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Wednesday, 20 January 2016
Legal Pot Poll: ‘We Want Legal Marijuana!’ American Majority Now Declares, According To New Survey
News
Jonathan Vankin
Pot should be legal in the United States of America — at least, that’s what a majority of Americans
now believe, according to a new poll of American views on marijuana use
and laws released over the weekend. But the poll also found that
opinions about marijuana and whether using the drug should be a crime
are subject to a wide generation gap, with older Americans remaining
firmly opposed to legalizing pot.
The poll was conducted in mid-December by the British-based research firm YouGov, which conducts polling via the internet.
When YouGov last asked the question
about marijuana legalization, in March of 2015, 48 percent of Americans
said they supported legal pot. That number has now ticked up slightly,
but for the first time, the figure represents a majority of United
States adults, with 52 percent now answering “yes” to the question, “Do
you think the use of marijuana should be legalized?”
The legal pot poll has a margin of error of +/- 4.6 percent, according to YouGov.
The results were also divided along political party lines, with
nearly two-thirds, 66 percent, of all self-identifying Democrats saying
they believe pot should be legal, and 51 percent of independents
agreeing.
But only 36 percent of Republicans felt the same way about legalizing marijuana, just over one-third.
Nonetheless, as seen in the video below, California Republican
Congress member Dana Rohrabacher, who represents large sections of
conservative Orange County, California, and who served as a press
secretary to President Ronald Reagan, recently made a strong argument in
favor of legalizing marijuana in an interview with the conservative
news outlet Newsmax TV.
Rohrabacher, at age 68, also falls into
another demographic group that largely opposes marijuana legalization,
according to the YouGov poll — senior citizens.
Only 39 percent of Americans aged 65 or older answered “yes” to the
marijuana legalization question, with 49 percent saying “no” and 12
percent “not sure.”
The growing segment of Americans who support legal pot may be due in
part to the generation gap. As older Americans die off, the percentage
of all U.S. adults who oppose marijuana legalization shrinks.
But the growing acceptance of legal marijuana may also be related to the increasingly widespread legality of
pot across the United States. With 20 states now allowing marijuana
sale and use for medical purposes, and another four plus Washington D.C.
legalizing recreational marijuana even without a medical reason, the
changing attitudes could be the result of simple familiarity.
Increasing legalization of marijuana has had an impact on the War on Drugs
[Photo By Getty Images File]
The
spread of legal marijuana has already had an impact on the War on
Drugs, with Mexico’s illegal marijuana farmers and criminal pot
distribution cartels feeling a financial squeeze, resulting in many
going out of business altogether, according to a recent report in the Los Angeles Times.
Farmers in one of Mexico’s largest-scale marijuana growing regions
reported the price for one kilogram of marijuana crop falling from $100
to just $30 over the past four years, according to the Times
report, making life hard not only for the small farmers, but also for
Mexico’s gangsters who once imported two-thirds of all marijuana
consumed in the United States.
Mexican drug cartel boss Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman [Photo by Marco Ugarter/AP]Since
2008, as more and more U.S. states relax their laws against marijuana
use and possession, the portion of pot ingested in the U.S. that has
been imported from Mexico has fallen to below one-third, the Times reported.
The poll showed little difference in opinion between white and black
Americans on the legal marijuana issue, with 53 percent of whites and 59
percent of blacks in favor. Hispanic Americans, however, stood firmly
against legal pot, with only 39 percent answering “yes” to the question.
Interestingly, income was also a factor in dividing opinion on
marijuana legalization. While 62 percent of poll respondents reporting
family incomes over $100,000 said they favored legal pot, only 51
percent of those with incomes between $50,000 and $100,000 were in
favor, a number that dipped to 49 percent for Americans from families
making under $50,000 per year.
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