Four-year effort could become a permanent fixture in the future.
Will Donald Trump turn over a new leaf for the cannabis industry?
Four-year effort could become a permanent fixture in the future.
Will Donald Trump turn over a new leaf for the cannabis industry?
While most eyes have been set on the presidential race during the 2016 election, Arizona, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada and California all held a vote to legalize recreational marijuana, a decision that could potentially shift the nation on a cultural and economic level.
Voters in California and Massachusetts approved recreational marijuana initiatives Tuesday night, and several other states passed medical marijuana provisions in what is turning out to be the biggest electoral victory for marijuana reform since 2012, when Colorado and Washington first approved the drug's recreational use.
(CNN) Chris Sayegh is a 24-year-old chef who has found a niche in the world of cannabis.
Visits to the state’s eight cannabis clinics doubled in August, the first month that pain patients were allowed into the program.
California’s Proposition 64, which decriminalizes marijuana and reinvests in the communities most impacted by racist drug policies, is arguably one of the most significant criminal justice policy shifts in a generation for Latinos.
A major new Australian industry could grow up around medicinal cannabis, with possibilities for global export opening up further down the track.
The Green Party’s candidate for US president will be on the ballot in 45 states today; green will be on the ballot in nine.
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