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4/20 FAQ for the cannabis high holiday

Published: Apr 20, 2017, 11:14 am • Updated: Apr 20, 2017, 11:17 am

By Gene Johnson, The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Today marks marijuana culture’s high holiday, 4/20, when college students gather — at 4:20 p.m. — in clouds of smoke on campus quads and when pot shops in legal weed states thank their customers with discounts.

This year’s edition provides an occasion for pot activists to reflect on how far their movement has come, with recreational pot now allowed in eight states and the nation’s capital, as well as a changed national political climate that could threaten to slow or undermine their cause.

Here’s a look at the holiday’s history.

Why 4/20?

The origins of the date, and the term “420” generally, were long murky. Some claimed it referred to a police code for marijuana possession or that it arose from Bob Dylan’s “Rainy Day Women No. 12 & 35,” with its refrain of “Everybody must get stoned” — 420 being the product of 12 times 35.

But in recent years, a consensus has emerged around the most credible explanation: that it started with a group of bell-bottomed buddies from San Rafael High School in California, who called themselves “the Waldos.” A friend’s brother was afraid of getting busted for a patch of cannabis he was growing in the woods at Point Reyes, so he drew a map and gave the teens permission to harvest the crop, the story goes.

During fall 1971, at 4:20 p.m., just after classes and football practice, the group would meet up at the school’s statue of chemist Louis Pasteur, smoke a joint and head out to search for the weed patch. They never did find it, but their private lexicon — “420 Louie,” and later just “420” — would take on a life of its own.

The Waldos saved postmarked letters and other artifacts from the 1970s referencing “420,” which they now keep in a bank vault, and when the Oxford English Dictionary added the term last month it cited some of those documents as the entry’s earliest recorded uses .

How did ‘420’ spread

A brother of one of the Waldos was a close friend of Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh, as Lesh once confirmed in an interview with the Huffington Post. The Waldos began hanging out in the band’s circle, and the slang spread.

Fast-forward to the early 1990s: Steve Bloom, a reporter for the cannabis magazine High Times, was at a Dead show when he was handed a flier urging people to “meet at 4:20 on 4/20 for 420-ing in Marin County at the Bolinas Ridge sunset spot on Mt. Tamalpais.” High Times published it.

“It’s a phenomenon,” said one of the Waldos, Steve Capper, now 62 and a chief executive at a payroll financing company in San Francisco. “Most things die within a couple years, but this just goes on and on. It’s not like someday somebody’s going to say, ‘OK, Cannabis New Year’s is on June 23rd now.’”

Bloom, now the editor in chief of Freedom Leaf Magazine, notes that while the Waldos came up with the term, the people who made the flier — and effectively turned 4/20 into a holiday — remain unknown.

How is it celebrated?

With weed, naturally. Some of the celebrations are bigger than others; Hippie Hill in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park typically draws thousands. In Seattle, the organizers of the annual Hempfest event are anticipating about 250 people at a private party. Some pot shops are offering discounts or hosting block parties.

College quads and statehouse lawns are also known for drawing 4/20 celebrants, with the University of Colorado’s Boulder campus historically among the largest gatherings — though not so much since administrators started closing off the campus several years ago. Generally, 4/20 events in Colorado have dropped off significantly since the state legalized recreational use in 2012.

Some breweries make 4/20 themed beers — including SweetWater Brewing in Atlanta, whose founders attended CU-Boulder. Lagunitas Brewing in Petaluma, California, releases its “Waldos’ Special Ale” every year on 4/20 in honoring of the term’s coiners; it’s billed as “the dankest and hoppiest beer ever brewed at Lagunitas.”

The politics

This year’s 4/20 follows successful legalization campaigns in California, Nevada, Maine and Massachusetts, which join Alaska, Colorado, Oregon and Washington as states that allow recreational marijuana. More than half the states allow medical marijuana.

