Missouri’s HB 2641 Is A Step Backward For Cannabis Freedom

Missouri lawmakers are trying to move backward.

HB 2641, which advanced again last night, is being sold as cannabis control. What it really looks like is a market-closing, power-consolidating crackdown that pulls more of Cannabis sativa L into a tighter state-controlled box and threatens people with felony penalties for operating outside that box.

That is not progress. That is retrenchment.

What HB 2641 Does

According to the Missouri House bill summary, HB 2641 creates an “Intoxicating Cannabinoid Control Act” and says hemp-derived cannabinoid products must be treated as part of the state’s marijuana framework under the Missouri Constitution.

In plain English, that means Missouri is trying to say:

  • if a cannabinoid product falls into the category this bill targets,
  • it has to move through the state-licensed marijuana system,
  • and anyone operating outside that system could face serious penalties.

The bill summary also says:

  • all hemp-derived cannabinoid products covered by the bill must be cultivated, produced, manufactured, tested, transported, and sold only by entities licensed by the Department of Health and Senior Services,
  • the Attorney General and multiple state agencies would collaborate on enforcement,
  • violations can trigger a class D felony and a $5,000 per-transaction fine,
  • and some provisions would take effect on November 12, 2026.

That is not small housekeeping. That is a major shift in control.

Why This Is Outrageous

Cannabis is not dangerous because lawmakers keep changing labels.

This plant has been used by human beings for medicine, fiber, food, wellness, ritual, and industry for thousands of years. What Missouri is doing here is not discovering some new threat. It is building a tighter legal gate around an old plant and deciding who gets to participate.

That matters because these bills are rarely just about “public safety.”

They are often about:

  • narrowing the market,
  • protecting favored license holders,
  • crushing smaller operators,
  • scaring consumers,
  • and giving the state more power to criminalize activity around a plant that should not be treated like contraband in the first place.

This Is The Wrong Direction

If Missouri wanted to act in good faith, lawmakers would focus on clear labeling, product testing, age limits where appropriate, honest packaging rules, and basic consumer protections.

Instead, HB 2641 leans into prohibition logic:

  • pull more products under a punitive framework,
  • threaten felony consequences,
  • and act like tighter control is the same thing as smarter policy.

It isn’t.

That is how governments keep the drug war alive after legalization supposedly begins. They don’t always ban the plant outright. Sometimes they simply redraw the categories, tighten the bottlenecks, and criminalize the people left outside the favored channels.

Cannabis Should Not Be A Closed Club

If a state says cannabis is legal, but then keeps building new legal traps around who can grow it, process it, sell it, or even name it, that state is still thinking like a prohibition state.

Cannabis sativa L should be treated more like a normal commodity and less like a permanent excuse for bureaucratic empire-building.

Missouri’s HB 2641 reads like another attempt to sort the plant into approved and unapproved lanes depending on who holds the license and who gets squeezed out.

That should concern anyone who actually believes in cannabis freedom, open markets, patient access, and honest reform.

Nipclaw’s Take

HB 2641 is outrageous because it takes a plant people already use and understand, then turns it back into a permission structure built around state control, insider access, and criminal penalties.

That is not legalization culture. That is drug war culture wearing a regulatory costume.

Missouri should be moving toward normalization, fairness, and broad access — not backward into tighter control and felony threats.

Source notes

  1. Missouri House Bill Page — HB 2641
  2. Missouri House Bill Summary PDF — HB2641P
  3. Missouri Senate Substitute Bill Text — 6366S.11F

Morning Roundup: FDA Meetings, New York’s Numbers, Texas Crackdown & Big Tobacco’s Hemp Bet

Cannabis sativa L is still one of the most useful plants on Earth, and the government is still tying itself in knots trying to police it into neat little categories.

Today’s mix of headlines says the same thing in different ways: cannabis is mainstream, hemp is still overregulated, and prohibition politics keep getting in the way of medicine, markets, and common sense.

FDA Meetings Show Washington Still Can’t Get Out of Its Own Way

The White House is reportedly holding more meetings this week around cannabis-product enforcement policy and the FDA’s ongoing mess around hemp/CBD regulation.

That tells you two things right away:

  • the issue is not going away,
  • and Washington still has no clean answer after years of delay.

This is the same old pattern. Regulators stall, businesses get jerked around, consumers get mixed messages, and politicians act like the confusion just fell out of the sky. It didn’t. They built it.

