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Tilray Brands Inc TLRY

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.TLRY

Tilray Brands, Inc. is a global lifestyle and consumer packaged goods company. The Company operates through four segments: Cannabis operations, Distribution business, Beverage alcohol business and Wellness business. The Cannabis operations, which encompasses the production, distribution, sale, co-manufacturing and advisory services of both medical and adult-use cannabis. The Beverage alcohol operations, which encompasses the production, marketing and sale of beverage alcohol products. The Distribution operations, which encompasses the purchase and resale of pharmaceuticals products to customers. The Wellness products, which encompasses hemp foods and cannabidiol (CBD) products. The Company offers a portfolio of adult-use brands and products and expands its portfolio to include new cannabis products and formats. Its brands include Good Supply, RIFF, Broken Coast, Solei, Canaca, HEXO, Redecan, Original Stash, Hop Valley, Revolver, Bake Sale, XMG, Mollo, and others.


NDAQ:TLRY - Post by User

Post by Trespasson Mar 15, 2024 3:19pm
167 Views
Post# 35935512

Kamala Harris

Kamala Harris

Vice President Kamala Harris convened a roundtable on Friday to discuss cannabis reform with musician Fat Joe and Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear - where she alluded to her own role in what she described as an unequal criminal justice system.

“I believe that the promise of America includes equal justice under the law. And for too many, our criminal justice system has failed to live up to that core principal,” said Harris, who started her political career as a prosecutor in California.

“And I say that with full knowledge of how this system has worked, including my experience as a prosecutor,” she added.

 

The group attending the roundtable included people who have received pardons for marijuana-related convictions.

The roundtable comes as Harris travels the country to rouse the Democratic base about the prospect of voting for her and President Joe Biden a second time. Polling has shown that legalization has had bipartisan support in recent years - though that support has been slow to translate into legislative action.

In 2022, Biden pardoned all prior federal offenses for simple marijuana possession and encouraged all governors to pardon state offenses. The same year, Biden asked US Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and the attorney general to begin the administrative process of reviewing how marijuana is scheduled under federal law.

It is currently listed as a Schedule I controlled substance – in the same category as heroin. During the roundtable on Friday, Harris referred to that classification as “absurd” and “patently unfair.”

Biden also mentioned cannabis reform in his State of the Union address last week.

“No one should be jailed for simply using or have it on their record,” Biden said in his address last week.

Harris repeated similar sentiments on Friday: “I believe – I think we all at this table believe – nobody should have to go to jail for smoking weed,” she said.

“And what we need to do is recognize that far too many people have been sent to jail for simple marijuana possession,” Harris added while acknowledging how the enforcement of cannabis-related laws have disproportionately impacted people of color.

Harris’ own feelings on marijuana reform have evolved in line with her career.

In a 2019 interview with “The Breakfast Club,” Harris admitted to using cannabis in college: “And I inhaled – I did inhale,” Harris told co-host Charlamagne Tha God in a reference to former President Bill Clinton’s infamous “didn’t inhale” response to a similar question while he was campaigning in 1992.

But as San Francisco’s district attorney from 2004 to 2011, Harris oversaw scores of marijuana convictions and she opposed a failed 2010 effort that would have legalized marijuana in California, the Los Angeles Times reported.

She called for an end to the federal government’s ban on medical cannabis in 2015, stopping short of complete legalization.

In her 2019 book, Harris wrote that marijuana should be legalized.

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