Pubdate: Wed, 26 Jun 2019 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Alex Berenson MARIJUANA ACTIVISTS PASS THEIR HIGH POINT This was supposed to be the year full cannabis legalization in the U.S. moved much closer to being a reality. Instead it has been a disaster for advocates. Although Illinois legalized recreational use on the final day of its legislative schedule, a half-dozen other deep-blue states that were expected to legalize failed to follow-including New York. Advocates want to believe legalization on their terms, with few restrictions on marketing and age limits potentially as low as 18, remains inevitable. Polls show that between 62% and 66% of Americans support legalization. But cannabis supporters are wrong, and the pushback against marijuana has only begun. Why? Because teen use is on the rise. And the experience of the 1970s-the last time cannabis advocates believed they might win full national acceptance-shows that the strongest voices against cannabis use aren't police officers or even physicians. They're parents. As teenage use of cannabis exploded during the 1970s, many parents became deeply concerned. The drug seemed to damage their children's motivation, memory and grades. National Families in Action, a nonprofit, became a powerful voice against the drug. By 1980 the U.S. had turned against cannabis. Canny marketing from advocates and the endorsement of much of the media have swung the pendulum the opposite way in the last 15 years. Use has soared. But until recently, teenagers were the exception. Federal data show adolescent use barely budged-partly because teen cigarette smoking fell so fast after 2000, and partly because the industry has been more careful about teen marketing. In the past year or two, though, many schools have reported a spike in teen cannabis use. The increase is likely related to the rise in e-cigarettes and nicotine vaping, as well as to the industry's resumed marketing push. Medical claims made for marijuana may also have led adolescents to believe the drug is safe. In fact, cannabis is more dangerous to teenagers than it has ever been. It contains far more THC-the chemical responsible for the drug's high and its psychiatric risks-along with less CBD, a non-psychoactive chemical that may reduce some of THC's negative effects. In 1980 cannabis typically contained less than 1.5% THC; these days cannabis often contains between 18% and 25% THC. Many users prefer semi-synthetic extracts that are between 60% and 90% THC. Besides damaging motivation or memory, the new superhigh-THC, low-CBD products carry serious psychiatric and abuse risks. New studies show they increase the risk of severe psychotic breaks as much as fourfold. Since the publication in January of my book about marijuana, I have been contacted by at least a dozen parents whose children suffered breaks not long after starting use. Not coincidentally, in states where legalization failed this year, wealthier suburban lawmakers proved a crucial political stumbling block. Because of the cost of vaping, the habit seems to be more attractive to upper-middle class kids, and their parents are now seeing marijuana's real risks up close. As that knowledge spreads, the media is likely to take a more skeptical stance, and national support for legalization will shrink. The change will happen slowly. Meantime, the current situation-about a quarter of American adults live in states where cannabis has been legalized, and many of the rest have easy access through dubious "medical" authorizations-is unstable at best. The legal American cannabis industry now has several billion dollars in revenue annually but no access to the banking system, and adult cannabis users can go from law-abiding citizens to criminals merely by crossing a state line. The federal government and states must try to get on the same page. As advocates see public opinion turn, there may be an opportunity for a narrow compromise around adult legalization. It would involve strict and permanent limits on marketing, such as a ban on any advertising or sponsorship of public events; strong warning labels; and a well-funded campaign to discourage use modeled on successful anti-tobacco campaigns; a minimum age limit of 23 to 25, given that marijuana appears to pose special dangers to developing brains; decriminalization for younger users, who need help more than punishment; a prohibition against cannabis suppliers claiming unproven medical benefits; and possible potency limits. Such a deal won't be acceptable to the for-profit parts of the industry, because it would end the fantasy that the U.S. cannabis market might one day reach $100 billion in annual sales. But other advocates, like the nonprofit Drug Policy Alliance, would likely support such a compromise. It would meet their core goal, enshrining the right of American adults to use cannabis legally, while ending criminal penalties for younger users. It would also acknowledge the emerging scientific consensus that cannabis use carries serious psychiatric risks, especially to developing brains. Those pushing legalization will soon realize that compromise is the only winning play. Children matter more to parents than ideology. If cannabis advocates don't agree to reasonable limits, they may wake up one day to find that 2019 wasn't the end of the beginning of legalization, but the beginning of the end. Mr. Berenson is author of "Tell Your Children: The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt