Heritage
Foundation
Marijuana
Is Harmful: Debunking 7 Myths Arguing It's Fine
Kevin
Sabet
April
27, 2014
Don’t
believe the hype: marijuana legalization poses too many risks to
public health and public safety. Based on almost two decades of
research, community-based work, and policy practice across three
presidential administrations, my new book “Reefer Sanity”
discusses some widely held myths about marijuana:
Myth
No. 1: “Marijuana is harmless and non-addictive”
No,
marijuana is not as dangerous as cocaine or heroin, but calling it
harmless or non-addictive denies very clear science embraced by every
major medical association that has studied the issue. Scientists now
know that the average strength of today’s marijuana is some 5–6
times what it was in the 1960s and 1970s, and some strains are
upwards of 10–20 times stronger than in the past—especially if
one extracts THC through a butane process. This increased potency has
translated to more than 400,000 emergency room visits every year due
to things like acute psychotic episodes and panic attacks.
Mental
health researchers are also noting the significant marijuana
connection with schizophrenia, and educators are seeing how
persistent marijuana use can blunt academic motivation and
significantly reduce IQ by up to eight points, according to a very
large recent study in New Zealand. Add to these side-effects new
research now finding that even casual marijuana use can result in
observable differences in brain structure, specifically parts of the
brain that regulate emotional processing, motivation and reward.
Indeed, marijuana use hurts our ability to learn and compete in a
competitive global workplace.
Additionally,
marijuana users pose dangers on the road, despite popular myth.
According to the British Medical Journal, marijuana intoxication
doubles your risk of a car crash.
Myth
No. 2: “Smoked or eaten marijuana is medicine.”
Just
like we don’t smoke opium or inject heroin to get the benefits of
morphine, we do not have to smoke marijuana to receive its medical
effects. Currently, there is a pill based on marijuana’s active
ingredient available at pharmacies, and almost two-dozen countries
have approved a new mouth spray based on a marijuana extract. The
spray, Sativex, does not get you high, and contains ingredients
rarely found in street-grade marijuana. It is likely to be available
in the U.S. soon, and today patients can enroll in clinical trials.
While the marijuana plant has known medical value, that does not mean
smoked or ingested whole marijuana is medicine. This position is in
line with the American Medical Association, American Society of
Addiction Medicine, American Glaucoma Foundation, National MS
Society, and American Cancer Society.
Myth
No. 3: “Countless people are behind bars simply for smoking
marijuana.”
I
wholeheartedly support reducing America’s incarceration rate. But
legalizing marijuana will not make a significant dent in our
imprisonment rates. That is because less than 0.3 percent of all
state prison inmates are there for smoking marijuana. Moreover, most
people arrested for marijuana use are cited with a ticket—very few
serve time behind bars unless it is in the context of a probation or
parole violation.
Myth
No. 4: “The legality of alcohol and tobacco strengthen the case for
legal marijuana.”
“Marijuana
is safer than alcohol, so marijuana should be treated like alcohol”
is a catchy, often-used mantra in the legalization debate. But this
assumes that our alcohol policy is something worth modeling. In fact,
because they are used at such high rate due to their wide
availability, our two legal intoxicants cause more harm, are the
cause of more arrests, and kill more people than all illegal drugs
combined. Why add a third drug to our list of legal killers?
Moreover,
marijuana legalization will usher in America’s new version of “Big
Tobacco.”
Already,
private holding groups and financiers have raised millions of
start-up dollars to promote businesses that will sell marijuana and
marijuana-related merchandise.
Cannabis
food and candy is being marketed to children and are already
responsible for a growing number of marijuana-related ER visits.
Edibles with names such as “Ring Pots,” “Pot Tarts,” and “Kif
Kat Bars” are inspired by common children candy and dessert
products.
Profitable
companies such as Medbox (based in California) has stated its plans
to open marijuana vending machines containing products such as
marijuana brownies. The former head of Strategy for Microsoft has
said that he wants to “mint more millionaires than Microsoft”
with marijuana and that he wants to create the “Starbucks of
marijuana.”
Myth
No. 5: “Legal marijuana will solve the government’s budgetary
problems.”
Unfortunately,
we can’t expect societal financial gain from marijuana
legalization. For every $1 in revenue the U.S. receives in alcohol
and tobacco taxes, we spend more than $10 in social costs.
Additionally, two major business lobbies—Big Tobacco and the Liquor
Lobby—have emerged to keep taxes on these drugs low and promote
use. The last thing we need is the “Marlboroization of Marijuana,”
but that is exactly what we would get in this country with
legalization.
Myth
No. 6: “Portugal and Holland provide successful models of
legalization.”
Contrary
to media reports, Portugal and Holland have not legalized drugs. In
Portugal, someone caught with a small amount of drugs is sent to a
three-person panel and given treatment, a fine, or a warning and
release. The result of this policy is less clear. Treatment services
were ramped up at the same time the new policy was implemented, and a
decade later there are more young people using marijuana, but fewer
people dying of opiate and cocaine overdoses. In the Netherlands,
officials seem to be scaling back their marijuana non-enforcement
policy (lived out in “coffee shops” across that country) after
witnessing higher rates of marijuana use and treatment admissions
there. The government now only allows residents to use coffee shops.
What all of this tells us about how legalization would play out in
the U.S. is another point entirely and even less clear.
Myth
No. 7: “Prevention, intervention, and treatment are doomed to
fail—So why try?”
Less
than 8 percent of Americans smoke marijuana versus 52 percent who
drink and 27 percent of people that smoke tobacco cigarettes. Coupled
with its legal status, efforts to reduce demand for marijuana can
work. Communities that implement local strategies implemented by
area-wide coalitions of parents, schools, faith communities,
businesses, and, yes, law enforcement, can significantly reduce
marijuana use. Brief interventions and treatment for marijuana
addiction (which affects about 1 in 6 kids who start using, according
to the National Institutes of Health) can also work.
And
one myth not found in the book: “Colorado and Washington are
examples to follow.”
Experience
from Colorado’s recent legalization of recreational marijuana is
not promising. Since January, THC-positive test results in the
workplace have risen, two recent deaths in Denver have been linked to
recreational marijuana use, and the number of parents calling the
poison control hotline because their kids consumed marijuana products
has significantly risen. Additionally, tax revenues fall short of
original projections and the black market for marijuana continues to
thrive in Colorado. Though Washington State has not yet implemented
its marijuana laws, the percentage of cases involving THC-positive
drivers has significantly risen.
Marijuana
policy is not straightforward. Any public policy has costs and
benefits. It is true that a policy of saddling users with criminal
records and imprisonment does not serve the nation’s best
interests. But neither does legalization, which would create the 21st
century version of Big Tobacco and reduce our ability to compete and
learn. There is a better way to address the marijuana question—one
that emphasizes brief interventions, prevention, and treatment, and
would prove a far less costly alternative to either the status quo or
legalization. That is the path America should be pursuing—call it
“Reefer Sanity.”
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