Four Months After Biden Promised Marijuana Pardons, He Has Not Issued Any
The president reaped political benefits with his pre-election proclamation but has yet to follow through.
The president reaped political benefits with his pre-election proclamation but has yet to follow through.
Is it just to punish the many for the excesses of the few?
Because legislators omitted a crucial letter, there is no straightforward way to downgrade convictions for offenses that are no longer felonies.
The CDC’s revised prescribing guidelines retain an anti-opioid bias and do nothing to reverse the harmful policies inspired by the 2016 version.
Cannabis consumers should have the same commercial leisure spaces that alcohol drinkers do.
Over 88 percent of opioid overdose deaths now involve either heroin or fentanyl. Targeting prescriptions is not an efficient way to address mortality.
And increase total health care costs to boot.
As Biden mentioned fentanyl deaths in his State of the Union address, Republicans called on him to close the border. But "open borders" aren't to blame for overdoses.
These days, he may run for president. His politics have changed.
The government argued that marijuana users have no Second Amendment rights because they are dangerous, unvirtuous, and untrustworthy.
Gov. Andy Beshear issued a conditional pardon aimed at protecting people who use marijuana for medical purposes from criminal prosecution.
The senator bemoans the "cannabis crisis" he helped maintain by blocking the SAFE Banking Act.
Plus: The editors consider the ongoing debt ceiling drama and answer a listener question about ending the war on drugs.
A documentary short about a woman who takes ayahuasca to alleviate the pain caused by addiction
Plus: From jokes to jail, Google urges SCOTUS to protect Section 230, and more...
Federal sentences for simple marijuana possession dropped by 93 percent over seven years.
A last-minute injunction gets tossed, allowing the state to give Robert Fratta a lethal dose of pentobarbital.
As the drug war retreats, individualist approaches to substance use and abuse will make us all better off.
Andrew Tatarsky and Maia Szalavitz push individualist approaches to substance abuse as the drug war retreats.
A ballot initiative approved in November decriminalizes consumption of natural psychedelics.
A North Carolina detective may have inhaled a significant amount during a drug bust.
Defendants say this practice violates the state’s own laws. The attorney general is pushing onward anyway.
The prospects in the next session, when Republicans will control the House, are iffy.
The mysteries of the mind are harder to unravel than psychiatrists pretend.
Stanford University psychologist Keith Humphreys misconstrues libertarianism and ignores its critique of prohibition's deadly impact.
The year’s highlights in buck passing feature petulant politicians, brazen bureaucrats, careless cops, loony lawyers, and junky journalists.
S.B. 58, which emulates an initiative that Colorado voters approved last month, would legalize the use of five psychoactive substances found in fungi and plants.
Although both bills have broad bipartisan support, they never got a vote in the Senate and were excluded from the omnibus spending bill.
The legal distinction between the smoked and snorted forms of cocaine never made sense.
A compromise to cram crack sentencing reform into the year-end omnibus spending bill fell apart at the last minute.
Plus: Title 42 order termination is on hold, the FTC vs. Meta, and more...
The attorney general's memo to prosecutors is an improvement, but it is no substitute for legislation.
The Senate majority leader is suddenly keen to pass legislation that he portrayed as a threat to broader reform.
The move comes as legislation flounders in Congress to end the crack-powder sentencing disparity once and for all.
Another officer claims to have been laid out just by being close to the drug. That’s not how it works.
A study credits "an overall lower police search rate," the result of new priorities and legal constraints.
The country's strategy ignores the failures of prohibition.
Plus: The editors briefly celebrate a noteworthy shake-up in the Senate.
Naloxone could be available without a prescription by spring.
Plus: Lawmakers "demanding action" against slurs on Twitter, FTC sues to stop Microsoft from buying Activision Blizzard, and more...
While Griner's release is welcome news, it's important to remember the thousands of Americans imprisoned for drug offenses here in the U.S.
Making it easier for scientists to study marijuana is a far cry from the liberalization that most Americans want.
You can’t turn lives and economies off and on without inflicting lingering harm.
After losing access to opioids, many patients can’t live with constant pain.
Plus: What's going on with Iran's morality police? Two more days to give to Reason's 2022 webathon, and more...