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Is Legalizing Marijuana a Mistake? Live Debate

According to an October 2022 Pew survey, “88% of US adults say that marijuana should be legal for medical and recreational use.” While marijuana legalization is gaining more and more cultural acceptance, effectively regulating drugs has long flummoxed policy and lawmakers. Some are even starting to have second thoughts, especially when it comes to how to practically enforce legal sales. In fact, voters in Oklahoma – one of the nation’s leading weed markets –overwhelmingly rejected recreational legalization earlier this year, even though voters backed medical marijuana legalization by a double-digit margin in 2018. Those who argue “Yes” for marijuana legalization say legalization creates more problems for our legal system because it requires extra enforcement to crack down on already robust illegal markets to make way for new, regulated, and legal markets. Additionally, competition from illegal weed markets is undercutting legal sales, which means the expected revenue stream from a legalized industry is far lower than expected. Those who argue “No” say legalization can reduce the burden on law enforcement and criminal justice systems, allowing resources to be redirected to more pressing issues. They also highlight marijuana’s medical benefits, such as for pain management and treatment of certain health conditions, which have made a difference in people’s lives.

With this context, it’s time to debate — and reconsider — “Is Legalizing Marijuana A Mistake?”

Arguing Yes: Paul J. Larkin, Jr, Senior Legal Research Fellow in the Meese Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at the Heritage Foundation and Teresa Haley, senior policy advisor at the Foundation for Drug Policy Solution

Arguing No: Toi Hutchinson, CEO of the Marijuana Policy Project; former member of the Illinois Senate, and Cat Packer, Director of Drug Markets and Legal Regulation at Drug Policy Alliance

Emmy award-winning journalist John Donvan moderates

Timestamps:
(1:32) Paul Larkin argues yes
(4:56) Toi Hutchinson argues no
(8:16) Teresa Haley argues yes
(11:18) Cat Packer argues no
(16:11) Is smoking marijuana a private or public matter?
(21:31) Debate over the potency of marijuana
(26:22) Debate on how criminalization of marijuana affects minority communities
(39:00) Nick Gillespie asks both sides to discuss the benefits of legalization
(42:49) An audience question about how to talk to your children about drugs
(49:52) The contrast between state and federal-level legalization
(56:13) Closing statements begin between all four debaters

#opentodebate #livedebate #debate #marijuana #legalization

Debate recorded live @TheFreedomFest in Memphis.

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Medical marijuana regulation bill fails in legislature, leaving new commission to clarify rules

Bill that would regulate medical marijuana in Nebraska failed in the legislature on Tuesday.

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Cannabis Legalization

It was one of the federal Liberal Party’s most distinctive election promises: Justin Trudeau’s commitment to legalize marijuana. Once elected, the tough task of finding the way forward landed on the somewhat unlikely point person, former chief of the Toronto Police Service, Bill Blair. He joins The Agenda to discuss the federal roll-out for marijuana legalization.

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Elton John: Weed legalisation was a mistake | James O’Brien – The Whole Show

This is a catch-up version of James O’Brien’s live, daily show on LBC Radio from the 12th of December 2024

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Should The UK Follow Germany To Legalise Cannabis?

TalkToday debates whether the UK should legalise weed after Germany have introduced new laws on personal possession.

As of 1 April, adults are allowed to carry up to 25g of dried cannabis on them and cultivate up to three marijuana plants at home with Cannabis consumption by anyone under 18 will continuing to be illegal.

Dr David Bull says: “It has some really good properties!”

#weed #cannabis #germany #talktv

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Trump supports reclassifying marijuana, voting for legalization in Florida

Former President Donald Trump recently signaled support for a significant shift in marijuana policy, aligning his stance with Vice President Kamala Harris. This marks the first time both major-party presidential candidates have backed broad cannabis reform, reflecting a growing trend of public support for legalization.

Full Story: https://san.com/cc/trump-supports-reclassifying-marijuana-voting-for-legalization-in-florida/

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A fact-checked debate about legal weed

2 opposing perspectives and 6 true facts about cannabis legalization.

