The future of legal marijuana is becoming less hazy every day: Americans are continuing to support legalization in record numbers, apparently no longer swayed by the same deceptive arguments drug warriors
have used for decades in support of a failed policy of prohibition.
With legal weed now being sold at stores around Colorado and soon in
Washington state, others are considering riding the tide of popularity to lower enforcement costs and substantial tax revenues.
But
just because the anti-marijuana crowd isn't putting forth any good
arguments against legalizing marijuana doesn't mean there aren't valid
questions worth discussing. And, more importantly, just because these
questions exist doesn't mean they are good arguments against legalizing
pot.
Below, we'll offer some answers to these questions. Hopefully
they'll help foster a debate about legalization that extends beyond
"pot should be legal, because getting high isn't a big deal" and "pot
should be illegal, because I've been told it's dangerous and I refuse to
believe otherwise."
1. As legal pot expands, will corporatization turn the marijuana industry into Big Tobacco 2.0?
With legal marijuana soon expected to outstrip the growth of the smartphone industry
and surge to upwards of $2 billion dollars in sales in 2014, nobody
should be surprised that big corporations are already lining up to
capitalize off the green rush. But what will the evolution of Big
Marijuana mean for pot itself?
Corporatization is a scary word,
especially in 4/20-friendly circles, where the thought of big business
tends to invoke fear of profit-driven greed and social irresponsibility.
These common side effects of capitalism don't jibe with the culture
many associate with marijuana, and perhaps for that reason, even some in
pro-legalization circles have expressed skepticism about
corporatization.
"Most people in the pot movement want a
progressive pot industry that supports people in communities and that
creates a lot of good-paying jobs," longtime marijuana journalist David
Bienenstock told Truthout in an interview last year, "but there's the concern that's not how corporate America tends to view free enterprise."
While
people like Bienenstock appear worried that corporations could claim
some of the progress that pot activists have made toward legalization,
many early investors in the marijuana industry maintain that big
business will be the key to ushering weed into an era of full,
nationwide acceptance.
But some critics have also pointed to high-profile transgressions by early pot pioneers as evidence that the industry is already being corrupted by money.
Concerns
surrounding corporatization ultimately come from both sides. While
pro-pot advocates worry primarily about how the forces of capitalism
will shape Big Marijuana, pot opponents like Smart Approaches to Marijuana claim that the industry will incorporate the worst practices of Big Tobacco as it becomes bigger and more lucrative.
But weed activists claim it's ridiculous to suggest that pot companies will employ now-prohibited "Joe Camel" youth advertising strategies or use dangerous chemicals to adulterate their products, in part because those practices have already invited federal backlash.
"Comparing
the marijuana business community to 'Big Tobacco' is like comparing
organic vegetable farmers to McDonald's and Coca Cola," said Mason Tvert
of Marijuana Policy Project. "When people think of 'Big Tobacco,' they
think of an industry that adds chemicals to its products and once used
cartoons in large advertising campaigns.
The marijuana industry is being
established with tight regulations in place that prohibit adding
chemicals to the product and significantly restrict advertising.
Marijuana prohibitionists have resorted to evoking 'Big Tobacco' because
they essentially have no compelling arguments remaining."
Tvert
argued that as with many consumer industries like alcohol, the people
buying the product will play the most essential part in shaping Big
Marijuana. They'll be the ones choosing which companies to patronize and
which business practices to support. Of course, consumers will then be
held responsible for knowing what they're buying and what they're
supporting.
2. After legalization, will more stoned drivers be on the road? Do we have adequate tools to keep this from happening?
With
anti-marijuana laws loosening in states across the nation, there are
legitimate fears that stoned driving will cause a rise in car crashes.
Smoking pot can make it harder to concentrate and maintain attention on the road,
and can decrease coordination, according to the National Highway
Transportation Safety Administration. Yet the tools that cops use to
detect whether people are driving under the influence of weed are
sometimes inadequate.
In many states, police conduct field
sobriety checks to determine if someone is high behind the wheel, and
will often follow up with toxicology tests.
While some high drivers can
pass field sobriety evaluations, blood and urine tests, by contrast,
have produced positive results weeks, or sometimes months, after someone
has smoked pot. A few savvier police agencies are starting to use saliva swabs and breathalyzers,
which are better at detecting how recently someone toked up.
But all
these tools have the same problem, experts say: they only identify the
presence of the drug, not whether the drug has actually impaired the
driver’s ability to operate a vehicle.
Even in Colorado and Washington, which have some of the most liberal high-driving laws in the nation (in both states, you can legally drive with up to 5 nanograms of THC
in your bloodstream), there are serious issues. On the one hand, the 5
nanogram limit unfairly criminalizes many law-abiding medical cannabis
users who usually have higher levels of THC in their veins than your
average Joe.
Such users have a higher tolerance for weed, and can be
arrested just for driving to the supermarket even if they may not be
impaired. On the other hand, the 5 nanogram limit still allows some
people to drive when their performance is compromised. That’s because
different people metabolize weed differently, and an inexperienced pot
smoker may be too baked to drive, but have only 3 to 4 nanograms of THC
in their blood.
Until a more reliable way of detecting impaired
driving is found, states that legalize pot will likely be left with a
similar dilemma.
3. What about potential risks associated with highly potent cannabis edibles?
As
marijuana acceptance grows, alternative pot products, including edibles
that are highly concentrated with THC, will continue to get more and
more popular. Opponents of legal weed have expressed concerns that this
will lead to increased incidents of accidental or over-ingestion,
especially among children. Studies have suggested
there's been an uptick in weed-related hospital visits, though
supporters and opponents of legal marijuana differ on just how serious
of a problem this trend is.
