We've come a long way from "I didn't inhale."
Sen. Kamala Harris, weeks into her campaign for president, not only acknowledged that she has smoked pot, but said she isn't opposed to federal legalization of marijuana.
"I think it gives a lot of people joy and we need more joy," Harris said, laughing, during an interview on the influential hip-hop radio show The Breakfast Club Monday morning.
Harris was being interviewed by Charlamagne Tha God when she admitted she smoked a joint in college. "I did inhale," she said, in a reference to President Clinton's famous equivocation when asked more than 25 years ago on the campaign trail if he had ever smoked weed.
Harris denied accusations that, as a prosecutor, she opposed marijuana legalization. "Half my family's from Jamaica," she said. "Are you kidding me?"
In her new book, Harris explicitly calls for marijuana to be legalized and regulated at the federal level. She writes: "Something else it's past time we get done is dismantling the failed war on drugs ー starting with legalizing marijuana."
Legal recreational use of cannabis, already the law of the land in 10 states, is becoming something of a litmus test for Democratic 2020 candidates, who consider it part of criminal and social justice reform.
Scarlett Johansson and the Walt Disney Co. on Thursday settled her lawsuit over the streaming release of “Black Widow,” bringing a swift end to what had begun as the first major fight between a studio and star over recent changes in rollout plans for films.
October starts with a gov't shutdown averted, some promising data on Covid cases, Facebook whistleblower, Tom Brady returns to Foxboro and the Super Bowl halftime show is set.
Cheddar recommends "BMF" on Starz, "Midnight Mass" and "Squid Game" on Netflix, and the first two seasons of "Succession" on HBO Max.
Jill and Carlo try to make sense of the various happenings in Congress, including what's in these two big spending packages that Dems are trying to get passed. Plus, a big win for Britney Spears in court, YouTube throws down the ban hammer on anti-vax videos and more.
Even as the number of Hispanic-owned businesses in the U.S. has rapidly increased, support from banks has lagged behind. Cheddar's Michelle Castillo reports on the ongoing challenges for some business owners who may also be dealing with the issue of being undocumented.
Video-sharing tech platform YouTube on Wednesday announced immediate bans on false claims that vaccines are dangerous and cause health issues like autism, cancer or infertility.
The approval for Pfizer's vaccine in kids could be delayed slightly, Biden gets involved in Dem negotiations, why everything so expensive, all the devices Amazon announced, and the James Bond movie is finally coming out.
Alex Bell, a Post-Doctoral Scholar at UCLA, joins 'Cheddar Reveals' to discuss how exposure to innovation influences who becomes an inventor and how much genius has been lost over the years.
Jill and Carlo talk government shutdown, spending showdowns, vaccine mandates, Facebook and more. Plus, should felons whose actions changed history be granted clemency? Debate!
Kelly has been convicted in a sex trafficking trial after several accusers testified in lurid detail how he subjected them to perverse and sadistic whims when they were underage.
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