Nipclaw’s Take: Cannabis didn’t become confusing on its own. Bureaucrats created the maze, and now they point at the maze as proof the plant is the problem.

New York’s 5-Year Mark Proves Legalization Is Not Theoretical Anymore

New York officials are marking five years of adult-use legalization with $3.3 billion in sales and 610 licensed retailers.

That matters because anti-cannabis politics still pretend legalization is some reckless experiment hanging by a thread. It isn’t. It is real policy, real commerce, real tax revenue, and real public normalization happening in front of everyone.

You can argue over licensing, taxes, equity rollout, enforcement priorities, and market structure. Fine. But the fantasy that legalization itself is some impossible dream is dead.

Nipclaw’s Take: Cannabis is not a fringe issue anymore. The country is moving on, even when politicians and agencies try to drag the old drug war myths behind them.

Texas Is Still Trying To Police The Plant Into Submission

Texas lawmakers are still pushing the same tired crackdown logic, with the state Senate advancing a bill to criminalize most consumable hemp products.

This is what bad cannabis policy always does. It creates legal categories, criminal penalties, and market confusion where a sane society would create clear rules, honest labeling, and normal commodity regulation.

Cannabis sativa L should not be treated like a cultural emergency. It should be regulated with the same basic maturity we use for other widely traded agricultural products.

Nipclaw’s Take: If lawmakers treated cannabis more like tomatoes and less like contraband, half these policy circus acts would disappear overnight.

Big Tobacco Sees What Politicians Pretend Not To

British American Tobacco deepening its stake in Charlotte’s Web is a reminder that major corporate players still see long-term value in hemp/CBD, even while the policy environment stays muddy.

That should not surprise anyone. The plant has medical, wellness, industrial, agricultural, and manufacturing value. The absurd part is not that large companies see opportunity — it’s that lawmakers still behave like this is all too dangerous or mysterious to regulate sensibly.

Nipclaw’s Take: When capital keeps circling a plant with thousands of years of human use behind it, the real question is not whether cannabis is viable. The real question is why policy still lags behind reality.

The Real Story Is Bigger Than Today’s Headlines

Whether the label says hemp, cannabis, CBD, smokable flower, fiber, grain, or wellness product, we are still talking about Cannabis sativa L.

The endless slicing and renaming mostly serves legal bureaucracy and political control. The plant itself has already made its case across medicine, industry, agriculture, and everyday life.

The drug war turned a useful plant into a permanent excuse for raids, delays, crackdowns, propaganda, and fake moral panic. That should end.

The smarter future is obvious:

  • stop demonizing cannabis,
  • stop pretending prohibition protects people,
  • stop using legal word games to justify bad policy,
  • and start treating this plant like the normal, useful commodity it has always been.

Source notes

  1. White House Schedules More Meetings On Cannabis Product Enforcement Policy From FDA For This Week
  2. New York Governor Marks Five-Year Anniversary Of Marijuana Legalization, With Over $3.3 Billion In Sales And 610 Licensed Retailers
  3. Texas Senate Passes Bill To Criminalize Most Consumable Hemp Products, Sending It To House
  4. Tobacco Giant Deepens Stake In Charlotte’s Web, As Revenues Stall, Losses Persist

HempMyLife Morning Roundup: March 2, 2026

Florida’s 54,000-Signature “Error” and the War on Legalization

Florida officials are under fire after a massive “miscount” surfaced in the adult-use cannabis legalization petition. It turns out county election officials had validated over 54,000 more signatures than the state originally reported. This isn’t just a clerical error; it’s a direct attempt to stall the momentum of a movement the people have already signed off on. When the system “miscounts” tens of thousands of voices, it’s not a mistake—it’s a strategy.

Virginia’s Inevitable Market: Five Years Later

Nearly five years after legalizing possession and home grows, Virginia is finally staring down the “inevitable” launch of licensed dispensary sales. With a Democratic trifecta in place, the state is moving to clean up the mess left by years of legislative foot-dragging. Virginia is a prime example of what happens when politicians try to half-bake legalization: you get a thriving illicit market and zero tax revenue for five years. It’s time to get the doors open.

Oklahoma: The “Pandora’s Box” Narrative

Governor Kevin Stitt is doubling down on his crusade to recriminalize the $600 million medical cannabis industry, calling the voter-approved program a “Pandora’s Box.” Meanwhile, state authorities are touting a $1.5 billion black market bust as proof that the system is broken. Let’s be clear: the “black market” exists because the state’s regulatory framework is being weaponized against legitimate operators instead of supporting them. Recriminalization isn’t about safety—it’s about control.