When it comes to children,
pro-marijuana advocates say that as with other substances, parents
should ultimately be held responsible for keeping these substances out
of the hands of kids. Keep them out of reach and remind them which
cookies are for them and which are for mommy and daddy. Not that stores
are making it hard to tell -- Colorado has led the way with labeling, packaging and safety standards
for marijuana-infused foods in order to eliminate potential confusion
and ensure quality. That means no marketing designed to make products
appealing to children.
Supporters of marijuana also note that the
severity and frequency of the pot-related hospital visits still pales in
comparison to those prompted by other substances, including widely
accepted ones like alcohol. A New York Times survey
of one Colorado hospital found that in the same period of time it had
treated 14 children after consuming marijuana, it had seen "48 children
who had swallowed acetaminophen — the active ingredient in Tylenol — and
32 who had accidentally taken antihistamines." Furthermore, while
overdoses on many other legal and illegal substances can cause death, an
individual would have to consume 20,000 to 40,000 times the amount of THC in a joint in order to be at risk of dying.
Of
course, underage kids accidentally or illegally eating pot brownies
aren't the only ones getting too high on edibles. With marijuana now
legal in Colorado, it would make sense to see larger numbers of people
who have gotten too high turning to hospitals for help, where in the
past they would have been scared to admit illegal drug use.
It's worth
mentioning that there isn't much a hospital can do for these patients,
besides supervise them and talk them through the uncomfortable
experience. Pro-pot advocates have stressed that adults should carefully
evaluate their own tolerance before eating too much of any edible,
especially one that could contain THC concentrations up to 10 times the
amount a casual user might be used to.
4. Will legal weed laws actually be able to edge out the black market drug trade?
When
Colorado opened up shop to legal weed earlier this year, supporters of
the law were confident that these sales would gradually box out illegal
marijuana as competition drove down prices at stores around the state.
But what many first noticed was the high price of legal weed, inflated
in part due to high demand, limited supply and a bevy of taxes --
including a 15 percent wholesale tax and a 10 percent special state
retail tax on marijuana transactions, on top of whatever other state and
city taxes are already being levied.
In the first two months of legal
sales, reports frequently touted marijuana sold for up to $400 an ounce
at retail shops, twice as much as at medical marijuana dispensaries and
as much as $250 more than the black market price. All of that has led
to some impressive revenue figures, but also some sticker shock for certain pot users.
Tax-free
sales are just one of the competitive economic advantages that illegal
pot dealers currently benefit from.
In exchange for assuming the risk of
serious felony charges for growing, trafficking and not operating as a
legitimate business, black market dealers have a much lower overhead: no
rent, no official oversight, no license or application fees, no costs
to comply with existing laws on packaging or labeling and, perhaps most
importantly, what is currently a cheaper product.
Further driving
such skepticism about the ability of legal weed to conquer the black
market is the fact that many people have a natural and understandable
distrust of leaving a paper trail in their pursuit of marijuana. In the
past, the federal government has punished legal medical marijuana
patients by revoking their federal benefits, and many are simply not
comfortable with openly flouting federal law.
Buying from trusted,
though illicit, suppliers could remain a more favorable option for some
of these people, at least for the time being.
But pro-pot
reformers remain confident that the cards are stacked in legal weed's
favor, despite the fact that it has yet to reach the point where it can
fully compete price-wise with its black market counterparts.
Tvert: growing acceptance and the convenience of having a fully
legal and reliable source for all things marijuana will draw in new
customers, drive down prices and convert those who currently get their
pot through other sources.
"Consumer behavior is driven by
convenience, quality, variety and price," Tvert said. "Prices are
already on their way down, and it will surely be easier to access a
wider variety of better quality marijuana in a legal retail store than
in the underground market. It won't be long before the underground
marijuana market undergoes the same experience as the underground
alcohol market."
5. Will pro-marijuana legislation outpace science?
As
much as weed legalization advocates don’t like to acknowledge it, there
are a number of studies suggesting cannabis could have negative health
effects for users.
First off, there are obvious dangers that come
with smoking weed. Cannabis smoke contains thousands of chemicals,
including over 50 known carcinogens, and there are studies that have linked marijuana with some kinds of cancer. However, there are also studies that have shown that marijuana actually combats certain cancers, and other studies that show no link at all. As you can imagine, that makes approaching marijuana legalization difficult from a health policy angle.
Secondly, the frequent use of cannabis may impair memory formation and increase the risk of schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders among users who are prone to such conditions. And contrary to popular belief, pot is
addictive for a sizable chunk of users -- as many as nine or 10
percent, experts say. (Tobacco, however, has an addiction rate about
three times as high.)
Younger stoners whose brains are still
developing have been shown to be particularly at risk from heavy
blazing. Studies have shown that smoking weed may cause a long-term drop in IQ and lasting depression
among adolescents. While legal marijuana, like alcohol, would likely
remain off limits to people under 21 years old, it’s plausible that
legalizing the drug would still make it more available to youngsters who
currently abstain due to fear of getting in trouble with the law.
The federal prohibition on marijuana has prevented a lot of research
into the effects of the drug, so there may be more evidence of harmful
effects that are still unknown. Of course, this knife cuts in either
direction: more research could also show further benefits of cannabis in
treating other medical conditions, and provide more clarity into how
strong the link is between marijuana use and the longterm effects cited
in some studies. Either way, it seems unreasonable for drug warriors to
insist on having it both ways.
Not only do they cherry-pick the negative
results of certain studies to back their agenda, but they campaign for a
continued policy of marijuana prohibition, in turn blocking further
research that could help guide smart legalization policy.
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