But it remains illegal under federal law. Attorney General Jeff Sessions this month ordered a review of marijuana policy to see how it may conflict with the President Donald Trump’s crime-fighting agenda, and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly recently called marijuana “a potentially dangerous gateway drug that frequently leads to the use of harder drugs.” That’s a view long held by drug warriors despite scant evidence for its validity.

Sixty percent of adults support legalizing marijuana, according to a Gallup poll last fall, and two-thirds of respondents in a Yahoo/Marist poll released this week said marijuana is safer than opioids.

Undermining regulatory schemes in legal pot states could prompt a backlash that would hasten the end of federal prohibition, said Vivian McPeak, a founder of Seattle’s Hempfest.

“We’re looking at an attorney general who wants to bring America back into the 1980s in terms of drug policy,” McPeak said. “I’m skeptical they can put the cannabis genie back into the bottle.”

What does it mean?

McPeak says 4/20 these days is “half celebration and half call to action.”

For the Waldos, who remain close friends, it signifies above all else a good time, Capper says.

“We’re not political. We’re jokesters,” he said. “But there was a time that we can’t forget, when it was secret, furtive. … The energy of the time was more charged, more exciting in a certain way.

“I’m not saying that’s all good — it’s not good they were putting people in jail,” he added. “You wouldn’t want to go back there. Of course not.”

Associated Press writers Kristen Wyatt in Denver and Sadie Gurman in Washington, D.C., contributed.

Follow Gene Johnson at https://twitter.com/GeneAPseattle

Canada Marijuana Legalization: Feds Looking To Set Up Cannabis Tracking System

  • Justin Trudeau’s Liberals have kept many of the promises they made on the campaign trail but others have fallen by the wayside. Here’s a look at some of the bigger election pledges abandoned by the Trudeau government (so far). (Information courtesy of The Canadian Press)

  • Electoral Reform

    Liberals pledged to usher in a new electoral system in time for the next election, guaranteeing that the 2015 vote would be the last conducted under first-past-the-post. That plan was abandoned in February 2017.

  • $10 Billion Deficits

    Run deficits of less than $10 billion in each of the first three years of the mandate, still reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio each year and balancing the books in the final year. The Liberals’ inaugural budget projects deficits for at least five years, totalling $113 billion, including almost $30 billion this year alone. The government still hopes to lower the debt-to-GDP ratio over the course of the mandate. (Photo: Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau)

  • 'Revenue Neutral' Tax Break

    The tax break for middle-income earners was to be “revenue neutral,'” paid for by hiking taxes on the wealthiest one per cent. In fact, it will cost the federal treasury $1.2 billion a year.

  • Small Business Tax Cut

    Reduce the small business tax rate to nine per cent from 11 per cent. (Photo: Small Business Minister Bardish Chagger)

  • Defence Spending

    Maintain funding levels for the Canadian Armed Forces. The government pushed back $3.7 billion for new equipment to 2020. (Photo: Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan)

  • That Whole Jets Thing

    Immediately scrap the planned $44-billion purchase of F-35 stealth fighter jets, launch open and transparent competition to replace the current CF-18 fighter jets and reallocate the savings to the navy. The government now proposes to buy a handful of Super Hornet aircraft as a stopgap measure.

  • Home Care Spending

    Immediately invest $3 billion over four years to improve home care. This promise is now tied to negotiations with the provinces and territories on a new health accord. (Photo: Health Minister Jane Philpott)

  • What About That Cap?

    Cap how much can be claimed through the stock option deduction on annual gains higher than $100,000.

  • Door-To-Door Mail

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s verbal promise to “restore” door-to-door home mail delivery. The government is committed only to stopping any further reduction in home delivery while it conducts a review of Canada Post’s operations.

  • UP NEXT: Trudeau’s Selfies

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, shown here taking a selfie with a child on Parliament Hill in October 2015, is no stranger to posing for a photo. Though Conservatives have given him a hard time over the practice, Trudeau says it’s all about staying connected to people. Click through this gallery to see more times Trudeau indulged a request for a selfie..

