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The Counterculture Giant Reclaims Its Roots

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For nearly five decades, High Times stood as the unapologetic voice of cannabis counterculture. More than just a magazine, it was a platform that elevated music, politics, psychedelics, activism, and the plant itself. It was a symbol of rebellion, freedom, and community. Then came the spectacular fall, the kind that made it feel like High Times might be gone for good. Until now.

Today, High Times returns under new ownership, new leadership, and a renewed purpose. RAW Rolling Papers founder Josh Kesselman, a lifelong reader and supporter of the brand, has taken the lead in acquiring the core assets of High Times, including the magazine, the Cannabis Cup, and its affiliated media properties. Alongside him is Matt Stang, a former High Times executive and co-owner and longtime cultural operator who helped build the Cannabis Cup into a global institution. Their plan: restore the soul of a brand that shaped generations, and set a new course rooted in the values that first built it.

“I get to bring back a piece of history that has played such an important part in culture and impacted so many lives, including my own,” Kesselman said. “This feels like a dream.”

But the dream comes with real work. And a complicated inheritance.

High Times’ recent history has been anything but stable. After its 2017 acquisition by an investor group led by Adam Levin, the brand shifted its focus to aggressive expansion, launching an investor crowdfund, pursuing a public offering, and acquiring retail cannabis businesses across the U.S.

The pitch was seductive: own a piece of the world’s most iconic cannabis brand. Over 20,000 investors bought in. Many never got shares. Few got answers. And when High Times missed SEC filing deadlines and continued to accept investments, it triggered investigations. In 2023, Levin was charged with securities fraud. By early 2025, he had pleaded guilty to conspiracy.  

During those years, the magazine printed intermittently, debts mounted, and a string of failed business deals drained the company’s momentum. The brand was out of cash, out of leadership, and out of time.

“It was heartbreaking,” said a former editor who asked not to be named. “We saw something we loved turned into a business plan. A bad one.”

By mid-2024, a court-appointed receiver was actively shopping the High Times trademarks, events, and licenses to the highest bidder. Among the bidders: private equity firms, dispensary groups, and even a psychedelics company hoping to rebrand the magazine entirely.

Instead, it landed in the hands of someone at the very core of Cannabis culture.

Josh Kesselman didn’t enter the cannabis space through Silicon Valley or Wall Street. His path started in Gainesville, Florida, with a head shop, a van, and a deep love for rolling papers. What began as a storefront called Knuckleheads became the launchpad for a decades-long mission: to make better papers and treat smokers with respect.

Josh Kesselman, founder of RAW Rolling Papers and new owner of High Times. (Photo courtesy of RAW)

RAW Rolling Papers officially launched in 2005 and quickly gained a loyal following among people who cared about purity, craft, and culture. The product was different; unbleached, vegan, and made with a natural connection to what smokers truly wanted yet had never experienced. But what set RAW apart was the man behind it. Kesselman connected directly with the community through videos, meetups, giveaways, and support for causes that mattered. He didn’t just build a brand. He earned a following.

Kesselman’s approach made him one of the most respected figures in the space: a founder with mass reach and underground credibility. And as RAW expanded worldwide, his loyalty to the roots of cannabis culture never wavered. He didn’t exit. He reinvested. In products. In people. In the culture itself.

Josh is a character. Charismatic, outspoken, and unapologetic. A throwback to the wild inventors and idealists who once ran underground empires. People like Thomas Forçade, the outlaw founder of High Times, who launched the magazine in 1974 while smuggling cannabis and funding radical newspapers. There’s a poetic symmetry to it: two long-haired misfits, decades apart, both driven by obsession and a refusal to sell out.

Thomas Forçade, founder of High Times, circa 1970s. (Photo: High Times Archive)

Kesselman had watched from the outside as the magazine he grew up on lost its way. The voice was gone. The magazine, when it was published at all, felt like a big paid ad. Cannabis Cups had stopped.

So when the opportunity arose to acquire the assets after the brand fell into receivership, the opportunity to rebuild it felt personal. “It wasn’t about flipping something,” he said. “It was about saving something. High Times always stood for more than the plant,” Kesselman told us. “It stood for truth. For freedom. For not apologizing about who we are.” To help save High Times he brought back part of the legacy to help.

Matt Stang is no stranger to the High Times story. Starting as an intern in the late 1990s, he spent nearly two decades inside the brand, eventually rising to Chief Revenue Officer and helping expand the magazine’s reach during the early days of legalization.

