Ramsey Khalid Ismael, 24, better known by his online alias, Johnny Somali, is a livestreamer who hurls provocative and offensive insults while he travels abroad, including in U.S. allies South ...
King Charles’ right-hand man, Major Johnny Thompson, is officially off the market. The king’s equerry, 40, popped the all-important question to his girlfriend of 18 months, Olivia Lewis — a ...
JOHNNY Somali is a controversial YouTuber who has gained online recognition for his inappropriate antics. Here we take a look at who the live-streamer is and what happened when he kissed the ...
With marijuana on the ballot in four states on Election Day, voters may feel overwhelmed with industry jargon they see online. Marijuana is all of the products in the Cannabis sativa plant that ...
A measure related to recreational marijuana is on the Florida ballot. Currently, medical marijuana is legal in the state. Amendment 3 asks voters to consider a state constitutional amendment that ...
Braude’s rhetoric sounds like it was ripped straight from an anti-marijuana PSA. It wasn’t until decades later that The Atlantic began to incorporate a broader range of reporting on marijuana ...
Marijuana will be legal in over half the United States if several ballot measures pass in November, with lobbyists confident that at least a few will succeed. Florida, North Dakota and South ...
U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Philadelphia said it seized 343 pounds of marijuana last week, days after a 170-pound seizure that officers described as "unprecedented." On November 6 ...
The days of "just say no" are over. Now candidates across the political spectrum are embracing legal pot. Advocates and opponents now cross party lines. In Florida, Bradford County Sheriff Gordon ...
Why public opinion has changed so quickly. By German Lopez Twelve years ago, mainstream politicians opposed marijuana legalization. Recreational use was forbidden even in the most liberal states.
Today’s older adults are also the generation that grew up in the 60s and 70s, she noted, which means many of them may have earlier life experience with marijuana and may be more open to using it.
And voters are caught in a whirlwind of advertisements, with opposing sides presenting sharply contrasting pictures of Florida's future should the marijuana measure pass. Further muddying the ...