  • Trudeau poses with a crowd in Bridgetown, N.S. on August 16, 2016.

  • Trudeau poses with an elder after receiving a ceremonial headdress while visiting the Tsuut’ina First Nation near Calgary, Alta., Friday, March 4, 2016.

  • Trudeau poses after a youth Q&A with Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto at the Museum of Nature, on Tuesday, June 28, 2016 in Ottawa…

  • A street party for Fete Nationale in Montreal on Friday, June 24, 2016…

  • After a group photo of parliamentarians to mark the 150th anniversary of Parliament Wednesday June 8, 2016 in Ottawa…

  • With employees of the STM maintenance centre in Montreal, Que., April 5, 2016…

  • At the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C., on Friday, April 1, 2016.

  • With a supporter at a rally in Ottawa on October 20, 2015, hours after Liberals won the federal election…

  • After he delivered remarks at the Komagata Maru Apology reception in Ottawa Wednesday May 18, 2016…

  • With members of the public on the way to his swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday, November 4, 2015.

  • With teacher Linsdsay Stuart, from Regina, at the Prime Minister’s Awards for Teaching Excellence in Ottawa on Thursday May 12, 2016.

  • At the Liberal Party cabinet retreat in Kananaskis, Alta., Sunday, April 24, 2016…

  • UP NEXT: Three Amigos Summit 2016

  • U.S. President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hug as the president leaves Parliament Hill on Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • U.S. President Barack Obama addresses Parliament in the House of Commons on Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau share a laugh with U.S. President Barack Obama after his address

  • U.S. President Barack Obama is greeted by children as he arrives on Parliament Hill on Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • U.S. President Barack Obama signs the guest book during a welcome ceremony after arriving on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, as Speaker of the House of Commons Geoff Regan, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau and Speaker of the Senate George Furey look on, Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and U.S. President Barack Obama take part in the closing press conference of the North American Leaders’ Summit at the National Gallery of Canada.

  • U.S. President Barack Obama, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Neito stand in front of Parliament Hill for a group photo during the North America Leaders’ Summit at the National Gallery of Canada.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and U.S. President Barack Obama take part in the North American Leaders Summit at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa on Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau welcomes U.S. President Barack Obama to the North American Leaders’ Summit in Ottawa, Wednesday June 29, 2016.

  • U.S. President Barack Obama talks with Governor General of Canada David Johnston on the tarmac upon his arrival at Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport on Wednesday, June 29, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, his wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto pose for a photograph along with Governor General David Johnston and his wife Sharon Johnston before attending a state dinner in honour of the Mexican President at Rideau Hall the official residence of the Governor General in Ottawa, Tuesday June 28, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto toast Governor General David Johnston at a state dinner in honour of the Mexican President at Rideau Hall the official residence of the Governor General in Ottawa, Tuesday June 28, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers a question as Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto listens during a Q&A with youth at the Museum of Nature, on Tuesday, June 28, 2016 in Ottawa.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto start the day with a run across the Alexandra Bridge from Ottawa to Gatineau, Quebec on Tuesday, June 28, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto in his office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, June 28, 2016.

  • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto at a dinner at Casa Loma in Toronto on Monday, June 27, 2016.

  • Mexico’s president Enrique Pena Nieto inspects during military ceremony in Quebec City Monday, June 27, 2016.

  • Mexico’s president Enrique Pena Nieto listens to the music during a ceremony in front of Canadian Governor General David Johnston, on Monday, June 27, 2016 in Quebec City.

  • Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto and Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard attend a press conference in Quebec City, Monday, June 27, 2016.

  • People protest against a visit by Mexico President Enrique Pena Nieto in Quebec City, Monday, June 27, 2016.

  • Canadians Support Marijuana Bill But Believe It Won’t Prevent Youth From Accessing Pot: Poll

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    A new survey has found strong support for the Liberal government’s marijuana legalization plan but significant doubt in its ability to achieve the government’s key goals.

