I have listened to and read the pros and cons of legalizing marijuana, and I don't see anyone talking about the strength of the THC in weed today. The weed if the '70s was much weaker than the weed of today. Unless there are strict controls on that, I can't support legalization. We have strict controls on the percentage of alcohol in liquor. You can't go into a bar or liquor store and buy a bottle of pure grain alcohol. Until we can have controls on the THC in weed, we can't legalize it. If weed is to be consumed for medical purposes, the THC must be bred out of the marijuana plant. I can't see legalizing it just so stoners can get high any time they want. There must be controls! Teresa Hering Phoenix [end]
Preventing kids from using drugs and alcohol is not easy, in fact, it is complicated. But this much we know about keeping kids safe from alcohol and drugs; the way to reduce the number of kids who use is to decrease supply and easy access, and increase the understanding of risks. Colorado, where marijuana was made legal in 2014, now leads the nation in youth use of marijuana and all illicit drugs. Colorado has been the proving ground that legalizing marijuana increases supply, increases ease of access, decreases perception of risk and increases the social acceptance of the drug. [continues 101 words]
There have been several articles published recently by the folks who don't want to see cannabis legalized for recreational use. Several of these opinions are penned by current and former elected officials, all of whom base their opinions on dubious facts, half-truths and outright lies. What message do you think that this sends to the very people the anti-cannabis crowd claim to want to protect, the adolescents? Today's kids are smarter than these folks give them credit for, and they know the facts about cannabis. So the message they may be getting is, "If they're lying to us about the harmful effects of cannabis, they're probably lying to us about the harmful effects of alcohol, meth and heroin, too." Unintended consequences of dishonesty? Bob Uselton, Phoenix [end]
As former Arizona superintendents of public instruction, we have spent our professional careers dedicated to seeking positive outcomes for our state's youth and its education system. Given what we know about the challenges involved in education reform, we are compelled to go on record in vociferous opposition to current efforts to legalize marijuana in Arizona. Most critically, we take great exception to recent campaign efforts to promote legalized marijuana as a net positive benefit to education reform. Legalizing a drug whose dangers have become more widely known and documented overturns decades of prevention work in our education and health-care systems. [continues 418 words]
Not surprisingly, EJ Montini was noticeably vauge in his recent op-ed ("Blowing marijuana smoke ...," Feb. 10) accusing Arizonans for Responsible Drug Policy of using "questionable" information in its arguments against legalizing marijuana. Nothing could be further from the truth. Consider the following: - -- Since Colorado legalized marijuana, teen use has risen dramatically and is now 74 percent higher than the national average. (2015 SAMHSA report/U.S. Department of Health and Human Services) - -- Since legalization, Colorado has seen an increase in marijuana-related traffic fatalities, hospitalization and emergency visits, as well as marijuana-related calls to poison control centers. (Rocky Mountain HIDTA) [continues 145 words]
Last week, dispensary owners in Arizona, and other states, woke up to news their Facebook pages were deleted At least a handful of medical marijuana dispensaries in Tucson realized their Facebook pages had been deleted on Thursday, Feb. 4 by the social media site, according to the Daily Haze. Facebook claimed they had banned the pages because the company does not allow any material that "condones drug use." The Haze spoke to Tucson's Earth's Healing's marketing director, Florence Hijazi, who told the online publication that not having a Facebook page damages the dispensary's business, because their patients check their page on a daily basis for different specials and other updates. Hijazi also told the Haze that, in response to being kicked out of Facebook, Earth's Healing plans to focus more on their Twitter account and their phone app. [continues 361 words]
Phoenix Open-Inspired Billboard Aims to Educate Golf Lovers and More on Marijuana Legalization Backers of a proposed ballot initiative to end marijuana prohibition in Arizona launched a Phoenix Open-inspired billboard on Monday, Feb. 1 to coincide with the kickoff of the golf tournament. It will be up through the end of the tournament on Sunday, Feb. 7. The Waste Management Phoenix Open is the world's best-attended golf tournament, according to the Scottsdale Convention and Visitors Bureau, which refers to the tournament as the "greatest show on grass." [continues 275 words]
Continuing the State's Anti-Marijuana Trend, Several Proposals by GOP Lawmakers Want to Make It Make It Harder for Patients to Access Medical Weed As it's been the tradition for several years, the 2016 legislative session began with nearly a handful of proposals hoping to burn down the state's medical marijuana industry. Whether any of them will see the light of day is still up for debate, but the bills still fired up medical weed advocates, who are sick and tired of state lawmakers continuously attacking the 2010 voter-approved Arizona Medical Marijuana Act. [continues 621 words]
Continuing the state's anti-marijuana trend, several proposals by GOP lawmakers want to make it make it harder for patients to access medical weed As it's been the tradition for several years, the 2016 legislative session began with nearly a handful of proposals hoping to burn down the state's medical marijuana industry. Whether any of them will see the light of day is still up for debate, but the bills still fired up medical weed advocates, who are sick and tired of state lawmakers continuously attacking the 2010 voter-approved Arizona Medical Marijuana Act. [continues 620 words]
Mexican Border City Grapples With Possibility of Legalizing Marijuana Mexico's Supreme Court ruled this fall that individuals have the right to grow marijuana for personal use, but on the border many are divided over the issue. Some in this border city, which became a bloody battleground for rival drug cartels fighting for lucrative smuggling routes to the U.S., say they believe decriminalizing marijuana will reduce violence. "Drug trafficking would go down and there would be fewer people involved in violence," said Raul Parra, a nursing student in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua--on the U.S.-Mexican border across from El Paso, Texas. [continues 265 words]
Legalization Nears Ballot; Bills Target Medical Use As a marijuana-legalization campaign nears its goal of gathering 150,000 valid signatures to get on the statewide November ballot, two Arizona lawmakers are proposing bills that would place limits on its medical use. Republican Rep. Jay Lawrence of Scottsdale is seeking to restrict access to medical marijuana with a bill that would ban naturopaths and homeopaths from writing prescriptions for the drug, require patients to renew cards every six months and punish those cardholders who sell or give the drug to kids. If approved, it would be referred to the November general election ballot. [continues 834 words]
In response to Lisa Olson's Saturday My Turn supporting the legalization of marijuana. I honor her dedicated service as an educator. My grandmother, father and three sisters were all Arizona teachers. My six children and I are products of Arizona schools. But on this issue, Ms. Olson is off the mark. Our schools need increased funding. However $40 million in revenue would result in less than one-half-of-one-percent of the overall $10 billion school budget in Arizona. [continues 130 words]
In November, Arizona voters will likely have the opportunity to decide whether marijuana should be regulated like alcohol in the state. With this vote on the horizon, it is time to seriously consider the implications of regulating marijuana. As a parent of five children and educator in Arizona for 25 years, my natural inclination is to wonder what impact it might have on young people in our state. While opponents of the proposed initiative claim it will be disastrous, the evidence suggests otherwise. [continues 575 words]
Cannabis prohibitionists (New Conditions, Dec. 24, 2015), discriminating against citizens, including sick citizens have been a menace long enough. Arizona citizens may stop cannabis prohibitionists from harming sick citizens with a golden opportunity to completely RE-legalize the relatively safe, extremely popular God-given plant cannabis on the next Election Day. Colorado citizens no longer need a doctor's recommendation and a permit, to use cannabis for medical health reasons and every subsequent poll indicates voters continue supporting the end of cannabis prohibition. Forcing sick citizens to pay for permission to use cannabis amounts to government extortion for protection from police and that sickening policy must end. - - Stan White [end]