Survey: 3M more U.S. pot smokers in last decade

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
WASHINGTON - A new government survey says more Americans are smoking marijuana, but other notorious illegal drugs have fallen off.
Nearly 7 percent of Americans aged 12 or older were illicit pot smokers in 2010, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, released Thursday. That is 3 million more users than earlier in the decade.
Does pot prevent obesity? What new study says
Facebook linked to teen drinking, drug abuse
"Synthetic marijuana" blamed for teen's death
At the same time, meth use has plunged by about half and cocaine use including crack is down sharply in the last few years.
The annual survey by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration also found declines from 2009 in tobacco use and binge drinking among teens.
One glaring problem: 23 million Americans needed treatment for a substance abuse problem in 2010, but fewer than 3 million received it.
17 stoner states: Where's marijuana use highest?
This week, the Border Patrol working the Arizona desert got a firsthand glimpse into how much marijuana comes into the country. Agents seized a total of 3,200 pounds of marijuana worth more than $1.6 million.
Government agents tracking suspected illegal immigrants Sunday found six bundles weighing less than 279 pounds and valued at $139,000.
In another incident Sunday, agents responded to a detection sensor and found five bundles of abandoned marijuana weighing more than 218 pounds. The bundles were estimated to be worth approximately $109,000.
Agents also recovered bundles of marijuana during routine searches last week. One search produced 75 bundles of marijuana weighing 1,840 pounds and valued at $920,000. Another search recovered 53 packages pot worth $156,000.
Federal agents also recovered 282 pounds of pot with a value of $140,500.
Popular on CBSNews.com
- TWA Flight 800 gets another look 17 years later 108 Comments
- America's endangered historic places 11 Photos
- FBI: No sign of Jimmy Hoffa's body in Detroit suburb
- Reporter Michael Hastings dies at 33
- Serena Williams sorry for "what I supposedly said" on rape
- TWA Flight 800 disaster - a look back 19 Photos
- Taliban: We killed 4 U.S. troops at Afghan air base
- Scientists say shipwreck timber in Lake Michigan centuries old















I don't need to repeat the things everyone else has said, I'm just going to say I agree with about 95% of the people who have posted, because I believe they are correct. In the realm of common sense, this stance seems to be more common than not. This prohibition just does not make any moral or logical sense. When the realization that prohibition essentially is making this country shoot itself in the nose to spite its face comes to surface to a degree that truly, physically mandates this to change, the better off we'll be.
Occasionally, some unfortunate people end up with a job that make other people dislike or even hate them. It's no fun and can be very stressful. It's really hard to go and do something that you know is doing nothing but harm seven days a week and it can become quite depressing, dangerous even. It may also lead to you not only feeling guilty as hell but also very insecure at the thought of all those angry citizens that have generally become cheesed off at the thought of all the mayhem you've caused to their lives.
What should you do? Easy; humbly hang your head in abject shame, and come clean. Admit you have unwittingly become part & parcel of one of the most horrific government policies in the history of mankind, and then hope you'll get to keep your pathetic shrunken testicles.