    The Angus Reid Institute’s poll, released Thursday, found that 63 per cent of respondents were in favour of Bill C-45, while 37 per cent opposed it.

    Left to right: National Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthiller, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould, Health Minister Jane Philpott and Parliamentary Secretary Bill Blair hold a press conference announcing new legislation for legalizing marijuana on April 13, 2017. (Photo: Seyit Aydogan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

    The Liberals have said their legalization bill, tabled in the House of Commons last week, was crafted to strictly regulate cannabis and keep it out of the hands of young people, discourage users from driving while under the influence, and gut the pocketbooks of criminal organizations profiting off the drug.

    The poll, however, found strong skepticism in the bill’s ability to do any of those things.

    Sixty-six per cent of respondents, for example, said they didn’t think the bill would discourage youth from using or abusing the drug, and 55 per cent believe it won’t keep criminal organizations from the marijuana trade.

    New penalties for selling pot to minors

    An accompanying bill, C-46, would introduce new criminal charges to deter users from driving while impaired. The law would also install penalties for selling pot to minors that range from police citations to jail terms of up to 14 years.

    The legislation, once passed, would allow police to use what Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould called “oral fluid screening devices” to check drivers for marijuana impairment.

    Fifty-one per cent of the respondents in Angus Reid’s survey said they don’t think those measures will discourage driving under the influence of pot, while 49 per cent said the new punishments would do the trick.

    The Liberals set a minimum age of 18 for purchasing recreational pot, but gave provincial governments the ability to set a higher age if desired.

    In fact, many aspects of the government’s pot legalization plan are left to the provinces, such as how much cannabis will be taxed and where it will be sold.

    The survey found dispensaries were the most popular choice across the country, with 68 per cent preferring them as a designated place to purchase pot. Sixty per cent said they preferred marijuana to be sold in government agencies like provincially-run liquor stores, and just 35 per cent said they wanted it to be ordered online and delivered by mail.

    The Liberals are aiming to have the two bills passed by July 2018.

    The Angus Reid Institute’s poll was conducted online among a representative randomized sample of 1,467 Canadians. The firm said in its report that a probability sample of this size would have a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

    With files from The Canadian Press

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    What Trump’s Pick For Drug Czar Means For Cannabis

    The Trump administration named Tom Marino as the head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), or “drug czar.” Marino is a Republican house representative from Pennsylvania. Before winning a seat in Congress, he was a district attorney during the Bush years.

    Marino’s appointment does not necessarily mean a hard turn on cannabis policy. He is softer on weed than other politicians selected by Trump, like attorney general Jeff Sessions or governor Chris Christie. On the other hand, he opposed several bipartisan efforts focused on improving cannabis policy at the federal level.

    A Drug Czar At Work

    In his three terms as a congressman, Marino had a prominent role in forming drug control policy. In 2016, he wrote a bill providing more tools for the justice department to target drug trafficking activity outside US borders. Another bill allowed for more collaboration between pharmaceutical distributors and the DEA. Both bills passed.

    Marino then served on a House committee with Democrats and other Republicans to combat the opioid epidemic. Over fifty thousand Americans died from opiate overdoses last year. But Marino’s trafficking legislation focused more on the prosecution of international traffickers, mostly low-level Colombian farmers. And his second bill, supported by the pharmaceutical lobby, made it harder to hold US pain-killer distributors accountable for their own participation in the epidemic.

    Heroin, synthetic opioids, and pain medication are Marino’s primary targets, leaving cannabis on the sidelines. He holds a states’ rights view on legal weed. But he is not partial to using legal weed as a tool for curbing the opioid epidemic.

