When we smell a nice plant, we make a blessing on it -- either בורא מיני בשמים, or בורא עשבי בשמים, depending on what kind of plant it is. (Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 216)
Ignoring, for the moment, the question of marijuana's permissibility (spoiler: it's forbidden, according to most opinions); would one inhaling vaporized marijuana make that bracha (presumably בורא מיני בשמים)? Marijuana doesn't smell good, by itself, but it can make a person feel good.
I guess the question can be boiled down to: is the bracha on smell triggered by an olfactory sensation, or by a הנאה (enjoyment) that comes through the sense of smell?
Answer
As far as I know, your making an incorrect assumption about marijuana.
However, assuming that you're correct in saying that smelling marijuana makes one feel good, then it should have the same rule as smelling 'tabak', a longstanding Jewish custom, which does not require a bracha. The Aruch Hashulchan (216:4) explains that smelling something for an enjoyment that isn't due to the actual smell is not sufficient to make a bracha. This is true even of scented tabak, and therefore presumably true of scented marijuana as well (no matter how it might be inhaled).
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