August 2023-By Scott Chipman, husband, father, grandfather and business owner. He is an activist for public health, safety and quality of life issues and vice president of Americans Against Legalizing Marijuana.
Harvard brain biologist Bertha Madras has described marijuana as the most dangerous drug in the United States, not only because of its impacts on health, but because what people think they know about it is wrong. Marijuana seems ubiquitous in our society today. So, what should we know?
Marijuana is a plant and it has been around for thousands of years and plants are “natural”, but poisons such as hemlock and arsenic are also “natural”. In addition, there is nothing natural about today’s marijuana. The “natural” plant has a THC (the component that makes you high) potency of about 1.5% and a CBD (the component that partially counteracts the THC) potency of about 1%. The plant is psychotropic, meaning it impacts the brain. Even a thousand years ago, the Chinese warned if you use too much you will “see dragons”. For decades botanical marijuana has been hybridized to reduce CBD and increase THC potencies to 14-25%. Edibles, vapes, and other products can range from 25% to 98% THC. In 1920, Mexico was the first country to make marijuana illegal and they did it because the drug was known to be dangerous to public health and safety. Marijuana also attracts a criminal element.
The process of “legalizing” pot in the U.S. really got started in the 1970s when the founder of NORML (National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws), Keith Stroup announced the strategy of “first we will get it ‘medicalized’, then normalized and then legalized.” Leftist California was the logical target. It took until 1996 to get marijuana identified as “medicine” with The Compassionate Use Act, Prop 215. This act was sold to voters as a way for the seriously ill and dying to have access to marijuana because “no one really cares what drug people use when they are near death.”
The reality was that Prop 215 allowed anyone to get and use pot for any medical purpose that the user thought might be helpful, including an ingrown toenail. The fraud was wholesale. One of our coalition members received a medi-pot recommendation for “anxiety while driving” his children to soccer practice. I received three recommendations without ever seeing a doctor. There are no proper medical protocols for “legal” medical marijuana.
Prop 215 had opened the door. Pot legalizers then had a setback with the defeat of Prop 19 as black voters, not supportive of marijuana in their neighborhoods, came out to support Barack Obama in 2010 and defeat the first full attempt to legalize “recreational” marijuana by 9 points.
Drug dealers are persistent and in 2016, there were 11 initiatives in California to fully legalize pot. Not one had a chance of getting enough signatures until Sean Parker and George Soros dropped nearly $30 million to pay between $7 and $11 per signature to push The Adult Use of Marijuana Act (Prop 64) onto the California ballot. Six more years of fake media narrative on the millions of pot users in jail for a single joint and the potential tax revenue for education and regulation and the fix was in. Marijuana had been decriminalized in California in 1975 to a misdemeanor and then to an infraction with a $100 fine in 2010. Literally no one was in jail for simple possession of marijuana, but, as it is said, “it is easier to convince someone of a lie than to convince them that they have been lied to.” Even today, many people believe the false narrative that thousands are in jail for simple marijuana possession.
California was the start and today we have 41 states, as well the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico that have “medical” marijuana programs and 23 of those have decriminalized cannabis or have full adult-use programs. However, the federal marijuana laws have not changed. The Controlled Substance Act still classifies marijuana as illegal. Today, more than ever before, marijuana should be illegal.
Why Should Marijuana Remain Illegal?
The legalizers initiated their whole effort with the idea that marijuana is medicine and, thus, should be legal and accessible. Marijuana is not medicine.
The reality is we do have “medical” marijuana in that we have several cannabis-based drugs that have been properly approved through the Food and Drug Administration process, including Marinol, Epidiolex, Dranabinol. There have been no pharmaceutical protocols utilized related to under-the-counter marijuana products. There is no laboratory evidence marijuana is effective for treating pain, insomnia, anxiety, depression, PTSD, ingrown toenails, or curing cancer. In fact, marijuana users typically require more pain medication after major surgery than non-users. Users often do not sleep well without marijuana because sleeplessness is a withdrawal symptom. Marijuana use can cause or increase depression and is linked to increased psychosis, psychotic breaks and even schizophrenia.
There are important reasons marijuana cannot be defined as a medicine any more than bourbon would be. To approve a medicine, the FDA requires five criteria to be fulfilled:
Marijuana fails to meet any of these five criteria for accepted medical use in the United States. So, currently it belongs in Schedule 1. Even if it isn’t a medicine, why illegal? Marijuana is dangerous. It is not dangerous because it is illegal. It is illegal because it is dangerous. It is particularly dangerous to the developing brain (anyone under about 25 years of age). About 1 of 10 users will become addicted or acquire cannabis use disorder.
According to data collected by the states of Arizona, Texas and Florida, which are not considered high pot-use states, marijuana is the number one drug associated with children’s deaths. These children are not dying as a result of marijuana use or poisoning, although that is happening at an alarmingly increasing rate. The children are dying as a result of abuse or neglect by their parents or guardians who are using marijuana. Unfortunately, such data isn’t collected in California, Washington, Oregon or Colorado, which are very high use states.
With All This Harm, Why the Strong Support for Legalization?
First, the “hip” narrative from the 1960s and 1970s that pot never hurt anyone is now in the mainstream of adults who grew up during those years. There are two problems with their “hip” thinking. Most of them know someone who went south due to marijuana and other drug use. Second, today’s marijuana products are 10 to 40 times more potent than back then. I’ve talked to dozens now in their 60s and 70s who have tried today’s marijuana. For example, Jim (70) told me, “I took one hit while on a camping trip and I couldn’t set up my tent, make a fire, or cook a meal. I was incapacitated. It was nothing like the pot I used in high school.”
Then there is the social justice issue. The drug war supposedly unfairly targeted poor, black and brown communities. So did the drug dealers. Providing permitted pot shops and a path into the marijuana drug dealing industry for persons in those communities does even more harm to the communities some claim to want to help. Also, there are libertarians who want everyone to be able to do whatever they want to do. They want all drugs legalized and they won’t recognize that everyone’s actions impact everyone around them.
Finally, if you are a user (about 50 million are) you don’t want one of your favorite activities to be identified as illegal. There are now more people in the U.S. accessing marijuana than tobacco. Virtually all drug use has been declining except marijuana use. That is because what people think they know about the drug is wrong. A recent poll indicated that a little over 57% of respondents said that they would support a policy to prohibit the sale of tobacco products. There is no doubt among researchers that marijuana is more dangerous than tobacco, especially in the short term. No one has had a psychotic breakdown or forgotten a baby in the car to die or driven the wrong way on the freeway or dropped out of school as a result of smoking cigarettes. All these tragedies are regular occurrences from pot use. But, few know this.
The poll shows that with proper information opinions can be changed. This March, Oklahomans voted down full legalization, because their electorate got the information they needed. Unfortunately, it took fifty years to get people to know the facts about tobacco and change their opinions and actions. The truth will come to light about marijuana. The only real question is how many lives will be lost or negatively affected before most people know the truth?
Tell Your Children
Tell your children, tell your grandchildren, tell your friends, neighbors, and the people you meet. Tell everyone. To do that effectively you need to know the subject. And while we all wait for public awareness, opinions and policy to catch up to the science, catch up yourself. Become really informed because this drug (and other drugs) will impact you and yours if it hasn’t already done so.
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