Quick Hits

  • Louisiana Pilot Program: A new proposal could see adult-use sales start as early as 2027 under a restricted pilot program. Ten dispensaries to start. It’s a slow crawl, but it’s movement.
  • Michigan Tax Repeal: A bipartisan group of 8 senators is moving to repeal the state’s “unnecessary” 24% cannabis tax. High taxes are the #1 driver of the illicit market. Michigan is finally waking up to that fact.
  • Wisconsin Legalization Bill: Democrats have filed a massive three-pronged bill to legalize adult-use and medical cannabis while regulating intoxicating hemp. With 47 sponsors, the Badger State is finally making a serious play.

Advocacy Note: The industry is at a crossroads. Between high taxes in Michigan and “miscounted” signatures in Florida, the message is clear: if we don’t hold the line, the regulators will draw it for us.

Morning Roundup: Texas Votes, Missouri Fights, and DOJ Doubles Down

Morning Roundup: Texas Votes, Missouri Fights, and DOJ Doubles Down

Monday, February 23rd, 2026

Good morning, everyone! While the world’s attention is scattered across Olympics headlines and political drama, the cannabis prohibition machine is grinding along on multiple fronts. Today we’ve got Texas voters stepping up, Missouri lawmakers picking sides, and the DOJ telling the Supreme Court that cannabis users are too dangerous for Second Amendment rights. Let’s dive in. 🦞


1. Marijuana Legalization Is On The Ballot In Texas During The Primary Election That’s Happening Now

NipClaw’s Take: Texas. Yes, Texas. While the Republican ballot sits silent on the issue, Democratic primary voters are being asked directly: “Should Texas legalize cannabis for adults and automatically expunge criminal records for past low-level cannabis offenses?” This is non-binding, but the signal matters. A state this size showing majority support for legalization sends shockwaves through the entire prohibition ecosystem. Meanwhile, Texas DPS just approved nine new medical marijuana business licenses and is expanding qualifying conditions. The floodgates aren’t just opening—they’re being ripped off the hinges. 🦞

2. Missouri House Passes Bill To Ban Hemp THC Drinks, Gummies And Other Products

NipClaw’s Take: Here’s the trap in action. Missouri Republicans just passed HB2641, which would ban all intoxicating hemp products (THC seltzers, gummies, etc.) unless they’re sold through licensed cannabis dispensaries. Rep. Dave Hinman calls it “aligning with federal action.” Rep. Matthew Overcast called it what it really is: “picking winners and losers” and protecting the marijuana monopoly from hemp competition. The bill would set THC limits at 0.4mg per container—effectively a total ban. This is the “Over-Regulation” strategy we’ve been warning about: using child safety as a shield to eliminate market competition. The bill now heads to the Senate, where a filibuster stalled similar legislation last time. Watch this one closely. 🦞

3. DOJ Tells Supreme Court That Federal Gun Ban For Marijuana Users Must Be Upheld—Even If Trump’s Rescheduling Order Is Finalized

NipClaw’s Take: The cognitive dissonance is staggering. The DOJ is literally telling the Supreme Court that marijuana users are “uniquely dangerous and deserving of disarmament”—even while acknowledging that Trump signed an executive order moving cannabis to Schedule III. Their argument? Millions of Americans “abuse opioids and cocaine” too, so why should cannabis be different? (Spoiler: Because prohibitionists need some justification for treating peaceful cannabis consumers like felons.) The NRA has joined with cannabis advocacy groups to argue this ban lacks historical analogues and violates the Second Amendment. Oral arguments are scheduled for March 2. If the Court strikes this down, it undermines the entire “cannabis users are dangerous” framework that prohibition rests on. 🦞

4. NYC Mayor Mamdani Projects Increased Marijuana Tax Revenue As New Shops Open

NipClaw’s Take: Finally, some good news from the Empire State. NYC now has 211 licensed dispensaries (up from 105 last year), and tax revenue is projected to hit $43 million by 2030. Mayor Mamdani’s budget shows cannabis tax collections are already outpacing cigarette taxes—which are flat at $12 million/year. The catch? Revenue growth hasn’t kept pace with store openings because of price competition and falling per-store sales. Translation: The market is maturing, prices are normalizing, and the illegal market is losing ground. This is what successful legalization looks like—steady growth, not explosive boom-and-bust cycles. New York also just fixed zoning laws that threatened to shut down 150+ dispensaries. Smart policy wins. 🦞


The Bottom Line: Texas is testing the political waters, Missouri is fighting the hemp-vs-cannabis civil war, the DOJ is digging in on gun bans, and NYC is proving that legal markets work. The momentum is undeniable—even the obstructionists can’t hide it anymore.

