marijuana

forbidden words: marijuana

This is one of the terms you can’t say in the Trump Regime. See a comprehensive list at the Forbidden Words Project.

marijuana

marijuana, noun

  1. a psychoactive narcotic drug rendered from the leaves and flowering tops of a cannabis plant, especially Cannabis sativa, used for recreational or medical purposes by smoking, vaping, or ingesting.

    He’s tried marijuana but claims it has no effect on him.

  2. the dried leaves and flowering tops from which the drug is rendered.

    Her personal stash of marijuana is rarely more than an ounce or two.

  3. any plant of the genus Cannabis, especially C. sativa, whose leaves and flowering tops have psychoactive properties.

    several acres of cultivated marijuana.

Etymology

Origin of marijuana
An Americanism dating back to 1890–95; from Mexican Spanish marihuana, mariguana; the traditional association with the personal name María Juana is probably a folk etymology

Related Words

from — Definition of marijuana. (n.d.). In dictionary.com

~ ~ ~

Example Sentences: marijuana

Were individuals in states where marijuana is legal on notice that they were committing a crime by owning a gun?
From Slate • Mar. 3, 2026

A White House official told MarketWatch that the order was about reclassifying marijuana.
From MarketWatch • Dec. 18, 2025

The predicament those in the hemp business find themselves in is that they’re stuck between both the alcohol lobby and, perhaps counterintuitively, the state-level marijuana lobby.
From Salon • Nov. 25, 2025

McConnell, who championed hemp back in 2018, has since argued in favor of closing what he has called a loophole that allows psychoactive products to be marketed as legal alternatives to marijuana.
From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 12, 2025

The small South American country has a long history of passing socially liberal laws, legalizing marijuana, same-sex marriage and abortion long before most others.
From Barron’s • Oct. 16, 2025

from — Definition of marijuana. (n.d.). In dictionary.com

~ ~ ~

Cannabis policy of the second Trump administration

The second Donald Trump administration saw an executive order to remove cannabis from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, commonly known as marijuana rescheduling. State-legal medical cannabis was moved to Schedule III on April 27, 2026.

Early statements

Trump made several campaign promises to allow U.S. states to individually determine the legality of cannabis on their own accord.[1] He has frequently voiced that cannabis should be a states’ rights issue, despite repeating, “marijuana opened the door to disorder in Washington, D.C.” in a fact sheet signed off by Trump personally.[2] He also said that he would vote yes on Amendment 3 which would have allowed adult-use recreational cannabis legalization in his home state of Florida.[3]

Administration policy personnel

Trump nominated Sara A. Carter to be the director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (or “drug czar“) in March 2025.[4] Carter’s background was “not in drug policy, public health, or law enforcement, and she has never served in government”.[5] During her September 2025 U.S. Senate confirmation hearings, she stated that she would “comply with all federal laws” regarding enforcement, and “explore all options” relative to cannabis rescheduling process begun in the Biden administration.[6]

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., before he was brought into the administration to lead U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, had “a long track record of supporting drug policy reform, including cannabis reform”,[7] and during his 2024 presidential campaign, had said that “he wanted to legalize marijuana”.[8]

“Well-known drug-policy lawyer” Matthew Zorn, who had previously worked on cannabis issues, was hired to be “psychedelics czar” at Department of Health and Human Services in May.[9]

Lobbying

Behind-the-doors lobbying of the administration by representatives of cannabis industry and civil cannabis reform entities began almost as soon as the second administration commenced. Businesspeople Howard Kessler and Kim Rivers (CEO of Trulieve) were listed by Politico as influential on the administration’s decision making process.[10]

2025–2026 rescheduling

In August 2025, the administration announced it would make a rescheduling decision “in weeks”.[11]

Removal of cannabis from Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act was subject of an Executive Order 14370, signed on December 18, 2025, which BBC report called “the most significant shift in US drug policy in decades”.[12] The executive order section 2 directed U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to “take all necessary steps” to carry out rescheduling “in the most expeditious manner in accordance with Federal law”.[13] These actions are expected in 2026, followed by a public comment period, though the Attorney General may interpret the “expeditious” order to waive public comment.[14] In any case, rescheduling will likely face court challenges from opponents of the policy; at least one industry newsletter said lawsuits were “guaranteed” and named Smart Approaches to Marijuana as having retained legal assets to do so as of December 22, 2025.[15]

The White House website listed goals of EO 14370 as including “to work with the Congress to allow Americans to benefit from access to appropriate full-spectrum CBD products”, to be carried out by White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Legislative, Political, and Public Affairs (James Blair) and “to develop research methods and models utilizing real-world evidence to improve access to hemp-derived cannabinoid products in accordance with Federal law and to inform standards of care”, to be carried out by Department of Health and Human Services.[16]

In April 2026, Axios reported that “the Trump administration is expected to move to reclassify marijuana as soon as Wednesday [April 26], per an administration official familiar with the matter.”[17] This was followed by confirmation from The Washington Post.[18]

The acting United States Attorney General, Todd Blanche, reclassified state-licensed medical cannabis to Schedule III on April 23, 2026.[19][20] Blanche stated that the process of rescheduling cannabis more broadly would proceed via the DEA hearings process set out by the Controlled Substances Act.[20] Associated Press reported the hearings would occur in June 2026.[19]

Hemp policy

Industry observers said that the administration’s stance on hemp was “refreshing” but “felt whiplash, as the White House seemed to contradict the hemp ban Congress wrote into the funding bill” that ended the 2025 United States federal government shutdown.[21]

See also

from — Wikipedia contributors. (2026e, April 24). Cannabis policy of the second Trump administration. Wikipedia. Retrieved May 9, 2026

 


May 9, 2026
Salem, MA

See the complete list at the Forbidden Words Project.

image: bleeding heart breakthrough © holly troy 5.2026


Discover more from holly troy ~ sacred folly

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Unknown's avatar

Posted by

Holly hails from an illustrious lineage of fortune tellers, yogis, folk healers, troubadours and poets of the fine and mystical arts. Shape-shifting Tantric Siren of the Lunar Mysteries, she surfs the ebbs and flows of the multiverse on the Pure Sound of Creation. Her alchemy is Sacred Folly — revolutionary transformation through Love, deep play, Beauty, and music.

2 thoughts on “marijuana

Leave a Reply