April 20, 2010 8:33 AM

74% Think Pot Has Medical Value, Poll Finds

In this photo taken May 13, 2009 marijuana grown for medical purposes is shown inside a greenhouse at a farm in Potter Valley, Calif. In the mountain forests along California's North Coast, refugees from San Francisco's Summer of Love have spent four deca

In this photo taken May 13, 2009 marijuana grown for medical purposes is shown inside a greenhouse at a farm in Potter Valley, Calif. In the mountain forests along California's North Coast, refugees from San Francisco's Summer of Love have spent four deca (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

(AP)  Most Americans still oppose legalizing marijuana but larger majorities believe pot has medical benefits and the government should allow its use for that purpose, according to an Associated Press-CNBC poll released Tuesday.

Respondents were skeptical that crime would spike if marijuana is decriminalized or that it would lead more people to harder drugs like heroin or cocaine. There also was a nearly even split on whether government spends too much or the right amount enforcing marijuana laws. Almost no one thinks too little is spent.

Marijuana use - medically and recreationally - is getting more attention in the political arena. California voters will decide in November whether to legalize the drug, and South Dakota will vote this fall on whether to allow medical uses. California and 13 other states already permit such use.

The balloting comes against the backdrop of the Obama administration saying it won't target marijuana dispensaries if they comply with state laws, a departure from the policy of the Bush administration, which sought to more stringently enforce the federal ban on marijuana use for any purpose.

In the poll, only 33 percent favor legalization while 55 percent oppose it. People under 30 were the only age group favoring legalization (54 percent) and opposition increased with age, topping out at 73 percent of those 65 and older. Opposition also was prevalent among women, Republicans and those in rural and suburban areas.

CBSNews.com Special Report: Marijuana Nation

Some opponents worried legalization would lead to reefer madness.

"I think it would be chaos if it was legalized," said Shirley Williams, a 75-year-old retired English teacher from Quincy, Illinois. "People would get in trouble and use marijuana as an excuse."

Those like Jeff Boggs, 25, of Visalia, California, who support legalization said the dangers associated with the drug have been overstated.

"People are scared about things they don't know about," said Boggs, who is married and works for an auto damage appraisal company.

Americans are more accepting of medical marijuana. Sixty percent support the idea and 74 percent believe the drug has a real medical benefit for some people. Two-thirds of Democrats favor medical marijuana as do a slim majority of Republicans, 53 percent.

Peoples' views on legalizing marijuana or on allowing its use for medicinal purposes were largely uniform across different regions of the country, despite the fact that legal medical marijuana use is concentrated in the West.

California was the first state to approve medical marijuana, in 1996, and has been the hub of the so-called "Green Rush" to legalize marijuana. But a patchwork of local laws in the state has created confusion about the law and lax oversight led to an explosion of medical marijuana dispensaries in some places.

In Los Angeles, the number of dispensaries exploded from four to upward of 1,000 in the past five years. Police believe some were nothing but fronts for drug dealers to sell marijuana to people who have no medical need, and the city recently adopted an ordinance to reduce that number to 70 in coming months.

Among those surveyed, 45 percent said the cost of enforcing existing laws is too high and 48 percent said it's about right. Democrats, men and young people were most apt to say the cost is exorbitant.

CBS News medical correspondent Dr. Jennifer Ashton on the medical marijuana debate:


Watch CBS News Videos Online

With state and local governments desperate for cash, some legalization proponents are pushing marijuana as a potential revenue stream. But only 14 percent of those surveyed who oppose legalization would change their mind if states were to tax the drug.

John Lovell, a spokesman with the California Narcotics Officers' Association, said he wasn't surprised by the poll results because people already are aware of widespread abuse of legal prescription drugs and alcohol.

"Given that reality, we don't need to add another mind-altering substance that compromises people's five senses," Lovell said.

Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, said that, since the organization was formed in 1970, there's been a slow but steady erosion of opposition to marijuana.

"Every single metric is pushing toward a zeitgeist in marijuana reform," he said.

