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Americans are getting creative in finding ways to gain access to
marijuana online, even if they aren’t legally allowed to do so, a recent
study found. According to research published on the American Journal of
Preventive Medicine, millions are looking for marijuana retailers on
the internet, with the rate rising by almost 300 percent from 2005 to
2017.
While this number seems normal given that many U.S. states
have already legalized the use of marijuana for various health and
recreational purposes, its easy availability online sans any form of
regulation poses a public health threat. For one, buying and selling
cannabis on the internet is illegal because it is a largely uncontrolled
market and its sellers do not follow a screening system with their
buyers.
In a news release on EurekAlert,
research lead John W. Ayers, associate research professor from the San
Diego State University Graduate School of Public Health, said that
anybody, regardless of location and age, is able to purchase marijuana
using their laptops and mobile devices.
The
proponents looked into typical Google searches typed in by those buying
marijuana online and found that the highest numbers came from Colorado,
Nevada, Oregon and Washington, with search volumes rising between 1.4
million and 2.4 million every month from 2005 to 2017. The research
monitored search terms such as “cannabis,” “weed," “marijuana” and
“pot,” combined with action words like “order,” “shop,” “buy” and more.
Some websites that freely sell cannabis have already been taken down,
but knowing the internet, surely there are thousands more possible
sources.
University College Cork, Ireland professor Theodore Caputi, one of the lead authors of the study, was quoted by Study Finds as
saying that despite the legalization of marijuana in some U.S. states,
online selling disables the government from collecting the necessary
taxes that would help support the cost of providing public health
services related to its use. In addition, its instant availability only
creates greater dependence that covers even the very young.
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