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Weed the People

The Future of Legal Marijuana in America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The legalization of marijuana is the next great reversal of history. Perhaps the most demonized substance in America, scientifically known as Cannabis sativa, simply a very fast growing herb, thrived underground as the nation's most popular illegal drug.
Now the tide has shifted: In 1996 California passed the nation's first medical marijuana law, which allowed patients to grow it and use it with a doctor's permission. By 2010, twenty states and the District of Columbia had adopted medical pot laws. In 2012 Colorado and Washington state passed ballot measures legalizing marijuana for adults age 21 and older.
The magnitude of the change in America's relationship to marijuana can't be measured in only economic or social terms: There are deeper shifts going on here - cultural realignments, social adjustments, and financial adjustments. The place of marijuana in our lives is being rethought, reconsidered, and recalibrated. Four decades after Richard Nixon declared a War on Drugs, that long campaign has reached a point of exhaustion and failure. The era of its winding down as arrived.
Weed the People will take readers a half-step into the future. The issues surrounding the legalization of pot vary from the trivial to the profound. There are new questions of social etiquette: Is one expected to offer a neighborly toke? If so, how? Is it cool to bring cannabis to a Super Bowl party? Yea or nay on the zoning permit for a marijuana shop two doors down from the Safeway? Plus, there are the inevitable conversations between parents and children over exactly what this adult experiment with marijuana means for them.
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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2015
      Journalist Barcott (The Last Flight of the Scarlet Macaw: One Woman's Fight to Save the World's Most Beautiful Bird, 2008, etc.) goes on a long, strange trip to document the changing fortunes of Big Dope.Fortunes is the operative word: There's plenty of money to be made in the marijuana business, and there are countless variations that can be found in the industry trade shows the author pops in on at various points in this engaging book. As he observes, it was the days of Richard Nixon that saw both a sharp upswing in prosecution for drug offenses and a loosening on the edges of various hemp-related crimes. Even in places such as North Carolina, not everyone bought Nixon's call for the death penalty for dealers, and several states "passed laws that made the possession of small amounts of pot legal or, at worst, a minor infraction." The pattern holds today: In Barcott's two case studies of Washington state and Colorado, possession and use of pot are legal, and the federal-state divide looms very wide-even as the public perception of marijuana is radically changing, such that in 2013, 58 percent of the respondents to a Gallup poll favored legalization. No stranger to on-the-ground research, the author secured a medical marijuana card, and he takes readers on a grand tour of dispensaries, potions, tinctures" and his own blown mind: "When you absorb more than 40 years of messages about the horrors of marijuana, walking into a dispensary where it's all on display, without shame or fear, can be an utterly disorienting experience." Yet, silly title aside, Barcott's book is entirely earnest. As the author notes, the feared explosion in crime has not happened in those test-case states, but its opposite has, while instances of racially based injustice and needless prosecutorial expenses have fallen dramatically. Will the rest of the country follow suit? To judge by Barcott's useful book, you'd do well not to bet against it.

    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2015

      The legalization (and ergo decriminalization) of marijuana use is one of the most dramatic and transformative social issues of our times. The recent legalization in Colorado and Washington State are only the latest manifestations of what has been a long history of legal regulation. What Barcott, a widely published nonfiction author and former Guggenheim fellow, brings to the table is a readable account of this history including some hilarious quotes from notables such as Richard Nixon. But the main emphasis of the book is a contemporary account of what the recent changes have wrought and what this changing world looks like. We get a glimpse into states where the penalties are still stiff for marijuana consumption and others where someone can walk in a store and simply buy an edible marijuana-laced gummi bear. The big questions still loom, however, as suggested by the subtitle. Barcott raises some fascinating topics but acknowledges that these are early days. Will the number of jurisdictions increase? How does the medical marijuana movement affect larger consumption subjects? VERDICT This fast-paced read contains great stories showing how these issues apply in everyday situations and will appeal to a broad range of readers.--David Azzolina, Univ. of Pennsylvania Libs., Philadelphia

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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