But his biggest contribution was the Cannabis Cup. When he first joined, the event was still a small gathering in Amsterdam. Under Stang, it evolved into a multi-city, international celebration of cannabis culture. “It was never just about the trophies,” Stang told us. “It was about recognition. Community. Celebration.”

Stang and Kesselman in a Los Angeles coffee shop talking cannabis. Courtesy of Big Freezy

In 2017 the company was purchased by private equity owners. Matt vehemently disagreed with the way High Times was being turned into a private equity run business and departed soon thereafter. During his time away he watched from the sidelines as the Cup and the magazine lost their footing. “When we saw what was happening, it wasn’t just disappointing,” he said. “It was painful.”

Now, many years later Stang returns as a partner to help restore High Times to its cultural and historical importance adding, “It’s time to bring back and revive the community we built together.”

From the sound of it, new ownership plans to bring back what made High Times special in the first place. The print magazine will return in small, collectible runs with deeper stories, and a focus on quality.

The archives: including covers, articles and art will be brought back to life, too.

Bob Marley on the cover of High Times, February 2002. (High Times Archive)

The Cannabis Cup is also being rebuilt with third-party judging, real transparency, and new ways for the public to participate. 

“Some of the greatest times of my life happened at those Cups. And I will bring them back. They’ll be just as much fun, because that’s the point,” Kessleman said. “When you remove private equity and investors, when it’s just a couple of people trying to do something for the culture, the possibilities become limitless.”

The new High Times website will roll out podcasts, video features, and longform storytelling again, mixing veteran contributors with new voices who live and breathe the culture.

Kesselman (who has millions of followers of his own) also wants the platform to serve as a home base for the most important cannabis voices on social media, rerouting users to hidden or new accounts to keep the community connected amid shadow bans and deletions. He thinks this will help save and rebuild our fractured community because in his words, “nobody can stop the truth.”

And yes, there will be merch. Apparel. Rolling papers. All done right. All done in the spirit of keeping the platform alive without selling it out.

The road back won’t be quick. But that’s the point. “I don’t care if it takes five years,” Kesselman said. “I’d rather go slow and build something real.”

“Most importantly?” Kesselman added. “Have fun while doing it.”

We can’t help but think that if Thomas Forçade could see High Times now—passed from the suits back to the true believers—he’d be lighting a joint and saying, finally.



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Marijuana And Drug Groups Press Meta About Shadowbanning And Censorship Of Content On Facebook And Instagram

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Nearly 100 organizations in the U.S. and abroad have signed on to an open letter to Meta—the social media behemoth behind Facebook, Instagram and Threads—condemning the company for its censorship of marijuana- and drug-related content, which can limit users’ access to health, policy reform and educational materials.

“Accounts committed to public education, legal and policy advocacy, research dissemination, and harm reduction services—including those of licensed healthcare professionals, nonprofits, and legal businesses—have been routinely shadowbanned, deplatformed, or had their posts removed with little explanation or recourse, despite operating in full compliance with local laws,” says the letter that was sent on Monday.

“This suppression is not merely an inconvenience,” the letter, which was led by Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP), adds; “it is a form of digital marginalization.”

Among the dozens of other groups that have already signed on to the statement are Drug Policy Alliance (DPA), Marijuana Policy Project, NORML, Harm Reduction International and others in the U.S., Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia.

“Censorship of science, public health, legal, and public policy discourse is not an act of neutrality; it causes harm.”

As of Monday, the petition is also open for individuals to add their names.

“So many groups we work with have been flagged for promoting get out the vote efforts, policy panels and events, information about preventing opioid overdoses, and more,” SSDP’s executive director, Kat Murti, said in a statement.

SSDP has also repeatedly faced challenges with its own social media accounts, Murti said, “greatly limiting our ability to reach our audience and hobbling our efforts to reduce harmful drug use and promote necessary policy change.”

At the beginning of this year, Meta announced that it was revising its content moderation policies and “getting rid of a number of restrictions…on topics…that are the subject of frequent political discourse and debate.” It was part of the company’s move away from intensive moderation of controversial topics like immigration and gender.

The company didn’t immediately change its practices around marijuana—continuing to block search results on its platform for terms such as “marijuana” and “cannabis” and instead displaying a notice encouraging users to report “the sale of drugs.”

While the company appears to have quietly updated that practice, the letter says that Meta continues to disproportionately and overzealously target topics such as cannabis, psychedelics and harm reduction.

