Marijuana legalization support at record high

A man smokes a joint at a pro-marijuana "4/20" celebration in front of the state capitol building April 20, 2010, in Denver. / Getty Images
Never before have more Americans believed legalizing marijuana was the right course for the country.
In a new Gallup poll, 50 percent of respondents in a nationwide survey said they believed it was time to make pot legal. About 46 percent came out against it.
Support for legalizing marijuana tended to be stronger among younger, more liberal groups, according to Gallup. Legalization received 62 approval among those aged 18 to 29, but got only 31 percent approval among those 65 and older. Liberals were twice as likely as conservatives to favor legalizing marijuana.
In a release, Gallup writes: "When Gallup first asked about legalizing marijuana, in 1969, 12 percent of Americans favored it, while 84 percent were opposed. Support remained in the mid-20s in Gallup measures from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s, but has crept up since, passing 30 percent in 2000 and 40 percent in 2009 before reaching the 50 percent level in this year's Oct. 6-9 annual Crime survey."
4 Americans get medical pot from the fedsStudy: LA pot clinics shut down, crime went up
Calif. braces for medical marijuana crackdown
If the steady climb in public support for marijuana legalization continues at its current pace, politicians will soon have to address the laws that fly in the face of that movement in opinion.
Already, the National Institute on Drug Abuse reports that marijuana is America's preferred illegal drug. In 2009, the NIDA released a report estimating that 28.5 million Americans age 12 and older had abused marijuana at least once in the year prior. By contrast, 51.9 percent of Americans age 12 and older (or roughly 100 million people) had used alcohol at least once in the 30 days prior to being surveyed; while 23.7 percent had binged (5+ drinks within 2 hours.)
Last year, Gallup released a poll claiming as many as 70 percent of Americans approved of the use of medical marijuana.
This growing change in public opinion comes at a critical time for marijuana policy in America. Sixteen states have legalized the use of medical marijuana in some form, and some are even considering decriminalizing the drug's recreational use. However, the federal government, while once suggesting it would leave it up to the states, has begun promising enforce federal drug laws when it comes to marijuana. The feds recently sent letters warning that they will soon be cracking down heavily on California's famed and large medical marijuana industry.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- Port Authority releases photo of One WTC workers at dizzying heights 113 Comments
- Massive train collision takes down highway overpass
- Washington state bridge collapses 20 Photos
- Best U.S. beaches 2013 10 Photos
- Bridge collapse blamed on tractor-trailer 323 Comments
- Frantic 911 calls reveal chaos in Okla., following tornado
- Deadly Angel Flight crash in upstate New York
- Sandy-shocked Jersey Shore seeks summer comeback













My brother started on Marijuana. He died of a drug overdose.
End of story.
The DO GOODERS seem to moverlook the founding principal of representation for taxation Tobaco has come under heavy attack, but no one wants to remember the tax dollars spent from tobaco sales at least the smokers contributed to building of Americ and the whiners , they just want a free tax dollar to spend on creating wellfare jobs that only add to the budget deficit.
HE doesn't like ugly.
Read The Book Of Joel: you'll get the picture!
On the issue of growing weed in your backyard...only if the following measures are met: Outside of residential areas/city limits, fenced areas only (6-7+ ft required), have laws similar to zoning laws allowing growth only in certain areas, and possible plant number restrictions.
Regulate it, tax it, sell it at liquor stores.
I am however concerned about the idea of growing it in our back yards. If that was legal, how do we protect young kids in our neighborhoods from easily acquiring it? And an even bigger question is how do we prevent neighborhood "gunfights" by homeowners hell-bent on protecting their marijuana plant from night-time fence-jumping teenagers?
Gunfights with growers will be a lot less common if the growers can call the cops and complain that those durn kids are on the lawn pulling up the weed again. I don't see a lot of combat going on for control of the alcohol market now, even though I can legally brew a fairly large amount.
And there is little fear that kids would be breaking into a house looking for legalized weed, just as they aren't likely to break in now looking for your home brewed beer. But pot plants freely growing in backyards though? That's too easy and tempting of a target.