Economists Predict Marijuana Legalization Will Produce 'Public-Health Benefits'

  • Thread starter ttystikk
  • Start date
  • Tagged users None

Do Farmers think legalization will reduce or increase overall drug & alcohol related fatalities?

  • legal weed plus booze equals catastrophe!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • legalizing weed will reduce fatalities from abuse of alcohol

    Votes: 6 60.0%
  • I don't think it will make any difference

    Votes: 4 40.0%

  • Total voters
    10
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
I would like a mod to edit my poll, it posted before I was ready; last response should read, 'I don't think it will make any difference'
 
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
In their 2012 book Marijuana Legalization: What Everyone Needs to Know, Jonathan Caulkins and three other drug policy scholars identify the impact of repealing pot prohibition on alcohol consumption as the most important thing no one knows. Are cannabis and alcohol complements, so that drinking can be expected to increase along with pot smoking? Or are they substitutes, implying that more pot smoking will mean less drinking? For analysts attempting to calculate the costs and benefits of legalizing marijuana, the question matters a lot, because alcohol is considerably more dangerous than marijuana by most measures. If the two products are complements, states that legalize marijuana can expect to see more consumption of both, exacerbating existing health and safety problems. But if the two products are substitutes, legalizing marijuana can alleviate those problems by reducing alcohol consumption.Reviewing the evidence in the Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, Montana State University economist D. Mark Anderson and University of Colorado economist Daniel Rees find that "studies based on clearly defined natural experiments generally support the hypothesis that marijuana and alcohol are substitutes." Increasing the drinking age seems to result in more marijuana consumption, for instance, and pot smoking drops off sharply at age 21, "suggesting that young adults treat alcohol and marijuana as substitutes." Another study found that legalizing marijuana for medical use is associated with a drop in beer sales and a decrease in heavy drinking. These results, Anderson and Rees say, "suggest that, as marijuana becomes more available, young adults in Colorado and Washington will respond by drinking less, not more."That conclusion is consistent with earlier research in which Anderson and Rees found that enacting medical marijuana laws is associated with a 13 percent drop in traffic fatalities. That effect could be due to the fact that marijuana impairs driving ability much less dramatically than alcohol does, although the fact that alcohol is more likely to be consumed outside the home (resulting in more driving under its influence) may play a role as well.Anderson and Rees also consider the impact of legalization on pot smoking by teenagers. Looking at data from the Youth Risk Behavior Survey from 1993 through 2011, they see "little evidence of a relationship between legalizing medical marijuana and the use of marijuana among high school students." Narrowing the focus to California after medical marijuana dispensaries began proliferating, they find "little evidence that marijuana use among Los Angeles high school students increased in the mid-2000s." It actually went down from 2007 and 2009, then rose from 2009 to 2011, but that increase was mirrored in three comparison cities (Boston, Chicago, and Dallas) without dispensaries.Anderson and Rees note that UCLA drug policy expert Mark Kleiman, who co-wrote Marijuana Legalization and has been advising Washington's cannabis regulators, recently described a worst-case scenario for legalization featuring an increase in heavy drinking, "carnage on our highways," and a "massive" increase in marijuana consumption among teenagers. "Kleiman’s worst-case scenario is possible, but not likely," they conclude. "Based on existing empirical evidence, we expect that the legalization of recreational marijuana in Colorado and Washington will lead to increased marijuana consumption coupled with decreased alcohol consumption. As a consequence, these states will experience a reduction in the social harms resulting from alcohol use. While it is more than likely that marijuana produced by state-sanctioned growers will end up in the hands of minors, we predict that overall youth consumption will remain stable. On net, we predict the public-health benefits of legalization to be positive."
 
Jboys3

Jboys3

236
43
While I disagree with their assesment, I like it! Any positve news towards cannibis is great news. Period!
 
ttystikk

ttystikk

6,892
313
While I disagree with their assesment, I like it! Any positve news towards cannibis is great news. Period!