The letter urges Meta to make five specific reforms to ensure access to what it calls “crucial conversations impacting the health and wellbeing of our community”:

  1. End discriminatory bans and shadowbans on accounts related to cannabis, psychedelics, and harm reduction when they operate within legal guidelines.
  2. Establish clear, transparent, and consistent content policies that distinguish between promotion of the sale of illegal substances and legitimate drug education and advocacy.
  3. Create a dedicated appeals and accountability process specific to drug-related content that includes community stakeholders and subject-matter experts.
  4. Engage in regular dialogue with the psychedelic, cannabis, and harm reduction communities to better understand our work and co-create equitable guidelines for content moderation.

“Censorship of science, public health, legal, and public policy discourse is not an act of neutrality; it causes harm,” the letter concludes, noting the increasing scientific evidence for the effectiveness of cannabis and psychedelic therapies. “As the cultural and legal landscapes around these issues evolve, so too must your policies.”

SSDP’s Murti said the group alerted Meta to obstacles caused by the company’s censorship more than a year ago, but that it is “continuing to see members of our community be deprived of access to online fundraising tools and digital advertising.”

Groups have also been “denied the opportunity to livestream panels and other events” and had posts about science, health and public policy “be artificially limited in reach,” she said. In some cases, Meta has also deactivated accounts.

While many platforms have policies against the illegal sale of drugs or require age-gating for content around controlled substances, critics say Meta’s filtering has often been overbroad.

SSDP asserted in a press release on Monday, for example, that “cannabis and psychedelic-related content, as well as public health information about drug checking and lifesaving naloxone, is backed by education, research, and blossoming legislative reform, yet Meta’s moderation policies fail to distinguish between illegal activity and legal, evidence-based content meant to educate and support communities.”

It’s unclear when Meta may have enacted the recent change to search filtering, nor has the company said whether other changes are forthcoming. Meta and Facebook press contacts did not responded to emails from Marijuana Moment sent on Friday.

Morgan Fox, political director at NORML, said last week that he hoped the search issue had been fixed for good.

“I hope these apparent changes are permanent and pervasive, and not just a temporary fix with limited scope—which we have seen in the past,” he wrote in an email to Marijuana Moment. “Without structural changes to content moderation and a clear process for addressing instances of inappropriate censorship in a more systemic manner, advocates and educators are going to have to remain vigilant to ensure that social media platform users can continue to effectively access their information.”

It’s an issue the legal cannabis industry has long grappled with. Fox noted in an email on Monday that he first started a petition on the issue in 2018 on behalf of the National Cannabis Industry Association (NCIA).

“It looked like the issue had been resolved for a while,” he said, “but it was only temporary.”

One cannabis-focused content creator who’s called out Meta in the past is cartoonist Brian “Box” Brown, who’s previously complained to Marijuana Moment that the company has flagged his posts, limited his accounts’ visibility and “killed my reach and growth.”

“My mind was boggled,” he said earlier this year. “My comic strip thats frankly TOO wonky about policy is getting flagged for selling drugs.”

In an email last about the search function, Brown said he’s picked up on a shift in Meta’s handling of his and others’ content.

“It’s weird,” he said. “I’m not even totally sure what’s happened. *Something* has changed. Stuff isn’t getting suppressed in the way it was before. But at the same time, it kinda is.”

Unlike in recent months, “I’m not getting warnings every day,” the cartoonist continued, but some posts still seem to get throttled.” He noted that other accounts, such as “a bunch of hashmakers and other influencers” have moved to other platforms after Meta “nuked” their accounts.

“It’s kind of a mixed bag,” he said, adding that he’s going stop censoring his own content—which he’d begun doing to avoid being flagged by the company’s algorithms—and see what happens going forward.

Ahead of this past holiday season, vape device manufacturer Puffco similarly complained about Instagram and parent company Meta for what it described as an overly aggressive campaign to flag and remove cannabis-related content. A video from the company asserted that Instagram’s policing of cannabis posts by brands and individuals effectively stifles efforts at community building among veterans, medical marijuana patients and legal adult-use consumers.

“The world didn’t want us, so we made a safe space for our community on Instagram where we could just be ourselves and share what we love,” the video said. “Isn’t that the point of this place?”

Despite more and more states having legalized and regulated marijuana for adults, social media companies have regularly flagged cannabis-related content as violations of their terms of service. The practice has led to suspensions of accounts belonging to state-regulated cannabis brands, informational websites and individual content creators, who now often create backup accounts to avoid the loss of a key line of communication to thousands of followers.

In 2018, concerns arose that Facebook was “shadowbanning” marijuana pages, including those of state cannabis regulatory agencies, by blocking them from search results. An internal presentation at the company the next year noted that it was considering loosening cannabis restrictions, but many have continued to run into problems

In July 2023, Meta announced that it had updated its cannabis advertising policy to permit the promotion of some non-ingestible CBD products and also loosen restrictions on hemp ads. It said businesses could begin promoting the sale of CBD if they receive written approval from Meta and if the products are certified with the payment compliance company Legitscript and comply with local laws. Ads also could not target people under 18.

“We want people to continue to discover and learn about new products and services on our technologies,” Meta said. However, it added that “advertisers will continue to be prohibited from running ads that promote THC products or cannabis products containing related psychoactive components.”

Earlier that year, Meta faced criticism over a feature of its microblogging app, Threads, for prompting users with a “get help” message about federal substance misuse resources if they searched for “marijuana,” various psychedelics and other controlled substances. Meanwhile, alcohol- and tobacco-related searches were exempt from the prompt. The feature no longer appears to be in place.

Twitter, now known as X, had a similar practice in place in 2020, cautioning users about “marijuana” searches as part of a partnership with SAMHSA. Alcohol and tobacco were excluded from the search restriction. But in late 2022, after being acquired by Elon Musk, Twitter suspended that practice.

Also, Twitter since updated its cannabis advertising policy, aiming to give cannabis businesses that are “certified advertisers” the ability to feature “packaged” cannabis products in the ad creative that’s promoted on the social media site.

Google, for its part, updated its policy in January 2023, making it so companies can promote Food and Drug Administration- (FDA) approved drugs containing CBD, as well as topical CBD products with no more than 0.3 percent THC.

Video game streaming company Twitch, meanwhile, updated its branding policy for streamers, prohibiting promotions of marijuana businesses and products while explicitly allowing alcohol partnerships. Twitch had previously clarified rules in a way that was inclusive of cannabis—exempting marijuana-related references from the list of banned usernames, just as it does for alcohol and tobacco.

In an update to Apple’s iPhone software that was instituted in 2022, users were given an option to track medications and learn about possible drug interactions with other substances—including marijuana.

In 2021, Apple ended its policy of restricting cannabis companies from conducting business on its App store. The marijuana delivery service Eaze subsequently announced that consumers were able to shop and pay for products on its iPhone app for the first time.

In contrast to Apple, Google’s Android app hub updated its policy in 2019 to explicitly prohibit programs that connect users with cannabis, no matter whether it is legal in the jurisdiction where the user lives.

In 2022, New York marijuana regulators asked the social media app TikTok to end its ban on advertising that involves the word “cannabis” as they worked to promote public education on the state’s move to legalize.

Read the full SSDP sign-on letter to Meta below:

Snoop Dogg Expands His Cannabis Brand Again, With New THCA Hemp Product Sales Website

Marijuana Moment is made possible with support from readers. If you rely on our cannabis advocacy journalism to stay informed, please consider a monthly Patreon pledge.

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DEA Museum Highlights Pen That Nixon Used To Sign Modern War On Drugs Into Law

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One of the featured exhibits at the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) Museum—which attempts to put a fun, exciting spin on America’s war on drugs—is a relic that helped give shape to federal prohibition: the pen that then-President Nixon used in 1970 to sign the modern drug war into law.

The pen and a signed photo of Nixon endorsing the Comprehensive Drug Prevention and Control Act is featured on an episode of Stories From the Collection, a video series from the DEA Museum intended to “take you into the collection to share stories about our most exciting objects,” according to the video’s host, Museum Technician Emma Miller.

“This set includes a signed photograph copy of the first page of the Comprehensive Drug Prevention and Control Act, and a pen used by President Nixon to sign it into law,” Miller explains in the video. “It commemorates a pivotal moment in federal drug law enforcement.”

Title II of the federal statute is the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), which created five schedules of substances—Schedule I to Schedule V—based on the government’s perception of their medical value and potential for abuse.

Fifty-four years ago Tuesday—on June 17, 1971—Nixon famously stepped up America’s war on drugs, declaring substance misuse “public enemy number one” and requesting increased funding for prevention.

“In order to fight and defeat this enemy, it is necessary to wage a new all out offensive,” he said. “I’ve asked the Congress to provide the legislative authority and the funds to fuel this kind of an offensive.”

