Where to Get Medical Marijuana in Dallas
Texas has a version of legalized weed, but there’s a catch.
Texas has a version of legalized weed, but there’s a catch.
The ban’s passage through the Senate is a victory for the lieutenant governor, who named it his top priority for 2025.
A new bill aims to completely ban THC products, claiming they put children at risk of addiction and overdose.
As opioid mortality rates fall nationally, Texas ranks among the states with the lowest death per capita.
THCa is popular in Texas, but it might not be around for long.
Perhaps the tides of two hot button issues are turning in Texas.
We in Dallas like to keep up on the most important issues, like the weather and drugs.
It was only a matter of time before the Texas AG added Big D to his long list of lawsuits for decriminalizing small amounts of weed.
The interim DPD chief told officers that the old law is now obsolete.
The Dallas Freedom Act passed with 67% of the vote, signaling a change in Dallas’ marijuana enforcement policy.
The Red-Headed Stranger is perhaps our state’s most beloved marijuana ambassador.
The ruling comes despite a letter from the DEA stating that THC-O is a Schedule I controlled substance.
The state submitted its arguments for banning the substances to the court last week.
The dispensers will carry the life-saving drug Naloxone, also known as Narcan, which reverses the effects of an opioid overdose.
The federal agency has been digging in to some hemp shops in Allen, though it may not get the information it’s looking for.
The two North Texas cities are trying to limit the concentration of smoke shops in certain parts of town.
If you want to have a say in marijuana’s potential rescheduling, you better speak up soon.
Allen says the recent move is meant to mitigate the negative impacts associated with the consumption of hemp products.
Delta-8, delta-9, THCa and all those other intoxicating hemp products you love could be on the chopping block in the next U.S. Farm Bill.
For better or worse, changes seem to be coming to the hemp-derived cannabis industry in Texas.
The move won’t legalize marijuana across the country, but it’s a step in that direction.
One of these days, you could be stopped on the way home from the hemp shop. Here’s some advice that might keep you out of trouble.