I'm not sure I'm following you here- are you saying that you don't think legal weed will reduce alcohol fatalities?

Im just trying to make sure i understand you.

In hopeful, but I'm not sure the benefits will be significant, either.
 
Jboys3

Jboys3

236
43
I'm not sure I'm following you here- are you saying that you don't think legal weed will reduce alcohol fatalities?

Im just trying to make sure i understand you.

In hopeful, but I'm not sure the benefits will be significant, either.
Correct. I don't think legal weed will reduce alcohol fatalities. However I like the article because it sheds a postitive light towards legal weed versus alcohol.
 
shaggyballs

shaggyballs

120
28
If cannabis is legal you will not be able to provide yourself with medicine.

You will be force to pay top dollar for whatever the state approve grower wants to grow and all the competition is gone so he will not have to provide a quality product if he so chooses.

It has already started!!

In Washington and Colorado



What about in Canada?

We are next!
Canada - Government Threatens To Share Medicinal Marijuana Patient Information
Health Canada has warned it will share with law enforcement the private information of citizens in lawful possession of medicinal marijuana unless they comply with a new order within six weeks’ time. Today (March 14), the federal government posted a notice online stating that medicinal-marijuana licence holders are required to destroy all marijuana they have and provide written notice stating that they “no longer possess marijuana (dried marijuana, plants or seeds) obtained under the old program”.

“If participants do not comply with the requirement to notify Health Canada, the Department will notify law enforcement,” the release states. Licence holders have until April 30, 2014, to meet the terms of the order. Another Health Canada website provides vague details on the consequences of not complying with the new directive. "The Department will take compliance and enforcement action," it states. "This includes informing law enforcement of your failure to notify Health Canada as required under section 259.3 of the MMPR. In addition, the Department will continue to cooperate with police, and provide information needed to protect public safety, as appropriate." A “notification form” is available for download on the Health Canada website. There are more than 16,500 British Columbians licensed to possess medicinal marijuana. When the Conservatives’ new Marihuana for Medical Purposes Regulation takes effect on April 1, licence holders will only be allowed to purchase dried cannabis via mail order.

The Health Canada directive issued today—on a Friday afternoon when government officials know media outlets are least likely to report it—contradicts information included in a September 2013 briefing note prepared for B.C. Attorney General and Minister of Justice Suzanne Anton. “Health Canada, citing privacy concerns, does not intend to disclose the addresses of former licensed grow operations once they are no longer permitted to legally grow marijuana,” that memo states. It’s unclear what has changed that has led Health Canada to believe it can turn over the information of citizens licensed to possess medicinal marijuana without violating individuals’ privacy.

For months, Health Canada has refused the Georgia Straight’s repeated requests for an interview on the topic of the new rules governing medicinal marijuana. A message left today requesting clarification on the March 14 notice was not returned. In a media release, Sensible B.C. campaign director Dana Larsen called for demonstrations against the Health Canada order. “Patients across Canada registered with Health Canada in good faith, to protect themselves against arrest for cultivating their own medicine,” Larsen said in the release. “Now they are being threatened with police action if they don’t destroy their perfectly good medication.”

Stay aware!!
Or suffer the consequence.

shag
 
Jolly Mon

Jolly Mon

218
93
As a father of a baby daughter I personally would like to see cannabis substitute alcohol well before she reaches college age. The difference between a Fri. Sat. night @ SDSU or Chico St. or any other party school vs. Humboldt State is night and day. Just compare student DUI records. Cannabis on campus imo will curve the fear most parents have sending their daughters off to college. Check out the Times article ( rape the crisis of higher education). If you have seen it you know a frat party + binge drinking = bad decisions . Not to mention all the daily domestic violence issues starts with a trip to the liqueur store. Lets have a happy alternative eat Cheetos and watch classic movies and surf the couch.
 
Top Bottom