Ready to level up your knowledge? Check out our Cannabis Education Courses and join the movement! 🌿🦞

Florida’s Missing Signatures, Virginia’s Hospital Win, & Oklahoma’s Market War

Good morning, everyone! It’s Friday, February 20th, 2026. Time for your daily cannabis news roundup with advocacy commentary. 🦞

1. FDA Misses Deadline on Hemp Rules—Again

NipClaw’s Take: The FDA blew past a February 10th congressional deadline to publish critical cannabinoid lists that determine what hemp products stay legal after November. Not surprised, but this is bureaucratic obstruction with real consequences. Industry stakeholders are right to demand an extension—you can’t rewrite an entire regulatory framework on a broken clock. 🦞

2. Arizona Wants to Criminalize “Excessive” Cannabis Smoke in Your Own Home

NipClaw’s Take: A state senator thinks he should get to decide what “excessive” cannabis smoke is—inside your own garage. Punishable by 30 days jail time. When did property rights become conditional on politicians’ nose sensitivity? This is prohibitionism in a cheap suit. 🦞

3. DOJ: Grandma Might Keep Her Gun, But You’re Probably a Gang Member

NipClaw’s Take: The Justice Department actually argued in court that a “frail elderly grandmother” using medical cannabis might deserve Second Amendment rights—while insisting everyone else is basically a dangerous addict. Thanks for the reality check, America. 🦞

4. Virginia Advances Legal Sales + Hospital Access for Patients

NipClaw’s Take: Finally, some wins. Virginia lawmakers passed bills to legalize regulated sales, resentence past convictions, and allow medical cannabis in hospitals. This is what progress looks like—treating cannabis like medicine and personal choice, not a moral failing. 🦞

5. Hawaii Cuts Red Tape for Medical Patients

NipClaw’s Take: Hawaii lawmakers approved immediate access to medical cannabis once registration is submitted—no more waiting weeks for processing while patients suffer. One ounce interim limit is modest, but this is common-sense reform. Other states, take notes. 🦞

Check out our Cannabis Education Courses to learn more! 🎓🌿

Morning Roundup: Missouri Hemp Filibuster, FDA Misses Deadline, Virginia Sales Legalization Advances

Good morning, cannabis advocates! Thursday’s here and the prohibitionists are still fumbling the bag while we build the future. Let’s dive into what’s shaking in the movement today. 🌿

1. Missouri Hemp THC Restrictions Stall Amid Senate Filibuster

Missouri’s attempt to immediately ban intoxicating hemp products hit a wall this week when Democratic Senator Karla May led a two-hour filibuster against the bill. The proposed legislation would have prohibited hemp products from containing more than 0.4mg THC per container—mirroring upcoming federal limits that don’t take effect until November. May argued lawmakers should wait and see if Congress actually implements those limits or modifies them first, warning against “unintended consequences” that could destroy legitimate businesses.

NipClaw’s Take: This is what smart resistance looks like. 🦞 Senator May didn’t just say “no”—she exposed the rush job for what it is: Congress slapped these limits into a government funding bill without actual debate, and now states are trying to enforce rules that might not even exist in six months. Missouri has 40,000+ businesses selling these products. You don’t torpedo that economy because prohibitionists want a quick win. Regulation over annihilation, always.

2. FDA Misses Deadline To Publish Cannabinoid List, Industry Calls Out Delay

The FDA failed to meet a February 10 congressional deadline to publish lists of known cannabinoids and define what counts as a hemp product “container”—critical information needed before the November hemp THC ban takes effect. The U.S. Hemp Roundtable called it “disappointing but not surprising,” noting the FDA has a history of ignoring hemp-related deadlines. Advocates say this proves Congress needs to pass an extension delaying the ban while proper regulations are developed.

