As an Indianapolis physician and former Indiana state health commissioner, Dr. Richard Feldman has some words in response to Attorney General Curtis Hill.
The end of one year and the beginning of another presents a good opportunity to look ahead at the long-term goals of the marijuana legalization movement.
Many responses have filed in from across the cultural and political landscape following the announcement that Attorney General Jeff Sessions will rescind the 2013 Cole Memorandum.
This year, the mighty festival’s second weekend landing on 4/20, which is just a sad coincidence because there will be no cannabis allowed on festival grounds, despite California legalization.
Three days after California businesses began selling marijuana for recreational use, a policy change by the federal government has sparked uncertainty about the future of legalized cannabis and provoked sharp reactions from officials in the state and around the nation.
In the face of absurdity, we always have comedy. "Late Night" briefly targeted Sessions’ decision, including Jimmy Kimmel who tried to answer that question on everyone’s mind.
Did Attorney General Jeff Sessions just reignite the 47-year-long, $1 trillion War on Drugs or did his surprise decision accelerate the end of marijuana prohibition?