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  • Posts Tagged ‘Rasmussen’


    51% of Americans think alcohol is more dangerous than marijuana

    Monday, August 31st, 2009 at 2:19 pm | By: Radical Russ

    Hey, any time more than half of Americans think something good about marijuana, we're happy.

    Hey, any time more than half of Americans think something good about marijuana, we're happy.

    …but 44% think marijuana is equally as dangerous or more dangerous than alcohol!

    Fifty-one percent (51%) of American adults say alcohol is more dangerous than marijuana, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. Just 19% disagree and say pot is worse.

    But 25% say both are equally dangerous. Just two percent (2%) say neither is dangerous.

    Younger adults are more likely than their elders to view alcohol as the more dangerous of the two.

    Unmarried adults are more critical of alcohol than those who are married. Those with children at home think alcohol is more dangerous than those without kids living with them.

    This finding surprised me, as I figured parents with kids at home would be more likely to succumb to reefer madness hysteria.  Is it really possible that a majority of parents would rather catch their kid smoking a joint than drinking a beer?

    As California looks for solutions to its ongoing budget problems, 47% of voters in the state say marijuana should be legalized and taxed. Nearly as many (42%) oppose the state legalizing and taxing the drug.

    Nationally, 41% of likely voters think the United States should legalize and tax marijuana, but 49% are opposed.

    President Obama’s new drug czar Gil Kerlikowske has signaled a shift away from the decades-old war on drugs toward more emphasis on health treatment for drug users. However, 54% of voters say illegal drug use is primarily a criminal justice issue rather than a matter of public health.

    This I would attribute to the other illegal drugs and the tendency of their users to commit more crimes.  I’d like to see the question narrowed down to just marijuana use; is it an issue of public health or criminal justice?

    Only 28% of voters believe that the legalization of marijuana in the United States would help to reduce drug-related violence in Mexico.

    This number shows that we haven’t done a good enough job educating people about the contribution of marijuana to the profits of the Mexican cartels.  Even with Arizona’s attorney general and others estimating 60%-70% of cartel profits stem from marijuana trafficking, it seems the people haven’t gotten the word.  They also may believe that even if we did dry up their major funding source through marijuana legalization that the cartels would just shift their profits and violence to controlling the trafficking of hard drugs.  Nobody ever stops to consider how the cartels are going to magically create millions of new American cocaine and heroin users to make up for the loss of marijuana business, especially when marijuana users would have greater access to a better product under legalization.

    There is a reason there is no Cocaine Culture or Heroin Times magazines.  Cocaine and heroin use most often are addictions; marijuana use is most often a lifestyle.

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    2009 NORML Foundation


    Stash for Thu, May 21, 2009

    Thursday, May 21st, 2009 at 6:00 pm | By: Radical Russ

    Download link: Secret Stash - Register to access

    Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

    Hemp Headlines

    1. Rhode Island House passes compassion center bill with veto-proof majority
    2. PA Rep. Cohen’s statement on medical marijuana bill
    3. FBI Director Mueller pwned in marijuana debate
    4. Rasmussen: 41% support legalization, 49% opposed

    Southern California Scene with Tere Joyce

    Daily Toker Tunes by Marijuana Music Awards

    California Marijuana Report with Eric Brenner

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    2009 NORML Foundation


    Rasmussen: 41% support legalization, 49% opposed

    Thursday, May 21st, 2009 at 9:20 am | By: Radical Russ

    Forty-one percent (41%) of likely U.S. voters think the United States should legalize and tax marijuana to help solve the nation’s fiscal problems.

    However, nearly half (49%) oppose this idea, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

    These results show little difference from a survey conducted in February that asked Americans about legalization only. At that time, 40% said marijuana should be legalized, but 46% disagreed.

    Over half of Democrats (52%) support the idea of legalizing and taxing pot, but only 28% of Republicans agree. Most GOP voters (65%) are against the idea, as are 37% of Democrats. Unaffiliated voters are more evenly divided: 41% are in favor of the idea and 47% are opposed to it.

    Adults between the ages of 18 and 40 are much more likely to support legalizing and taxing marijuana than those over 40.

    The new survey also shows that nearly half of voters (46%) believe marijuana use leads to use of harder drugs. Thirty-seven percent (37%) do not see marijuana as a “gateway” drug.

    That “gateway drug” argument sure is persistent, isn’t it?  I guess I could give it a positive spin: at least if you’re relying on the “gateway drug” argument to show how awful marijuana is, you’re tacitly admitting that the marijuana itself isn’t so harmful.

    The only three effective tools left in the prohibitionist’s rhetorical arsenal are:

    1. Marijuana is a gateway drug that leads to use of harder drugs.
    2. If we legalized marijuana, our streets would be filled with stoned drivers!
    3. What about the children?  For God’s Sake, won’t somebody think of the children?

    So it is up to us to educate our friends and family and elected representatives.  We need to have people who bring up “gateway drug” laughed out of the room like people who insist the moon landing was faked*.

    We’ll deal with “stoned drivers” and “what about the children” another time.  For your peers that shoot you the “gateway drug” argument, you could tell them that the Institute of Medicine debunked this theory in 1999 and every study subsequent to it has agreed.  Or you could point out that the “gateway theory” is a logical fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc reasoning (that since this came before that, this caused that).  But if your peers were swayed by logic and reason, we wouldn’t have 46% of them believing the “gateway theory”.

    The theory survives because it fits a pattern familiar to most people.  They understand that the falling-down drunk who’s loaded on scotch was once probably a guy who drank a beer or two.  They understand that the chain smoker was once probably a guy who had a cigarette now and then.  They understand that the right-wing talk radio host who was downing 30 illegal Oxycontin a day probably started on one or two a day.  They also realize — accurately, I’ll admit — that the crack addict and heroin junkie probably smoked a joint or two before they moved on to the hard stuff.

    So the way you attack this is to flip the perspective.  They’re looking at all the hard drug addicts and noting that almost all of them used pot.  You need to make them see all the marijuana users and show how few actually use hard drugs.  Here are your three rhetorical attacks on the “gateway theory”:

    Read the rest of this entry by clicking here

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    2009 NORML Foundation


    Rasmussen Poll finds 40% of Americans favor legalization of marijuana

    Saturday, February 21st, 2009 at 6:10 pm | By: Radical Russ

    Rasmussen Reports poll released this week shows that 40% of Americans have joined with such public figures as the late Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman and former Seattle Police Chief Norm Stamper in saying that marijuana should be legal. 

    Interestingly, legalization enjoys its greatest support among those Americans who refuse to identify with either major political party. According to Rasmussen:

    Sixty percent (60%) of Republicans are opposed to the legalization of marijuana. Democrats are more evenly split on the question, giving legalization the edge by five points….

    Among adults not affiliated with either major political party, 49% favor legalization of marijuana, while 41% oppose it.

    While Democratic politicians have usually proven more willing than Republicans to discuss alternatives to prohibition, policy is another matter. Former Democratic President Bill Clinton initiated federal raids against medical marijuana dispensaries in states that have legalized marijuana for medical uses, and current Attorney General Eric Holder has long been an enthusiastic booster of harsh drug policies. So it’s not surprising that unaffiliated and third-party voters would show the strongest support for legalization.

    Now if only we didn’t have a political system that almost mathematically and financially guarantees third parties don’t have a chance.


    Topics: , , , ,

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    2009 NORML Foundation
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