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Majority of Yanks are pro-pot legalization

Agoraphobic

Alfrescian
Loyal
Latest survey shows that the majority of the American public are in favour of legalization. Going along with this trend, it looks like the federal government there will soon have to release a whole bunch of people previously thrown in jail for cannabis offences, large corporations will cash in on the commercial benefits they predict, government is going to rake in millions, if not billions, in tax revenue. For the average Joe in the street, they will no longer have to sneak around the dimly lit back alleys to buy their stash and be able to buy them from regular stores. What was considered a deviant activity just one or two decades ago, is now considered normal activity by mainstream society.

Cheers!

http://news.yahoo.com/majority-of-a...n-for-first-time--survey-shows-211700847.html

Majority of Americans now support marijuana legalization, survey shows
Opinion poll marks a watershed moment for pot advocates

By Michael Walsh 8 hours ago Yahoo News

Pot prohibition is going up in smoke.

A majority of Americans support the legalization of marijuana for the first time in recent history, according to a new survey.
Researchers asked 1,680 people whether they thought marijuana should be made legal
According to the General Social Survey (GSS), which is considered the nation’s most reliable, 51.7 percent said they supported legalization and 41.7 percent said they opposed it, while 6.6 percent were undecided.
“We’ve been measuring public attitudes toward legalization of marijuana since the ’70s,” Tom W. Smith, director of the GSS, said in an interview with Yahoo News. “In 2012, you had a plurality of Americans against legalization. Now, in 2014, you have a majority in favor of legalization.”
The Washington Post, which first reported on this new data, points out that the drastic change resembles America’s evolving opinion on gay marriage — and there has been a drastic change in the past few years.
Smith notes that the percentage of undecided respondents on the question of marijuana has been relatively high over the past decade.
“It shows how attitudes are in flux. They’re just not sure,” Smith said. “They might think medical marijuana is OK but not further than that.”
He suggested that some Americans may need to weigh the longstanding reputation of cannabis as a gateway drug with the reality of recreational use in Colorado, Washington State, Alaska, the District of Columbia and (this July) Oregon.
Back in 1973, the first year of the survey, only 19.2 percent of Americans supported legalization. That figure bottomed out at 15.6 percent in 1987 but has climbed more or less steadily ever since.
Morgan Fox, communications manager for the Marijuana Policy Project, says that Americans are tired of laws that punish adults for enjoying a substance that many argue is safer than alcohol.
"Hopefully their elected officials are paying attention and preparing for the inevitable," Fox said in a statement. "The failures of marijuana prohibition are too obvious to ignore forever, which is evidenced by the growing support for ending it."
GSS is an in-person survey of adults, who speak either English or Spanish, living in households in the United States.
 
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