    Marino’s Voting Record

    Trump's Drug Czar

    As a house representative, Marino has consistently opposed federal reform initiatives for marijuana policy. He voted against a bill that prevents the Justice Department and the DEA from prosecuting vendors in states where marijuana is legal. He also voted against a bill to allow medical marijuana prescriptions for veterans. And once again, he opposed a bill to relax federal restrictions on growing hemp.

    More striking than his voting record is a comment made in a congressional hearing in May 2016. Marino stated that he wanted to see forced treatment for non-violent drug offenders “in a secured hospital-type setting under the constant care of health professionals,” a “hospital-slash-prison, if you want to call it.” Such measures would impact marijuana users, only a minority of which meet the criteria of an addiction diagnosis.

    Overall, marijuana is likely to take a back seat to opiates for Marino’s tenure as drug czar. He is a far cry from the staunchly anti-pot advocacy of other politicians in Trump’s cabinet, but he is also to the right of many Republican lawmakers when it comes to marijuana legalization and access.

    This 4/20, here are 11 stats that show weed has definitely gone mainstream

    Published: Apr 20, 2017, 8:31 am • Updated: Apr 20, 2017, 8:31 am

    By Christopher Ingraham, The Washington Post

    Many marijuana users hide their stash in their closets. Most people who use marijuana are parents. There are almost as many marijuana users as there are cigarette smokers in the U.S.

    Those facts and many more are among the conclusions of new survey from Yahoo News and Marist University, which illustrates how pot has become a part of everyday life for millions of Americans.

    1. Nearly 55 million adults currently use marijuana

    More than half of American adults have tried marijuana at least once in their lives, according to the survey. Nearly 55 million of them, or 22 percent, currently use it – the survey defines “current use” as having used marijuana at least once or twice in the past year. Close to 35 million are what the survey calls “regular users,” or people who use marijuana at least once or twice a month.

    Those numbers are larger than what we see in some other surveys. A Gallup poll released last year found that more than 33 million adults identified as “current” marijuana users, although it didn’t specify a time frame the way this survey did. The latest federal survey on drug use found about 33 million adults used marijuana in the past year, considerably lower than the Marist poll’s 55 million figure.

    But those federal numbers are from 2015, while the Marist poll was conducted last month. Considering four more states have legalized marijuana since the federal survey was done, attitudes on use may have changed enough that more are comfortable admitting their use to a survey.

    Survey mode is another potential factor: The Marist poll was done via phone, while the federal survey involved interviewers speaking with people in their homes. Considering marijuana remains fully illegal at the federal level, people may simply be more comfortable admitting their use to a voice at the end of a phone line than a representative of the federal government.

    Regardless, 55 million people is a staggering number. It would mean that there are nearly as many marijuana users as there are cigarette smokers (59 million).

    2. Support for recreational marijuana may not be as robust as it seems

    Public opinion surveys consistently show that support for marijuana legalization hovers around 60 percent. But most of those surveys don’t ask respondents what, exactly, legal marijuana means to them – they just ask whether marijuana should be legal or not.

    The Marist survey asked about medical and recreational marijuana separately. It found that about 83 percent of Americans say they support medical marijuana, in line with what other national surveys have shown. But respondents were closely divided on the question of “legalizing the use of marijuana for recreational use” – 49 percent support it, 47 percent oppose.

    That lines up with a detailed breakdown of the legalization issue in a survey by the Associated Press and the National Opinion Research Center last year, where 61 percent said they supported legalization, but 24 percent of those supporters clarified that they only supported medical use.

    3. People who have tried marijuana are much more approving of it than those who haven’t

    Prior marijuana use is one of the biggest predictors of support for recreational marijuana legalization. Fully 70 percent of Americans who have tried marijuana at least once support legalizing recreational weed. Only 26 percent of those who haven’t tried it say the same.

    In short, people who have experience using marijuana generally think it should be legal. This has potentially significant implications for the national legalization debate: As marijuana becomes legal in more states, more people will try it. This could lead to greater support for legalization, even more states legalizing, more people trying it, and so on.