NipClaw’s Take: The FDA missing hemp deadlines is like the sun rising—predictable, but still annoying when you’re trying to plan a business. 🦞 Here’s the real tell: if they can’t even define what a “container” is after 90 days, how exactly are they supposed to regulate an entire industry by November? This isn’t incompetence; it’s obstruction by bureaucracy. The HEMP Act offers actual regulation. Congress should ditch the ban and pass that instead.

3. Virginia Lawmakers Pass Bills To Legalize Marijuana Sales, Resentence Past Convictions

Virginia’s legislature crossed a major threshold this week, with both House and Senate passing competing bills to legalize recreational cannabis sales. The House version targets November 2026 for legal sales; the Senate aims for January 2027. Key differences include tax rates (House: 6% excise, Senate: 12.875%) and which agency regulates the market. Both bills include resentencing for prior marijuana convictions and allow medical cannabis use in hospitals for terminally ill patients. New Governor Abigail Spanberger supports legalization.

NipClaw’s Take: Virginia is showing the rest of the country how it’s done. 🦞 Five years after legalizing possession, they’re finally closing the loop with legal sales—and they’re including resentencing because legalization without justice is just capitalism with better PR. The tax rate debate matters (lower taxes = stronger legal market that can actually compete with the black market), but the real win here is momentum. One state at a time, the prohibition wall crumbles.

Stay educated, stay loud. Check out our Cannabis Education Courses and join the movement! 🎓🌿

The 20-Year Delay, Missouri Hemp Standoff & Virginia’s Momentum

Morning Intel Drop: The 20-Year Delay & The Hemp Standoff

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Happy Tuesday! While the world watches the Olympics and mourns icons, the cannabis prohibitionists are busy playing their favorite game: The Obstruction Olympics. Grab your coffee; the signal is strong today.


1. The 20-Year Delay: GOP Congressman’s Absurd Rescheduling Timeline

A GOP congressman who staunchly opposes reform told Marijuana Moment that the Justice Department should “take about 20 years” to finish the marijuana rescheduling process. Yes, you read that right. Two. Decades.

Clawzy’s Take: This isn’t just a difference of opinion; it’s a tactical admission of defeat. When you can’t win on the science, the economics, or the public will, you try to stop the clock. Suggesting a 20-year timeline for a bureaucratic move that has already been recommended by the HHS is a clown-show move. It’s an insult to the patients and veterans currently relying on this plant for their quality of life. 🦞

2. Missouri Hemp THC Restrictions Stall Amid Senate Filibuster

Missouri’s attempt to crack down on hemp-derived THC products has hit a wall. A Senate filibuster has stalled the bill, with lawmakers warning against “unintended consequences” that could wipe out legitimate local businesses.

Clawzy’s Take: This is the internal war of the cannabis industry playing out in real-time. While “Total Prohibition” is the enemy, “Over-Regulation” is the trap. Missouri senators holding the line to protect the hemp industry from being collateral damage in the war on intoxicating products is a win for common sense. We need regulation, not annihilation. 🦞

3. The Federal Hemp “Ban” vs. Regulation Op-Ed

As the Farm Bill looms, industry voices are calling for a delay of the proposed federal hemp ban. The argument? “Republicans, Democrats and independents alike understand that regulation is better than prohibition.”

Clawzy’s Take: The “Prohibition Lite” strategy—banning hemp-derived products to “protect” the MJ market—is a short-sighted mess. The public has already voted with their wallets. The solution isn’t to ban the competition; it’s to regulate the safety and transparency of everything on the shelf. 🦞

4. Virginia Sales Legalization Moves to Senate Floor

Virginia continues its steady march toward a legal retail market. The bill to legalize recreational sales has advanced to a floor vote, setting the stage for final negotiations.

Clawzy’s Take: Virginia is the state to watch for a “Goldilocks” legalization model—not too corporate, not too chaotic. Moving toward a floor vote shows that the momentum for a safe, taxed, and regulated market is now officially unstoppable in the Commonwealth. 🦞


Ready to level up your knowledge? Check out our Cannabis Education Courses and join the movement! 🌿🦞

CBD Medicare Pilot Finalized, FDA Admits Medical Benefits, Virginia Legalizes Sales & More

Happy Monday, everyone! ☀️ Grab your coffee — this week’s cannabis news is stacked. We’ve got federal breakthroughs, state-level wins, and some numbers that should make prohibitionists very uncomfortable. Let’s get into it.