The AP-CNBC Poll was conducted April 7-12, 2010, by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Media. It involved interviews with 1,001 adults nationwide on landline and cellular telephones. It had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 59 Comments
by theunique1 June 18, 2010 4:19 PM EDT
Although it gets you high. It IS medicine. Anti-inflammatory, neuroprotectant and antioxidant. It can also be soaked in alcohol for 2 weeks and rubbed on sore joints and muscles. It also relieves stress and reduces pain and nausea. If you don't like it, nobody is forcing you to use it. And if you do like it, no one has the right to prohibit you from using it.
Reply to this comment
by Jamessandra June 16, 2010 5:19 PM EDT
All excuses in the world won't change why most people still want the drug - to get away from reality and live in la-la land
Reply to this comment
by theunique1 June 18, 2010 4:22 PM EDT
And so what? It's their body and their choice, not yours. How would you like it if someone forced you to use it? It's the same thing. Get out of other people's business please and mind your own--only.
by Jamessandra June 16, 2010 5:14 PM EDT
When will people stop trying to take drugs so they don't have to face realty ?
Reply to this comment
by NinthSt78 June 16, 2010 5:02 PM EDT
Take the "gin" out of the bathtub, and put it back in the "victory gardens" and "peace pipes" where it belongs. Stop trying to tell the indian that his medicine isn't any good, and that the "white man's" commercialized medicine is better.
Reply to this comment
by jscottelwood-2009 May 11, 2010 7:40 AM EDT
It is simply Holistic medicine...just make sure that you state in the disclaimer that "This product is not intended to identify, prevent or cure any disease"
Reply to this comment
by polaral May 4, 2010 3:27 PM EDT
The answer is simple: As a natural agent, pharmaceutical companies can't patent cannibis and know that it's legal use would might threaten their stanglehold on the American public. Put pot against Valium and guess who'd win. If Lilly or Pfizer could make money off of pot, it would be legal in time for Christmas!
Reply to this comment
by polaral May 4, 2010 3:18 PM EDT
It was interesting to note that people in the age groups most likely to have used marijuana back in the 60's and 70's are less inclined to favor it's legalization now. Seems people do get more conservative with age.
Reply to this comment
by tauleonardo April 21, 2010 10:25 AM EDT
I worked as a Program Physician with seriously drug-addicted patients for years, and I understand the scientific fallacy of classifying cannabis in the same group with heroin and cocaine. The "orthodox" addiction medicine establishment is by no means scientifically independent - it speaks and writes in accordance with DEA wishes, views and directives. What is being concealed from us is that marijuana, as opposed to most controlled prescription drugs and alcohol, has not had one single case of fatal overdose, does not have a documented physical withdrawal syndrome and has the addiction liability of 3% compared with 10% for alcohol and about 20% for "legal" as well as illegal opiates (Morphine, heroin). It has also been shown that cannabis use suppresses violent crime (Substance Abuse: A Comprehensive Textbook, 4-th Edition). Medicinal qualities of marijuana plant are numerous and varied, the very latest being that some of the plant components potentially "switch off" the aggressive breast cancer gene. In the end, the science will prevail over fear, as it always does.
Reply to this comment
by tauleonardo April 21, 2010 10:25 AM EDT
I worked as a Program Physician with seriously drug-addicted patients for years, and I understand the scientific fallacy of classifying cannabis in the same group with heroin and cocaine. The "orthodox" addiction medicine establishment is by no means scientifically independent - it speaks and writes in accordance with DEA wishes, views and directives. What is being concealed from us is that marijuana, as opposed to most controlled prescription drugs and alcohol, has not had one single case of fatal overdose, does not have a documented physical withdrawal syndrome and has the addiction liability of 3% compared with 10% for alcohol and about 20% for "legal" as well as illegal opiates (Morphine, heroin). It has also been shown that cannabis use suppresses violent crime (Substance Abuse: A Comprehensive Textbook, 4-th Edition). Medicinal qualities of marijuana plant are numerous and varied, the very latest being that some of the plant components potentially "switch off" the aggressive breast cancer gene. In the end, the science will prevail over fear, as it always does.
Reply to this comment
by Phil_E_Drifter April 20, 2010 11:23 PM EDT
So many stupid g*ddamn people.

IT'S NOT A WAR ON (SOME) DRUGS IT'S A WAR ON MINORITIES.

TO REPLACE OUTLAWED SLAVE LABOR WITH PRISON LABOR.

Read ***********/1mn
Read ***********/waronminorities
then read ***********/potconviction

ALCOHOL IS THE MOST DANGEROUS DRUG ON THE PLANET. No other drug, legal or not, turns its user into a belligerent, stumbling moron but alcohol.
Reply to this comment
See all 59 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook