It's Not a Cigarette. It's Not a Vape. And It's Big in Japan.
Heated tobacco products are coming to America, at long last. How will they change the landscape for smokers and prohibitionists?
Heated tobacco products are coming to America, at long last. How will they change the landscape for smokers and prohibitionists?
The Washington Post hectors Congress to make U.S. life expectancy a "political priority."
Gavin Newsom supported a ballot initiative to legalize recreational marijuana in California but rejected a social consumption measure.
Plus: State officials attempt to ban Donald Trump from 2024 election ballots.
Big government has been ruinous for millions of people. Charities aren't perfect, but they are much more efficient and effective.
The year's highlights in blame shifting.
It's a commendable, but very modest, expansion of a step he took last year.
The pardons freed no prisoners, but the White House says they will ease the burden of a criminal record.
Tony Montana has a bloody rags-to-riches story.
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
Jordan S. Rubin's Bizarro tells the story of the men who tried and failed to challenge the government's arbitrary rules on synthetic drugs.
As of today, adults 21 or older in the Buckeye State may possess up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana and grow up to six plants at home.
"We're going to build a wall...I am not going to sit there and let sex trafficking go unabated," DeSantis said.
The late Supreme Court justice eloquently defended property rights and state autonomy.
The study is one of several documenting the perverse impact of an intervention aimed at reducing substance abuse.
“I couldn’t believe it was my baby,” Amanda Bews' mother said. "She looked like she was mummified."
The Supreme Court mulls how to apply a mandatory minimum for gun possession by people convicted of drug felonies.
Comedian Shane Mauss on the democratization of mushrooms, LSD, cannabis, DMT, and ketamine
The series foregrounds cases of OxyContin addiction, despite their rarity.
Deja Taylor is going to federal prison because of a constitutionally dubious gun law that millions of cannabis consumers are violating right now.
Clarence Cocroft filed a lawsuit this week challenging the state's virtual ban on advertising medical marijuana businesses, arguing the law violates his First Amendment rights.
Intoxicating drugs never do as much damage as the laws that impotently attempt to eradicate them.
Plus: A listener asks the editors why the Libertarian Party waits until election year to nominate its presidential candidate.
There is no solid evidence that P2P meth is more dangerous than pseudoephedrine-derived meth and no reason to think it would be.
That prosecutors in the Hoosier State successfully denied people this due process is a reflection of how abusive civil forfeiture can be.
Voters approved a ballot initiative that will allow possession, home cultivation, and commercial distribution—assuming that state legislators don't interfere.
A federal lawsuit argues that it is time to reassess the Commerce Clause rationale for banning intrastate marijuana production and distribution.
The government treats its endless appetite for information about citizens as more important than people's ability to conduct business in a normal fashion.
The death of the Friends star should remind us of the costs of the war on drugs.
A New York Times podcast tells a story about both the drug war and institutional incompetence.
Brazil now has one of the largest cigarette markets in the world, despite its efforts to rid the country of cigarettes through prohibition.
These kinds of poisonings are rare to nonexistent.
The FIRST STEP Act signed by Trump eased drug sentencing. He's running away from that accomplishment in the 2024 election.
The psychedelic comedian talks cognitive liberty and the mind-blowing pace of legalization efforts.
Newsom vetoed both reforms, which he deemed excessively permissive.
The government has doubled down on failed policies, citing deeply flawed studies and misrepresenting data.
The Reason Sindex tracks the price of vice: smoking, drinking, snacking, traveling, and more.
In light of the state's marijuana reforms, the court says, the odor of weed is not enough to establish probable cause.
An officer conducted the search of Prentiss Jackson's vehicle after claiming he could smell "a little bit of weed." It ultimately resulted in a lengthy prison term.
The SAFER Banking Act is trying to address dual legality of cannabis laws between the federal government and the 38 states that have some form of legal cannabis.
Plus: A listener asks the editors to weigh in on a hypothetical executive order to establish an American Climate Corps.
A 2022 Canadian case involving what looks like a stoned mistake seems to be the closest real-world example of this purported danger.
Just as there are adult reasons for vape companies to sell flavored vape pods, there are adult reasons for drug dealers to color their fentanyl.
The late California senator always seemed to err on the side of more government power and less individual freedom.
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