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Chapters:
00:00 Introduction to format
1:04 Fact #1: Public opinion
2:11 Will’s Introduction
2:41 Fact #2: Road safety
4:03 Paul’s Introduction
4:24 Fact #3: Marijuana arrests
5:41 Fact #4: Cannabis business owners
7:14 Fact #5: Illicit market
9:15 Fact #6: Corporate interest
10:10 Closing statements

There are few places in the world where you can walk into a licensed shop and buy marijuana for recreational use. Uruguay is one (sold in pharmacies). Canada is another. They’re joined by 21 US states, representing 48 percent of the American population, up from zero states in 2013.

That means that in Idaho, people caught growing or selling weed face mandatory jail time and tens of thousands of dollars in fines while their counterparts next door in Washington can enroll in a state-funded mentor-ship program for cannabis business planning and development. And states like Washington are violating both US federal law which prohibits any use of marijuana, and also international law, which prohibits non-medical uses.

That’s messy. But it reflects that although large majorities agree that the criminalization of cannabis use was a mistake, there’s less consensus about how exactly to move forward.

Will Jones III, the Director of Community Engagement & Outreach at Smart Approaches to Marijuana (SAM), maintains that the commercialization of weed would lead to more harm than good. He prefers decriminalization instead, which removes criminal penalties, treating marijuana possession more like a traffic ticket. (Six US states have decriminalized recreational cannabis without legalizing.) However, SAM prioritizes fighting legalization and reducing drug use over promoting decriminalization.

SAM co-drafted the Medical Marijuana and Cannabidiol Research Expansion Act which makes it easier to study marijuana and develop marijuana-derived drugs but without descheduling marijuana as a schedule I illicit substance. President Biden signed it into law in December of 2022.

Paul Armentano, the Deputy Director of NORML, has spent decades advocating for legalization of marijuana and says decriminalization doesn’t go far enough. NORML represents the interests of cannabis consumers and has been advocating for the removal of criminal penalties for recreational marijuana since 1970.

We thought both of their perspectives were worth hearing but didn’t want to stage a traditional debate where viewers so often come away confused about what to believe. So we created a format that would help establish a shared foundation of facts while still communicating what each of these advocates believe is the most important information to know.

In this new take on a debate, we asked both participants to identify facts that their opponent would have to concede are true. They were given an opportunity to review their adversary’s facts in advance and in a video call agreed on a set of six. In the video, you’ll see those facts presented, with each participant given the opportunity to add a “footnote” to their opponent’s facts.

Sources:
https://news.gallup.com/poll/356939/support-legal-marijuana-holds-record-high.aspx
https://emersonpolling.reportablenews.com/pr/us-marijuana-policy-study-january-2022
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33731424/
https://norml.org/laws/arrest-charts/
https://mjbizdaily.com/chart-19-cannabis-businesses-owned-founded-racial-minorities/
https://www.aclu.org/report/tale-two-countries-racially-targeted-arrests-era-marijuana-reform
https://blogs.bmj.com/tc/2021/04/10/perils-of-the-tipping-point-of-big-tobacco-2-0-taking-over-the-legal-cannabis-industry/
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/30/cannabis-drinks-companies-hope-to-capitalize-on-growing-market.html

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Democratic Debate: Bernie Sanders Pledges to Legalize Marijuana on Day One

Bernie Sanders absorbed an onslaught from all six rivals at Tuesday night’s debate as the Democratic presidential candidates faced off in their last encounter before a crucial round of primaries that will likely set the course for the rest of the race.

Elizabeth Warren accused Sanders of stealing details of her health-care plan. Michael Bloomberg said Russia’s intelligence services favor the Vermont senator because Vladimir Putin wants President Donald Trump to be re-elected. Joe Biden criticized Sanders’ past stances on gun control.

Sanders has taken over as the front-runner in the Democratic race and the debate in Charleston, South Carolina, was a chance for the other six candidates to try and stall his momentum.

