in the administration's pitch to voters who oppose the war on weed.
Contrary to the president's rhetoric, moving marijuana to Schedule III will leave federal pot prohibition essentially unchanged.
For over 50 years, marijuana has been in the same category of controlled substances as heroin and LSD. The DEA is finally proposing to end that ludicrous policy.
The head of Students for Sensible Drug Policy clarifies the misconceptions around decriminalization, safe injection sites, and whether Trump or Biden is better on drug policy.
Biden has not delivered on his promise to decriminalize marijuana.
Moving marijuana to Schedule III, as the DEA plans to do, leaves federal pot prohibition essentially untouched.
The change from Schedule I to Schedule III is welcome, but removing it from the schedules altogether is the best option.
"We should be building a wall around the welfare state, not the United States," Nick Gillespie argued at a recent immigration debate.
Columbia law professor David Pozen recalls the controversy provoked by early anti-drug laws and the hope inspired by subsequent legal assaults on prohibition.
The CDC’s numbers show that pain treatment is not responsible for escalating drug-related deaths.
Courts have repeatedly ruled that delta-8 and delta-10 products are legal. So why are officers and district attorneys still raiding shops?
If drug warriors really wanted to punish "those responsible" for the transgender activist's death, they would start by arresting themselves.
The state’s policies and practices seemed designed to strangle the legal cannabis supply.
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Oregon lawmakers recently voted to recriminalize drugs after voters approved landmark reforms in 2020.
New York's botched recreational marijuana rollout just keeps looking worse.
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Hours before the president said "no one should be jailed" for marijuana use, his Justice Department was saying no one who uses marijuana should be allowed to own guns.
William Barr and John Walters ignore the benefits of legalization and systematically exaggerate its costs.
The far-traveling smuggler turned breeder "never gave up" on his dream of recovering neglected marijuana strains.
The judicially approved Brookline ban reflects a broader trend among progressives who should know better.