    4. Most Americans think smoking weed is ‘socially acceptable’

    Regardless of whether they support legalization or use it themselves, 56 percent of Americans say that using marijuana is “socially acceptable,” compared to 42 percent who say it isn’t. Again, there’s a big split here between people who’ve tried it (74 percent say it’s acceptable) and people who haven’t (37 percent).

    Majorities also said it would make no difference to them if they learned that their doctor, clergyman, favorite athlete, favorite celebrity or children’s schoolteacher used marijuana in their personal life. Americans do, however, disapprove of parents smoking pot in front of their kids: 79 percent say they would have less respect for such a person.

    4/20 marijuana smokingAn attendee smokes marijuana during the April 18, 2015 4/20 celebration at Civic Center Park in Denver, Colorado. (Brent Lewis, The Denver Post)

    5. Americans say weed is less risky than tobacco, alcohol or painkillers

    By a margin of 72 percent to 20 percent, Americans say that regular alcohol use is more of a health risk than regular marijuana use. The margins for tobacco (76 to 18) and prescription painkillers (67 to 20) are similar.

    But the public is split on whether pot is a risk in and of itself: 51 percent say using marijuana is a health risk, while 44 percent say it is not. Like any drug, there are indeed serious risks associated with marijuana use: addiction, long-term health problems, driving impairment, you name it. While it’s true that the risks associated with marijuana are generally lesser than the risks of using alcohol or other drugs, that doesn’t mean that it’s “safe,” full-stop.

    6. Marijuana’s legal status isn’t a huge barrier to use

    Asked why they don’t use pot, 27 percent of marijuana abstainers cited its illegality. But the rest pointed to a host of other reasons: 26 percent said they simply don’t like it. 16 percent said they don’t use because it’s not healthy. Others said that it would interfere with work or school or that they simply had no desire to use it.

    These numbers are mirrored in another question: Asked whether they would use marijuana if the federal government legalized it nationally, only 28 percent said they’d be likely to do so. The rest said the legal change wouldn’t make much of a difference in their behavior.

    This points to a simple reality: Marijuana is already the most ubiquitous illicit drug in the country, rivaling legal drugs like tobacco in popularity. For most people who want to use it, getting hold of some pot is simply a matter of a trip to the darkweb, or Craigslist, or a call to a friend-of-a-friend.

    7. Most marijuana users are millennials

    Fully 52 percent of the country’s 55 million pot users are millennials. Majorities of marijuana users are male, make under $50,000 a year and lack a college degree. Only 14 percent of current users are Republicans, and over two-thirds supported Hillary Clinton in the latest presidential election.

    Interestingly, millennial marijuana users appear to be the most conflicted about their use: 25 percent of them say they’ve felt “guilty” about their marijuana habit, compared to only 17 percent of non-millennials. That brings us to the next point:

    8. Few people want to admit they use marijuana just for fun

    This is one of the survey’s most interesting findings: asked why they currently use marijuana, only 16 percent of smokers said it was “just to have fun.” The rest cited a variety of utilitarian reasons: 37 percent said they used marijuana to relax; 19 percent said they do it to relieve pain, 10 percent said it helps them be social.

    If there’s any group in society who do something “just to have fun,” you’d think it would be marijuana users. The stereotypical image of the “stoner” is the guy blazed out of his mind on his couch, eating Funyuns and giggling at his TV.

    But most users don’t see themselves this way. For them, marijuana is less about recreation and more of a product that fulfills a specific need in their life: relaxation, or pain relief, or social lubricant.

    9. Where people hide their stash – dressers, fake cans or tins, or locked containers

    Roughly four in 10 marijuana users hide their stash from others. Among those who hide their pot, the dresser (20 percent) is the most popular place of concealment, followed by fake cans, containers or books (11 percent), in safes or locked containers (11 percent) and the closet (8 percent).

    Astonishingly, 3 percent of marijuana users keep their marijuana in their cars. If you’re familiar with the practices of highway drug interdiction you know this is a terrible idea. Drug task forces routinely use minor traffic infractions like busted taillights, failure to turn or speeding as a pretext for searching for contraband in a person’s car, often with the aid of a drug-sniffing dog.

    Marijuana users say they hide their stashes to keep it away from the prying eyes of children, law enforcement and parents/grandparents, respectively.

    10. More than half of marijuana users are parents

    According to Marist, 54 percent of adults who use marijuana are parents. A majority of those parents – 16 million of them – have children under the age of 18.

    Childhood exposure has been a big talking point for opponents of marijuana legalization. States like Colorado have seen an uptick in the incidence of small children inadvertently eating marijuana edibles and having to go to the emergency room. In raw number terms, however, these cases are still very rare. Nationwide, poison control centers get calls for pediatric exposure to marijuana and alcohol at identical rates once you control for the total number of users of both substances.

    In the Marist survey, 94 percent of marijuana-using parents of underage kids say they’ve never used it in front of their kids or shared it with them.

    11. Most people are open about marijuana use with their family and friends.

    Marijuana users are very open about their habit with their significant others (95 percent of users have told them) and close friends (95 percent again). 72 percent have told their parents about their marijuana use, and 60 percent have told their kids.

    Some families even toke together – 21 percent of users have either smoked marijuana in front of their parents or shared a joint with them. Among older users with adult children, 35 percent have smoked with or in front of their kids. Over 60 percent of users have done so with their close friends.

    Millennials are the most social pot users – only 25 percent of them typically smoke alone. The rest usually share with significant others and friends. Older pot users are more likely to smoke alone: 40 percent of the over-35 crowd usually use marijuana by themselves.


    To see fun charts for these stats, visit Christopher Ingraham’s Wonk Blog

    Why Melissa Etheridge is crushing on cannabis, Canada and Trudeau: ‘I love what he stands for, what you all stand for’