“I’ve been hearing my name mentioned a little bit tonight,” Sanders said.

Warren, who has generally refrained from attacking her fellow progressive in previous debates, suggested Sanders has good ideas but hasn’t offered details about how he’d accomplish his goals.

“Bernie and I agree on a lot of things, but I think I would make a better president than Bernie,” Warren said. “And the reason for that is that getting a progressive agenda enacted is going to be really hard, and it’s going to take someone who digs into the details to make it happen.”

But most of the candidates spent almost as much time focused on Bloomberg, who has been rising in national polls as he’s spent more than $500 million on advertising.

(Bloomberg is the founder and majority owner of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.)

Warren renewed her attacks on Bloomberg over non-disclosure agreements signed by women who’ve complained of sexual harassment at his company. Bloomberg said last week that he’s willing to release women from three non-disclosure agreements related to offensive comments they say he made, but Warren called on him to sign a blanket release for anyone who has an NDA. #DemocraticDebate #BernieSanders #Marijuana

The former New York mayor dismissed Warren’s criticism.

“I don’t know what else she wants us to do,” Bloomberg said. “The trouble is with this senator, enough is never enough.”

Warren referred to one of the NDAs concerning a woman who filed a complaint in 1995 alleging that Bloomberg told her to “kill it” when she told him she was pregnant.

Bloomberg replied, “I never said, period, end of story. Categorically never said it.”

From the opening moment, the debate was a brawl, with Bloomberg responding to a question about the economy by saying that Putin wants to see Trump stay in the office and has been helping Sanders online because he wants to see Sanders lose to Trump.

“Let me tell Mr. Putin, I’m not a good friend of President Xi of China,” Sanders retorted in a reference to comments Bloomberg has made about the Chinese leader. “Hey Mr. Putin, if I’m president of the United States, you’re not going to interfere in” U.S. elections, he said.

Amy Klobuchar, Pete Buttigieg and Tom Steyer joined in going after Sanders, saying he’s unrealistic and hasn’t accomplished much in all his years in Congress. Klobuchar also faulted Warren.

“It matters if you can actually get things done,” Klobuchar said.

Buttigieg said nominating Sanders will lead to Republicans controlling Congress. The Democrats who helped win the House majority in 2018 are running from Sanders’s plan “as fast” as they can.

“I’ll tell you what it adds up to, it adds up four more years of Donald Trump,” Buttigieg said. “It’s time for us to stop talking like the presidency is the only office that mattered.”

When the topic turned to foreign policy, Sanders faced questions about his past statements, including those in a “60 Minutes” interview Sunday in which he praised Fidel Castro’s literacy programs. Sanders said he’s consistently opposed authoritarian regimes but recognized that sometimes those governments accomplish good things.

He said that former President Barack Obama had noted that “Cuba made progress on education” and other areas, and that he was doing the same.

That prompted an attack from Buttigieg, who said Democrats won’t win elections by “telling people to look at the bright side of the Castro regime.”

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Cannabis Legalization Losses

In the first year since cannabis became legal in Canada, the Ontario government suffered huge financial losses selling the substance. Industry experts join The Agenda to explore what went wrong, how Ontario’s approach differed from provinces that were able to turn profits, and what changes are in store when it comes to the business of cannabis.

Legalize medical marijuana? Doc Willie Ong says ‘pwede’

Doctor Willie Ong said the country should give the legalization of medical marijuana a chance after conducting medical studies.

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Dr. Juurlink on prescribing medical marijuana

In a new Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) article, Dr. David Juurlink, head of Sunnybrook’s division of clinical pharmacology and toxicology, makes a case for judicious prescribing of cannabis to patients who report meaningful benefit from it.

Read more: http://sunnybrook.ca/media/item.asp?c=1&i=1146&f=medical-marijuana-cannabis-juurlink

Nick wants medical marijuana now

Nick Ferrari says it’s high time that the government delivers medical cannabis #ThePledge

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