Marijuana News Roundup: Trump AG Nominee Sessions No Friend to Cannabis

In what is generally viewed as a negative development for the legal marijuana market, President-elect Donald Trump has selected Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions to be the next Attorney General of the United States. Sessions is an outspoken critic of marijuana legalization who was reported as saying (jokingly) that the Ku Klux Klan was "OK" before he discovered that KKK members smoked marijuana. In a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing earlier this year, Sessions said that "good people don't smoke marijuana."

Perhaps the biggest threat to the cannabis industry is that Sessions (if confirmed) would reverse the Justice Department's current policy of mostly turning a blind eye to enforcing federal drug laws in states where voters have approved medical or recreational use of marijuana products.

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Efforts from the industry to remove marijuana from the Schedule I list of most dangerous drugs are also likely to fall on deaf ears if Sessions becomes the AG. And as long as marijuana remains a Schedule I drug, there are many avenues open to federal law enforcement officials to raise havoc in the industry, not the least of which is a chilling effect on new investment.

For more on what a Sessions appointment may mean, see this article in Weed News.

Marijuana Found Innocent of Being a "Gateway Drug"
Publishing the "most comprehensive" report ever compiled on the cause of addiction, research conducted by The University of British Columbia indicates that people suffering from drug dependency issues could benefit from marijuana use.

Particularly helpful for those suffering from alcohol and opioid addictions, the new study found marijuana use offers a realistic exit strategy for breaking the bonds of addiction, according to Zach Walsh at UBC.

Research suggests that people may be using cannabis as an exit drug to reduce use of substances that are potentially more harmful, such as opioid pain medication.

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Drilling down on the available marijuana-related studies, researchers at UBC found:

In reviewing the limited evidence on medical cannabis, it appears that patients and others who have advocated for cannabis as a tool for harm reduction and mental health have some valid points.

Read more at Marijuana.com.

Where Marijuana Plants Flourish Under Energy-Saving LED Lights
Behind the covered windows of a nondescript two-story building near the Olympia Regional Airport, hundreds of marijuana plants were flowering recently in the purple haze of 40 LED lights.