Sometimes the clearest sign that a law has outlived reality is who shows up to challenge it.
In a case now headed to the Supreme Court, NORML and the National Rifle Association are effectively on the same side, opposing a federal rule that can turn marijuana users into prohibited gun owners, even when they are sober and nonviolent.
Yes, that NORML. And yes, that NRA.
At the center of the fight is a federal statute dating back to 1968 that bars any “unlawful user” of a controlled substance from possessing a firearm. On paper, it sounds like a public safety measure. In practice, it sweeps far wider, potentially covering millions of Americans who use cannabis occasionally, medically, or in compliance with state law.
The case, United States v. Hemani, asks whether that kind of blanket ban can survive modern constitutional scrutiny. The Trump administration wants the Court to reinstate a prosecution against a gun-owning marijuana user in Texas. A federal appeals court previously ruled that disarming someone based solely on past or occasional drug use, without evidence of danger or impairment, goes too far.
What makes this moment unusual is not just the legal argument. It’s the coalition pushing back.
Alongside NORML and the NRA are criminal defense lawyers, civil liberties groups, and policy organizations from across the ideological map. They don’t agree on much. But they agree on this: treating cannabis use as a status that strips people of constitutional rights, without clear standards or individualized findings, is a problem.
Historically, laws addressed the risks of firearms and intoxication in a much narrower way. They focused on conduct, like carrying or firing a weapon while drunk, usually in public. They did not impose permanent bans on gun ownership simply because someone consumed an intoxicant at some point in their life.
That distinction matters. Under the current federal rule, a person can be sober, at home, legally possessing a firearm, and still face felony charges based on how a court interprets their cannabis use. The law offers no clear definition of how recent or frequent use must be. That vagueness is part of what critics say makes it unconstitutional.
For cannabis consumers, this case is about more than guns. It exposes the deeper contradiction still baked into federal marijuana policy. Cannabis can be legal enough to tax, regulate, and sell in dozens of states, yet illegal enough to quietly strip rights and trigger serious criminal penalties.
It also highlights how uneven enforcement can become when a law technically applies to millions but is enforced against only a few. That kind of discretion rarely lands evenly, and history suggests it never has.
The Supreme Court does not have to fully dismantle the statute to reshape its impact. Even a narrow ruling clarifying who counts as an “unlawful user” could change how prosecutors, regulators, and consumers think about the risks tied to cannabis use.
For now, the takeaway is simple. When marijuana laws are so outdated that NORML and the NRA find themselves aligned, it’s not culture war theater. It’s a sign that federal policy still hasn’t caught up with lived reality.














