Washington state has strict protections for native plants, including cacti, especially on public lands, but chopping down a cactus isn’t a blanket “weird property ...
Virginia doesn’t have a specific “pickle law” making certain pickles illegal, unlike the famous (but largely mythical) bouncing pickle rule from Connecticut. That Connecticut ...
Chopping down a cactus is a felony in Arizona but typically not in New Jersey. Arizona treats protected native cacti like saguaros as valuable plants ...
Alabama’s landlord-tenant laws, governed by the Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act (Ala. Code § 35-9A-101 et seq.), favor landlords while mandating basic habitability ...
In South Carolina, you own the rainwater that falls on your private property, with no state restrictions on collection for personal use. Ownership Rights ...
Minnesota’s alcohol laws remain among the nation’s strictest in 2026, blending pandemic-era delivery allowances with longstanding prohibitions on grocery store sales and direct shipping. ...
No, jaywalking and littering are regulated in Wisconsin but rarely lead to serious enforcement for minor, everyday instances. Jaywalking Rules Wisconsin Statute 346.38 requires ...
No, bear wrestling is explicitly illegal in Missouri under a real statute, but it’s a class A misdemeanor—not a felony—with penalties like up to ...
No, cursing while driving isn’t broadly illegal across Maryland, but Rockville has a narrow local ordinance against profane language audible near streets or highways. ...