Marijuana is on the march.
New
Jersey and New York are poised to legalize the drug for recreational
use, joining 10 other states. And just weeks ago, Gov. Tom Wolf said Pennsylvania should take “a serious and honest look at recreational marijuana.”
Gov. Wolf is right. It’s time, past time, for an honest discussion about this drug.
So, pop quiz: Which of these four statements are true?
1) Marijuana is mostly harmless and cannot cause serious mental illness.
2) Marijuana has been proven to treat many diseases.
3) States that legalize medical marijuana have lower rates of opioid-overdose deaths.
4) Crime and marijuana use are not linked. Violent crime has fallen in states that have legalized.
If
you’ve listened to the debate around legalization, you probably think
two or three or maybe even all four are true. After all, that’s what
cannabis advocates and politicians like Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey have told you.
In reality, the answer is none.
As
I discovered to my shock when I began researching my new book about
marijuana, nearly everything that advocates have told Americans about
the drug’s risks and benefits is a myth.
Legalizing it for recreational use is almost certain to cause mental illness and violence to rise.
Legalizing it for recreational use is almost certain to cause mental illness and violence to rise.
In fact, murders and aggravated assaults have soared since legalization began in the first four states to legalize, according to FBI data.
I
am not an antidrug advocate or a religious conservative who objects to
marijuana use for moral reasons. I am a former New York Times reporter
who became interested in cannabis after my wife, Jacqueline – a
psychiatrist who specializes in evaluating mentally ill violent
offenders – told me that nearly all her patients had used the drug at
the time of their crimes.
I
was skeptical. But the evidence is overwhelming. Over the last 30
years, researchers have proven marijuana is linked to psychosis – the
medical term for a break from reality, such as hearing voices or having
paranoia and delusions.
Not
even cannabis advocates dispute that the drug can cause temporary
paranoia and psychosis. After all, cannabis psychosis is a recognized
medical term – and marijuana dispensaries actually advertise some
strains as less likely to cause paranoia. Federal data shows that
hundreds of heavy marijuana users are taken to emergency rooms with
psychosis symptoms every day. The number tripled between 2006 and 2014,
according to an analysis that an NYU professor and I performed of the
data.
Marijuana’s
risks to mental health are not just temporary. Many studies have linked
use of the drug by teens to permanent mental illness, including
schizophrenia, the most devastating form of psychosis. In a press
release in 2017 summarizing the findings of its landmark report on
cannabis, The National Academy of Medicine - the gold standard for authoritative and unbiased advice on health affairs - wrote,
“The evidence reviewed by the committee suggests that cannabis use is
likely to increase the risk of developing schizophrenia, other
psychoses, and social anxiety disorders, and to a lesser extent,
depression.”
Psychosis can be devastating for sufferers and their families. It also causes violence.
Advocates
for people with mental illness fear that discussing the link will
stigmatize people with the disease. But wishing away the connection
can’t make it disappear. In truth, psychosis is a shockingly high risk
factor for violence. The best study shows that people with schizophrenia were almost 20 times as likely to commit homicide as healthy people.
They commit many of those crimes while they are under the influence of drugs, especially cannabis.
As
more people use higher-potency marijuana more frequently, the problem
of marijuana-related crime is becoming more obvious, including in
Philadelphia. In 2018, the city had 351 homicides,
the most since 2007. Last month, Police Commissioner Richard Ross said
police had found more than one-third of those deaths were linked to drug
dealing, and he specifically mentioned marijuana.
Police in Atlanta, Las Vegas, and elsewhere have also mentioned the link.
Police in Atlanta, Las Vegas, and elsewhere have also mentioned the link.
Legalizing
the drug will not solve the problem. States that legalize still have a
black market in sales to minors, as well as in cannabis that is legally
grown in private homes but cannot be legally sold.
They also have lower prices, which leads to heavier use. And as people use more, their risk for paranoia and psychosis increases.
They also have lower prices, which leads to heavier use. And as people use more, their risk for paranoia and psychosis increases.
Police
and social services agencies all over Pennsylvania are already
struggling with the state’s devastating opioid epidemic. The choices
that fueled that epidemic are worth remembering.
Decades ago, advocates, including some of the same people now pressing for marijuana legalization, promised that increasing opioid use would help relieve pain without causing addiction.
They promised the risks of opiates could be easily managed and that only prohibitionist crusaders would object to greater use.
Decades ago, advocates, including some of the same people now pressing for marijuana legalization, promised that increasing opioid use would help relieve pain without causing addiction.
They promised the risks of opiates could be easily managed and that only prohibitionist crusaders would object to greater use.
We know now just how wrong they were.
Marijuana’s
risks are different from opioids, but they are no less real. Lawmakers
ought to remember that truth as they listen to advocates promising that
legalization will do no harm.
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