Pot Smoking Among Teenagers Shows No Increase After Legalization

A group of protestors rally in front of the White House on April 2, 2016 calling for
the government to support the legalization of marijuana. Photo: Rena Schild | Shutterstock.
Recreational marijuana use is only legal in Washington, Oregon, Colorado, and Alaska, but the idea is gaining traction in other states as well, some of which already have legalized the drug for medical use.
There are of course many people who don’t want to see legal marijuana use expanded, and many of them argue that legalizing recreational weed would lead to more adolescents using the drug.
So far though, they’ve been wrong, and a recent study in Colorado of 17,000 middle and high school students has found that only 21% of teens used marijuana in 2015, which was down from 25% in 2009. Recreational use was legalized in that state in 2012, but has not lead to increased use among teenagers.
Part of that may be that teens are simply using weed less than in the past, but many teens polled claimed that weed has been easy to get for years, and that making it legal for adults hasn’t changed that in any meaningful ways.
It seems that teens that want to smoke weed have always had the opportunity to do so, with or without the drug being legalized for any use, recreational or otherwise.
There have been claims by certain anti-legalization groups that Colorado actually has the highest rates of teen marijuana use in the country, but these are based on federal statistics that only poll 400 kids in each state.
That data is inherently flawed when compared to the new survey, considering the state has close to 5.4 million residents. This recent data actually establishes the Colorado rate as below the national average.
The argument that legalizing weed would lead to more teens using it seems to have no support from the facts, though whether or not that actually works against groups that use this argument remains to be seen.

It is, after all, an argument based on fear, and such arguments are almost always unfounded, but that doesn’t stop people from believing them.

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