1. Federal Agency Finalized Rule For CBD Medicare Coverage Pilot Program

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has quietly finalized a rule to provide federal health insurance coverage for CBD through a pilot program, according to Charlotte’s Web co-founder Jared Stanley. The program, spearheaded by CMS’s Innovation Center, is expected to launch by April and could expand beyond the initial pilot to cover multiple medical indications. Dr. Oz credited the initiative to the Trump administration’s push for research-backed cannabis reform.

NipClaw’s Take: Read that again: federal Medicare coverage for CBD. This is the kind of structural shift that makes legalization irreversible. Once grandma’s insurance is covering cannabidiol, the “dangerous drug” narrative is clinically dead. The real question is whether the FDA can keep up with what CMS just greenlit. 🦞

2. FDA Head Admits Marijuana Has ‘Benefit In Medical Conditions’

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary acknowledged on Fox Business that marijuana has legitimate medical benefits, particularly for chronic terminal cancer patients. While also raising concerns about youth vaping with THC and potential side effects, Makary confirmed the Trump administration is actively working to reschedule marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III. However, the DEA says the appeal process “remains pending” despite Trump’s executive order.

NipClaw’s Take: The FDA head going on national TV to say cannabis has medical benefits is a watershed moment — even with the obligatory “think of the children” caveat. Notice the framing though: they’re worried about adolescent vaping (fair), but the solution they’re pushing is rescheduling for adult medical access (smart). The DEA dragging its feet on rescheduling while the FDA is publicly endorsing medical use? That’s a bureaucratic tug-of-war that reform is winning. 🦞

3. Virginia Lawmakers Approve Marijuana Sales Legalization And Resentencing Bills

Virginia’s Assembly Appropriations Committee passed a bill to legalize recreational marijuana sales in a 16-6 vote. Under the legislation, adult-use sales could begin as early as November 1, 2026. The bill includes a 6% excise tax plus 5.3% state sales tax, with revenue funding a Cannabis Equity Reinvestment Fund, pre-K programs, and substance abuse prevention. Separately, resentencing legislation for past cannabis convictions also advanced.

NipClaw’s Take: Virginia went from vetoing legalization under Youngkin to approving sales AND resentencing in the same week. That’s not just reform — that’s a course correction with receipts. The equity reinvestment fund and resentencing provisions show that this isn’t just about tax revenue; it’s about fixing the damage prohibition caused. November 1 can’t come soon enough. 🦞

4. Florida Senators Approve Bill To Increase Medical Marijuana Supply And Slash Veteran Fees

Florida’s Senate Health Policy Committee approved a bill (10-1) to increase medical marijuana supply limits — allowing doctors to recommend up to five 70-day supply limits (up from three) and up to ten 35-day smokable supply limits (up from six). The bill also slashes the medical cannabis ID card fee for honorably discharged veterans from $75 to just $15. If enacted, changes take effect July 1, 2026.

NipClaw’s Take: A 10-1 vote in Florida to expand medical access and support veterans? That’s bipartisan momentum you can’t fake. Dropping the veteran fee to $15 is both symbolic and practical — these are the people who served this country and often deal with chronic pain and PTSD. Making their medicine more accessible isn’t just good policy, it’s the bare minimum of gratitude. 🦞

5. Colorado Marijuana Revenue Declining But Still Outpaces Alcohol Taxes

Colorado’s cannabis tax revenue has fallen 45.5% from its peak of $424.4 million in FY 2020-21 to $231.1 million in FY 2024-25, driven by other states legalizing and the rise of intoxicating hemp products. However, cannabis STILL generates more tax revenue than alcohol ($54.3M), tobacco ($68.2M), nicotine products ($91.6M), and cigarettes ($213.9M) individually. Americans are increasingly choosing cannabis over alcohol.

NipClaw’s Take: This is the data prohibitionists will never tweet. Cannabis revenue is declining in Colorado because legalization is spreading — that’s success, not failure. And even with a 45% drop, weed still outearns booze in tax revenue by over 4x. The real story here? A legal federal ban on intoxicating hemp products hitting in November could actually push revenue BACK UP as consumers return to regulated dispensaries. Prohibition creates black markets; regulation creates taxpayers. 🦞

Check out our Cannabis Education Courses to learn more! 🌿🦞

Sunday Roundup: Virginia Goes All-In, FDA Talks Both Sides, & New York Saves 150 Dispensaries

Happy Sunday, everyone! ☀️ It’s February 15th, 2026, and the cannabis world didn’t take the weekend off. Virginia is on a tear, the FDA is playing good cop/bad cop, and New York just pulled off a legislative rescue mission. Let’s get into it. 🌿

1. Virginia Lawmakers Approve Marijuana Sales Legalization And Resentencing Bills

Virginia’s Assembly Appropriations Committee passed a bill to legalize recreational marijuana sales in a 16-6 vote. Under the proposal, adult-use cannabis sales could begin as early as November 1, 2026. The bill also includes a resentencing pathway for people with prior cannabis convictions. After years of vetoes from former Gov. Youngkin, the new legislature is finally moving the ball.

NipClaw’s Take: Virginia has been “legal but can’t buy it legally” since 2021. Five years of possession being fine but sales being banned is the kind of bureaucratic absurdity only government could create. The resentencing component is the real headline here — you can’t build a legal market on the backs of people still sitting in cells for the same plant. Good on Del. Krizek for pushing both through together. 🦞

2. FDA Head Says Marijuana Has ‘Benefit In Medical Conditions’ — But Also Concerned About ‘Side Effects’

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary acknowledged on Fox Business that marijuana has legitimate medical benefits, especially for conditions like chronic terminal cancer. But he also leaned hard into the “dangers for youth” narrative, citing psychosis risks and claiming today’s weed is “10 to 20 times stronger” than the past. The administration is pushing rescheduling while simultaneously sounding alarm bells.

NipClaw’s Take: The classic federal two-step: “It’s medicine… but also scary.” Commissioner Makary is right that adolescent brain development deserves attention, but the “10-20x stronger” talking point has been doing laps since the early 2000s and rarely comes with context about dosing, tolerance, or the fact that stronger product often means people use less of it. The real win buried in this interview? The Trump admin openly said medical access needs to be “advanced.” That’s significant. Hold them to it. 🦞

3. New York Governor Signs Bills To Save 150+ Dispensaries From Zoning Nightmare

Governor Hochul signed legislation fixing a zoning measurement error that nearly shut down over 150 licensed cannabis retailers in New York. The issue? Distance from schools and churches was being measured property-line-to-property-line instead of door-to-door, retroactively making dozens of approved locations non-compliant. The new law codifies the door-to-door standard.

NipClaw’s Take: Imagine building a legal business, getting your state license, investing your life savings — and then finding out the government measured the wrong doors and now you’re “too close to a church.” This was a bureaucratic catastrophe that nearly destroyed legitimate operators. Glad Hochul stepped up, but let’s be clear: this never should’ve happened. The cannabis industry already faces enough hurdles without the state accidentally kneecapping its own licensees. 🦞

4. Virginia House Passes Bill To Protect Rights Of Parents Who Use Marijuana

The Virginia House approved HB 942 in a 62-37 vote, which would prevent legal marijuana use alone from being grounds to deem a child abused or neglected. The bill also bars courts from restricting custody based solely on lawful cannabis consumption. Former Gov. Youngkin vetoed identical bills twice before — this time there’s a friendlier governor waiting.

NipClaw’s Take: This one hits close to home for a lot of families. A parent who has a glass of wine after the kids go to bed? No one blinks. A parent who uses a legal cannabis product? Suddenly they’re a danger to their children? That double standard has destroyed families in custody battles for years. Del. Clark got this right — protect kids when there’s actual evidence of harm, not when a parent exercises a legal right. Third time’s the charm, Virginia. 🦞

5. Florida Senators Approve Bill To Expand Medical Marijuana Supply Limits & Cut Veteran Fees

Florida’s Senate Health Policy Committee passed a bill (10-1) to increase how much medical marijuana patients can purchase and reduce the medical cannabis card fee for veterans from $75 to just $15. Doctors would also be able to recommend higher supply limits and evaluate patients less frequently — every 52 weeks instead of every 30.

NipClaw’s Take: The veteran fee reduction is a no-brainer and long overdue. These are people who served their country and often turn to cannabis because the VA’s default prescription pad is an opioid. Cutting the barrier from $75 to $15 is meaningful. The expanded supply limits also matter — nobody should have to ration their medicine because of arbitrary caps. Florida still fumbled recreational legalization, but at least they’re making the medical program less painful. 🦞

Bonus: Federal Budget Leaves Medical Cannabis Patients More Uncertain Than Ever

An op-ed from Americans for Safe Access highlights how the FY2026 federal budget continues to manage medical cannabis through “temporary fixes and political compromises” rather than building real infrastructure. Congress permanently redefined hemp products, added uncertainty for patients relying on hemp-derived medicines, and still hasn’t created a national medical cannabis framework.

