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77 Percent Of Americans Support Legalizing Medical Pot: Poll


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77 percent of Americans Support Legalizing Medical Pot: Poll

 

http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/252612/20111119/77-percent-americans-support-legalizing-medical-pot.htm

 

Saturday, November 19, 2011 10:49 AM EST

 

 

77 percent of Americans Support Legalizing Medical Pot: Poll

By Ashley Portero

 

<p class="article">While several recent polls have shown that Americans are slowly warming up to the idea of legalizing marijuana, a new CBS News poll found that even individuals who do not support its straight legalization believed doctors should be able to prescribe small amounts of cannabis for certain medical purposes.

 

In fact, 77 percent of Americans believe medical marijuana should be permitted for serious medical conditions, even though a meager 31 percent of respondents said they believed the medical marijuana being purchased in the U.S. under state-authorized programs is being used for that purpose.

 

Regionally, the poll -- conducted at the end of October - found that individuals on West Coast are more prone to support medical marijuana legalization. Forty-eight percent of respondents from the region said they favored medical marijuana, compared to 43 percent of people in the Midwest, 41 percent of Northeasterners, and 33 percent of those living in the South.

 

The regional approval is not much of a surprise, since 10 out of the 16 states that have some form of legalized medical marijuana program are located on the West Coast.

 

Electorate Breakdown

 

While opinions on medical pot varies based on respondents' political affiliation, CBS News reports a considerable number of conservative voters also support medical cannabis programs. In fact, when categorized by political party affiliation, the number of Independents who said they supported legalizing medical marijuana -- 48 percent -- was higher than self-professed Democrats (45 percent) and Republicans (23 percent.)

 

Meanwhile, 66 percent of liberals favored medical pot, compared to 45 percent of moderates and 25 percent of conservatives.

 

Despite acknowledging that marijuana may have a medical benefit, 51 percent of respondents said they did not believe pot should be legalized for recreational uses. However, as multiple polls have indicated, there has been growing support for the marijuana legalization movement in recent years. CBS News reports that in 1979, the first year the organization asked the question in a poll, only 27 percent of respondents said pot should be legal.

 

The CBS poll is not the only one that has reflected a surge of support for marijuana legalization. An October Gallup poll found that 50 percent of responderespondentsed legalzinlegalizingile 48 percent of respondents in a March Harris Interactive poll said they strongly supported decriminalizing the substance.

 

U.S. DEA Categorization

 

Currently, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) categorizes marijuana as a Schedule I drug, which means the federal government considers it to be a highly addictive drug with no medical value. The classification has led to major conflict with some states, particularly California, that recognize the legality of medical pot, since the DEA has repeatedly insisted that federal law on the issue triumphs over individual state edicts.

 

In October, the California Medical Association became the first statewide medical association in the U.S. to adopt an official policy recommending the legalization and regulation of marijuana. In a statement, the organization said it took that position because pot's classification as a Schedule I substance has restricted scientists' ability to study its health benefits, putting some physicians in an uncomfortable position when they recommend the drug to patients.

 

The exact medical benefits of marijuana vary, depending on who you ask. A 2010 study from the University of California Center for Medical Cannabis Research reports cannabis is effective in treating neuropathic pain in cancer, diabetes, HIV/AIDs and spinal cord injury patients. The International Association for Cannabinoid Medicines reports there have been 37 controlled studies assessing the safety of marijuana and its naturally occurring compounds in about 2,500 subjects since 2005.

 

However, the effects of long-term marijuana exposure are still unclear. The strongest argument against the use of medical marijuana is that it may actually accelerate or aggravate the very disorder it is being used to treat, according to Harvard University. In addition, some studies suggest marijuana may weaken the immune systems of sick patients and could damage cells in users' bronchial passages.

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These numbers don't make any sense. How could support be 77% nationwide, yet regionally no more more than 48%?

 

Looks to me the like the ibtimes author got the data wrong. The 77% is correctly for medical support, but the 48% refers to mj legalization. A few other sources including cbs show this...

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57327004-503544/poll-public-supports-medical-marijuana-but-not-full-pot-legalization/?tag=cbsnewsLeadStoriesArea

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All I know is that it makes me feel like getting up and doing something. Unfortunately, I am still assailed by guilt. Guilt that some people don't like me simply because I use cannabis to make myself feel better. I hope I see the day when people won't judge me, especially "Christians" who, according to the Bible, are not supposed to be judging others.

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All I know is that it makes me feel like getting up and doing something. Unfortunately, I am still assailed by guilt. Guilt that some people don't like me simply because I use cannabis to make myself feel better. I hope I see the day when people won't judge me, especially "Christians" who, according to the Bible, are not supposed to be judging others.

 

 

 

Amen to that!!!! Many don't practice what they preach! One set of rules for themselves and another set of rules for everyone else. Just like politicians...

 

"Things that make you go Hmmmmmm"

Arsenio Hall

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I hope I see the day when people won't judge me, especially "Christians" who, according to the Bible, are not supposed to be judging others.

 

give me a break. don't start that bunny muffin here. for one thing, know what you're talking about when you make statements like that. secondly, this is about america warming up to mj, not how you have been "persecuted." lastly, Christians are a small majority of the people who don't approve of mj.

 

and, just to be clear, i AM a Christian, and if you can't tell, i AM tired of hearing how we're bringing everyone down. every group (and I mean EVERY group) has its fanatics, and to use a broad stroke and paint all Christians as the burning-down-abortion-clinics type is BS. just like it is BS to say all people from the middle east are plane-bombing, suicide-mission muslims.

 

also, to be even more clear, the bible does not say we are NOT to judge. we are to judge and disassociate with those who continue to reject God. just, more often than not, you get your feelings hurt because so and so won't give you a gold-stamp of approval, so they don't like you and are persecuting you.

 

get over it. for a group you dislike so much, you sure do want their approval.

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I don't recall reading any passage in the New Testament that tells one to judge others... could you specify where this appears?

 

Christians are the vast majority of those who don't approve of MJ... and of those who do... most people in the US are Christian.

 

Why "persecution" in quotes? Being humiliated, judged, ostracized, fired from employment, having your house seized, children taken away, being thrown in prison and beaten or raped, denied medical care - if that's not "persecution," I don't know what is.

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