The pen used to sign the federal drug law, which took place the previous October, was a gift from Nixon to Jack Ingersoll, who at the time was the director of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, which later became DEA.


Stories From the Collection: President Gift Set

“This framed set commemorates the creation of a law that is still widely utilized by DEA,” Miller said in the video, adding that the writing instrument is “only one of over 45,000 artifacts, photographs, videos and documents in the DEA Museum’s collection. Each illuminates important moments in the history of DEA, federal drug law enforcement and drug use in American culture.”

Earlier this year, the drug policy publication Filter visited the DEA Museum in order to—as senior editor Helen Redmond critically put it—“see all the lies and misinformation in one place” and “understand how the curators sold and sanitized the war on drugs.”

“I was not disappointed,” Redmond wrote in an op-ed, concluding that “The fiction that permeates the museum is that the DEA is somehow winning a drug war that is justified.”

DEA is widely seen as ideologically committed to the drug war—a commitment that former President Joe Biden’s drug czar recently said may have compromised the government’s effort to move marijuana from the most-restrictive Schedule I of the CSA to Schedule III.

About five months into President Donald Trump’s second term, there has still been no movement on the pending plan to reschedule cannabis, leaving advocates and stakeholders frustrated by both the current inaction as well as the Biden administration’s failure to get the job done.

According to former White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) Director Rahul Gupta, that may have been due to deliberate resistance from within DEA—a suspicion shared widely among supporters of the reform, including those involved in an administrative hearing that’s been stalled for months, with no clear indication it will proceed any time soon.

What happens next in the process is uncertain, especially ahead of the potential Senate confirmation of Trump’s pick to lead DEA, Terrance Cole, who has declined to say whether he supports the proposal but has previously voiced concerns about the dangers of marijuana and linked its use to higher suicide risk among youth.

Trump, for his part, has not publicly weighed in on cannabis reform since taking office, and the White House did not include rescheduling in a recently released list of drug policy priorities for the administration.

Other former DEA and HHS officials have separately expressed their sense that, if rescheduling is going to happen, the president will need to proactively demand its completion.

Former Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), meanwhile—a backer of legalization whom Trump first tapped for attorney general but withdrew from consideration—recently made somewhat surprising comments about the president’s position on rescheduling, suggesting that his endorsement of the reform while campaigning last year may have been a politically motivated move to try and win over more young voters but that he personally has “a deep personal aversion to anything that dulls the senses.”

While Trump’s position on the issue has evolved over the years, including several past comments supportive of medical cannabis, Gaetz said the president is still “totally intolerant” to any reform that “he believes will increase drug use.”

That represents a significant shift in rhetoric Gaetz used in an op-ed in March, when he predicted that “meaningful” marijuana reform is “on the horizon” under the Trump administration and praised the president’s “leadership” in supporting rescheduling.

DEA recently notified an agency judge that the proceedings are still on hold—with no future actions currently scheduled as the matter sits before the acting administrator.

Separately, in April, an activist who received a pardon for a marijuana-related conviction during Trump’s first term paid a visit to the White House, discussing future clemency options with the recently appointed “pardon czar.”

A marijuana industry-backed political action committee (PAC) has also released a series of ads over recent weeks that have attacked Biden’s cannabis policy record as well as the nation of Canada, promoting sometimes misleading claims about the last administration while making the case that Trump can deliver on reform.

Its latest ad accused former President Joe Biden and his DEA of waging a “deep state war” against medical cannabis patients—but without mentioning that the former president himself initiated the rescheduling process that marijuana companies want to see completed under Trump.

Most Marijuana Consumers Oppose Trump’s Cannabis Actions So Far, But Rescheduling Or Legalization Could Bolster Support, Poll Shows

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CBD From Cannabis Could Help Reduce Alcohol Binge Drinking, Study Shows

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The cannabinoid CBD reduces rates of binge drinking and alcohol blood concentrations, a new study of mice indicates.

Using what they called a “murine drinking-in-the-dark” research model, scientists at the University of Sydney investigated the theory that non-intoxicating cannabidiol could mitigate problematic drinking issues.

“These experiments consistently showed a dose-dependent suppression of alcohol consumption by CBD,” the paper concludes. “The efficacy of acute CBD persisted for several months, was maintained during sub-chronic administration and was not associated with locomotor impairments.”

The study, published in the journal British Journal of Pharmacology with funding from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council, found that “CBD represents a promising candidate to reduce voluntary alcohol consumption.”

“Mechanisms driving CBD’s alcohol-related effects remain unclear and may involve polypharmacology, including actions at the [neuropeptide S receptor] identified in the present study,” researchers said.

“The present findings showed a clear, dose-dependent inhibition by CBD of binge-like ethanol consumption in male and female mice. This effect was supported by [blood ethanol concentration] data and could not be attributed to sedation, because CBD did not alter locomotor activity. CBD suppressed drinking with acute administration, and the effect was maintained when CBD was administered sub-chronically, indicating the effect was not subject to tolerance.”

“CBD presents as a promising novel pharmacotherapy for problematic alcohol use; however, how CBD generates alcohol-related benefits is yet to be determined,” the study says. “Unravelling CBD’s mechanisms may direct the development of safer, more effective [alcohol use disorder] therapeutics.”

Results of a separate study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry also indicated that a single, 800-milligram dose of CBD can help manage certain alcohol cravings among people with alcohol use disorder (AUD), supporting the use of the marijuana component as a potential treatment option for problem drinkers.

Federally funded research into the effects of cannabis on alcohol use that was published last month also found that people who used marijuana immediately before drinking subsequently consumed fewer alcoholic beverages and reported lower cravings for alcohol.

The study follows a separate survey analysis published in March that found that three in four young adults reported substituting cannabis for alcohol at least once per week—a “fast-emerging” trend that reflects the “rapid expansion” of the hemp product marketplace.

The report from Bloomberg Intelligence (BI) found that, across various demographics, cannabis is increasingly being used as an alternative to alcohol and even non-alcoholic beverages as more companies—including major multi-state marijuana operators (MSOs)—expand their offerings.

The findings were largely consist with a growing body of studies indicating that cannabis—whether federally legal hemp or still-prohibited marijuana—is being utilized as a substitute for many Americans amid the reform movement.

An earlier survey from YouGov, for example, found that a majority of Americans believe regular alcohol consumption is more harmful than regular marijuana use. Even so, more adults said they personally prefer drinking alcohol to consuming cannabis despite the health risks.

A separate poll released in January determined that more than half of marijuana consumers say they drink less alcohol, or none at all, after using cannabis.

Yet another survey—which was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) and released in December—found that young adults are nearly three times more likely to use marijuana than alcohol on a daily or near-daily basis.

That poll provided more granular, age-specific findings than a similar report published last year, finding that more Americans overall smoke marijuana on a daily basis than drink alcohol every day—and that alcohol drinkers are more likely to say they would benefit from limiting their use than cannabis consumers are.

A separate study published in the journal Addiction last year similarly found that there are more U.S. adults who use marijuana daily than who drink alcohol every day.

In December, BI also published the results of a survey indicating that substitution of cannabis for alcohol is “soaring” as the state-level legalization movement expands and relative perceptions of harm shift. A significant portion of Americans also said in that poll that they substitute marijuana for cigarettes and painkillers.

Another BI analysis from last September projected that the expansion of the marijuana legalization movement will continue to post a “significant threat” to the alcohol industry, citing survey data that suggests more people are using cannabis as a substitute for alcoholic beverages such a beer and wine.

Yet another study on the impact of marijuana consumption on people’s use of other drugs that was released in December suggested that, for many, cannabis may act as a less-dangerous substitute, allowing people to reduce their intake of substances such as alcohol, methamphetamine and opioids like morphine.

A study out of Canada, where marijuana is federally legal, found that legalization was “associated with a decline in beer sales,” suggesting a substitution effect.

The analyses comport with other recent survey data that more broadly looked at American views on marijuana versus alcohol. For example, a Gallup survey found that respondents view cannabis as less harmful than alcohol, tobacco and nicotine vapes—and more adults now smoke cannabis than smoke cigarettes.

A separate survey released by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) and Morning Consult last June also found that Americans consider marijuana to be significantly less dangerous than cigarettes, alcohol and opioids—and they say cannabis is less addictive than each of those substances, as well as technology.

Meanwhile, a leading alcohol industry association is calling on Congress to dial back language in a House committee-approved spending bill that would ban most consumable hemp products, instead proposing to maintain the legalization of naturally derived cannabinoids from the crop and only prohibit synthetic items.

Marijuana Market Incentives May Be Reducing Biodiversity In The Plant, Causing A ‘Bottlenecking Of Cannabis Genetics,’ New Study Says

 

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