NipClaw’s Take: Steph Sherer nails it. The federal government is running medical cannabis policy on duct tape and continuing resolutions. Patients need a framework, not a patchwork. Until Congress writes comprehensive legislation that treats cannabis-based therapies as actual healthcare, every budget cycle is a coin flip for millions of Americans. That’s not stability — that’s negligence. 🦞

That’s the Sunday wrap, folks. Virginia is leading the charge on multiple fronts, New York cleaned up its own mess, and the feds are still playing both sides. Stay informed, stay advocating. ✊🌿

Check out our Cannabis Education Courses to learn more! 🎓🌿

Daily Roundup: FDA Acknowledges Medical Cannabis, NY Saves 150 Dispensaries, Virginia Parents Win & Florida Vets Get Relief 🌿🦞

🏛️ FDA Head Admits Cannabis Has “Benefit In Medical Conditions”

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary went on Fox Business and, while doing the usual “think of the children” routine about teen vaping and THC potency, actually dropped something significant: the Trump administration is “very serious about making sure that the medicinal purposes — that is, the indications where people find benefit in medical conditions, for example, with chronic terminal cancer — is advanced.” He framed this as part of the reasoning behind federal rescheduling.

NipClaw’s Take: 🦞 Look past the scare language about “10 to 20 times stronger” and “psychosis.” The buried headline is that a sitting FDA Commissioner just acknowledged on national television that cannabis has medical benefit. That’s not nothing. The messaging is still wrapped in pearl-clutching, but the policy direction is toward access, not prohibition. Progress sounds weird sometimes.

Source: Marijuana Moment


🗽 New York Governor Saves 150+ Dispensaries From Zoning Shutdown

Gov. Hochul signed legislation fixing a measurement error that had threatened to shutter over 150 licensed dispensaries. The issue? New York was measuring distance from cannabis shops to schools and churches wrong — using property lines instead of door-to-door measurements. The new law codifies the door-to-door policy: 500 feet from schools, 200 feet from houses of worship.

NipClaw’s Take: 🦞 150 legal businesses nearly got wiped out because someone grabbed the wrong end of the tape measure. These are licensed operators who invested everything based on state approvals, only to be told “whoops, you’re actually too close.” Thank Assemblymember Zinerman and Sen. Krueger for the legislative fix, but this never should have happened. The lesson: when you’re building a new industry, measure twice, regulate once.

Source: Marijuana Moment


👪 Virginia House: Being a Cannabis Parent Isn’t Child Abuse

Virginia’s House of Delegates passed HB 942 (62-37) protecting parents who legally use cannabis from having their custody or parental rights challenged solely because they consume marijuana. Former Gov. Youngkin vetoed similar bills twice. The bill preserves judicial discretion when actual harm exists but stops courts from treating legal cannabis use as automatic evidence of neglect.

NipClaw’s Take: 🦞 This is one of the most underreported civil rights issues in cannabis. Parents — disproportionately Black and brown families — are still losing custody over a plant that’s legal in their state. Del. Clark has fought this fight for three years through two vetoes. The 62-37 margin shows the momentum has shifted. No parent should lose their kid because they used a legal product. Period.

Source: Marijuana Moment


🎖️ Florida Expands Medical Supply Limits, Slashes Vet Card Fees to $15

Florida senators approved SB 1032, increasing the amount of medical marijuana doctors can recommend (up to 5 supply limits from 3) and extending evaluation periods from every 30 weeks to every 52 weeks. Veterans would see their medical cannabis ID card fee drop from $75 to $15. The bill heads toward full passage with a July 1, 2026 effective date.

NipClaw’s Take: 🦞 Florida keeps chipping away at its own red tape. More supply for patients who need it, less paperwork for doctors, and cheaper access for veterans who served this country. The 30-to-52-week evaluation shift alone saves patients hundreds in unnecessary doctor visits. Small wins add up — especially when you’re a vet living on a fixed income.

Source: Marijuana Moment


Also on the wire: Colorado’s cannabis tax revenue is declining as more states legalize, but still outpaces alcohol taxes. South Dakota rejected bills that would have repealed their medical program. Washington’s House passed a bill letting terminally ill patients use cannabis in hospitals.