Sunday, February 22, 2009
Americans Growing Kinder to Bud 
We all know that Michael Phelps was on something. But perhaps he was also onto 
something. Three recent polls show that Americans are more sympathetic to the 
idea of legalizing marijuana than ever before.

The first poll, conducted last week by Rasmussen Reports, has 40 percent of 
Americans in support of legalizing the drug and 46 percent opposed. The second, 
conducted in January by CBS News, has 41 percent in favor of legalization and 
52 percent against. And a third poll, conducted by Zogby on behalf of the 
marijuana-rights advocacy group NORML, has 44 percent of Americans in support 
of legalized pot and 52 percent opposed.

That all three polls show support for legalization passing through the 40 
percent barrier may be significant. I compiled a database of every past poll I 
could find on this subject, including a series of Gallup polls and results from 
the General Social Survey, and could never before find more than 36 percent of 
the population (Gallup in October, 2005) stating a position in favor of 
legalization:



Several cautions and caveats apply, however. Firstly, although support for 
legalization has grown, it remains the minority position. Secondly, although 
there has been a long, slow-moving upward trend in favor of legalization since 
roughly 1992, there is no guarantee that public sentiment will continue to move 
in that direction: support for legalization had grown to about 30 percent in 
the mid 1970s before dropping significantly during the Just Say No years of the 
1980s.

Still, the position no longer holds the stigma that it once did. About as many 
Americans now support legalizing marijuana as do de-legalizing abortion. The 
past three Presidents have admitted, more or less, to marijuana use. Thirteen 
states have some form of decriminalization on the books, while fourteen permit 
medical use of the drug, although it is not clear how robust those provisions 
are as they are superseded by federal law.

The pro-legalization position may have some generational momentum as well. 
According to an AARP poll conducted several years ago, while just 8 percent of 
Americans aged 70 or older had ever tried pot, lifetime usage rates grow to 58 
percent among 45-49 year olds.

This is probably not one of those issues, however, where Washington is liable 
to be on the vanguard. When Barney Frank introduced a bill last year to 
decriminalize pot, it got only eight co-sponsors, one of whom subsequently 
withdrew her name. And President Obama has steered clear of any suggestion that 
he might move to legalize or decriminalize pot, in spite of some earlier 
statements on his record to the contrary.

My guess is that we'll need to see a supermajority of Americans in favor of 
decriminalizing pot before the federal government would dare to take action on 
it. If the upward trend since 1990 holds (and recall my earlier caution: it 
might not), then legalization would achieve 60 percent support at some point in 
2022 or 2023. About then is when things might get interesting. But I'd guess 
we'll see other some other once-unthinkable things like legalized gay marriage 
first.

-- Nate Silver at 6:02 PM 

http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/2009/02/americans-growing-kinder-to-bud.html

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"WebTV Dawgs/Dittos" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/WebTV-Pals
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: pot.PNG>>

Reply via email to