    Rocker Melissa Etheridge is coming to Toronto, and she couldn’t be more excited.Story continues belowAside from performing for Canadian Music Week (on April 22 at Toronto’s Danforth Music Hall), Etheridge is in town for the first-ever O’Cannabiz Conference & Expo, a three-day event running from April 21 to 23. The gathering will explore the latest marijuana regulations, industry standards and best practices for both medicinal and recreational marijuana in Canada. Several keynote speakers — including Etheridge herself — will discuss the future of cannabis and the “budding” Canadian market.Etheridge has been a cannabis activist since surviving breast cancer in 2005, when she used marijuana to deal with the adverse side effects of chemotherapy. She doesn’t mince words: she says the plant has changed her life. In 2014, she teamed up with Greenway Dispensary in California to create a line of cannabis-infused wine, called Know Label Wine, and then in 2016, she launched her own company, Etheridge Farms, which produces legal cannabis products (in California only).READ MORE: Marc Emery claims smoking marijuana makes people better driversShe’s looking to expand her businesses north of the border, and with Canada considering a change in marijuana legalization by June 2018, it’s looking positive for the longtime musician. Global News spoke with Etheridge about her new initiatives, why the U.S. differs so much from Canada in terms of our views on marijuana, and why she’s a big fan of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.Global News: Can you tell me a little bit about your background, your relationship with cannabis and how it has changed over the years?
    Melissa Etheridge: Before breast cancer I was that casual rock-star user, it wasn’t something I did all the time, but I certainly didn’t turn it down. I probably did it more than I did drinking, but it was sort of a social thing.
    When I went through breast cancer, I used it as medicine, and it really became clear to me what a medicine it is. It can be so powerful and strong for so many things, and it made me an advocate when I felt the pain relief and its help with appetite. I started walking that walk and that led me into the community in California — these fine people who’ve been fighting this fight for many, many years — and inspired me to jump into the business.Why does marijuana have a terrible reputation? Is it historical, is it ignorance, is it both?
    It’s lack of education, and there was a concerted, amazing effort in the ’30s and ’70s to really vilify cannabis, to make it scary. “This is from bad people across the border, they’re bringing it into our country…” They really did a number on Americans, especially my generation.
    Realistically, if we compare it to anything… any other sort of drug…
    Anything. [Laughs]
    … marijuana is far less impactful, less damaging. Correct?
    Yeah. You see what a good PR job they did on it! It’s very sad, but slowly… I feel it’s like the LGBT movement 20 years ago. It takes people to come out of the closet, to tell their family members, their coworkers, their neighbourhood, “Hey, I am a person who smokes cannabis. I am a contributing citizen and I’m not a stereotype.”
    READ MORE: Pot legalization in Canada: Here’s what you need to know about proposed lawYou have two marijuana businesses on the go right now. What sorts of products do you make?
    We have vape pens coming out in a few weeks, edibles, oils… oh, and a topical! When I started seeing how many uses cannabis has, aside from the psychotropic effects, I was blown away. The topicals have been used for generations for broken bones, sprains, cuts, burns and bruises. It goes deep into the wound and helps healing because [humans] have our own endocannabanoid system that connects with cannabanoids. [Laughs] It’s like we were made to be on the Earth with this medicine.
    I have grandmothers who have knitted all their lives, and arthritis has crippled their hands. They sleep with gloves on after putting the topical on their hands, and they come in the next day and say, “It’s a miracle!” I’ve seen this with my very own eyes. If we could just reschedule it, make it a legal herb… we could investigate and research the amazing things this flower can do.Music-wise and songwriting-wise, how does cannabis impact you?
    Cannabis and music go hand-in-hand. There is the experience of listening, which is a mystical experience that we can’t explain. This shows how important music is to our very existence. When you have an herb that enhances that experience, that deepens it into our soul and emotional life, then that’s something. My ultimate goal is… I want a Melissa Etheridge show and a Melissa Etheridge dispensary so people can have that experience. I love to smoke and write, it puts me in a place of inspiration. It sets me in a place to understand how human beings are connected in this wonderful way, and we shouldn’t be afraid of the spiritual side of us.
    Just last week, the Canadian government announced it would be tabling legislation to legalize marijuana. Things are changing here. Any thoughts on that, considering we’re just across the border, yet we have such different viewpoints?
    Yes! I love Canada! [Laughs] Do you know what’s weird? I can have my legal cannabis here and be in Canada and have my legal cannabis there, but I can’t fly from Canada to California with my cannabis. [Governments] really have to step up with how it’s changing and what’s happening. Once they take the fear out of it, then we can really move forward with it like you guys are. You’ll find there will be more jobs, the economy would be better, people are going to be healthier, there will be fewer opioid deaths, fewer alcohol deaths.. really, the plus sides of this are astounding.
    READ MORE: Melissa Etheridge reveals why she rejected Brad Pitt as sperm donorSo what is the difference here, between the U.S. and Canada?
    Your country has been on its journey, and yes, you have religion and values, but there hasn’t been a sector of Canadians who’ve been taught that your country is based on certain religious values. That can kind of mess up something. When things are thrown into the category of “good” and “evil,” and they’re never looked at again… cannabis, we don’t even talk about it! It’s thrown into the “drugs” category.
    Canada has been moving along on all fronts. You were the first with the LGBT rights, now with cannabis, the immigration policies. Your [Prime Minister] Justin Trudeau, I want to kiss him on the mouth. [Laughs] OK, maybe not on the mouth! [Laughs]It’s because he’s “hot,” right?
    [Laughs] He is, I know. Even to me, isn’t that weird? No, but seriously, I love what he stands for, and what you all stand for. He’s a consistent leader, and your government is showing consistent leadership. Not from fear, but from looking into the future and saying, “Wow, look where we can go.” I’m loving me some Canada.
    [This interview has been condensed and edited.]Follow @CJancelewicz

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