Chris Cuomo Had a Former Leftist Call in to His Show. He Clearly...
The Right Needs Real America First Journalism
This Town Filled Its Coffers With a Traffic Shakedown Scheme – Now They...
Planned Parenthood: Infants Not 'Conscious Beings' and Unlikely to Feel Pain
Democrats Boycotting OpenAI Over Support for Trump
Roy Cooper Dodges Tough Questions About His Deadly Soft-on-Crime Policies
Axios Is Back With Another Ridiculous Anti-Trump Headline
In Historic Deregulatory Move, Trump Officially Revokes Obama-Era Endangerment Finding
Sen. Bernie Moreno Just Exposed Keith Ellison's Open Borders Hypocrisy
Another Career Criminal Killed a Beloved Figure Skating Coach in St. Louis
Slate's 'Leftists Are Buying Guns Now' Piece Unintentionally Hilarious
Federal Judge Blocks Pete Hegseth From Reducing Sen. Mark Kelly's Pay Over 'Seditious...
AG Pam Bondi Vows to Prosecute Threats Against Lawmakers, Even Across Party Lines
Senate Hearing Erupts After Josh Hawley Lays Out Why Keith Ellison Belongs in...
Nate Morris Slams Rep. Barr As a ‘RINO’ for Refusing to Support Ending...
Tipsheet

The Federal Government May Change Marijuana's Status This Summer

The Federal Government May Change Marijuana's Status This Summer

The Drug Enforcement Administration is considering relisting marijuana from its current Schedule 1 status under the Controlled Substances Act. A decision is expected by this summer.

Advertisement

Re-categorizing marijuana from Schedule 1 to Schedule 2 would open up scientific research for the drug. This change is supported by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association. Currently, marijuana is classified as being more dangerous than cocaine and opioid painkillers. It is impossible to die from an overdose of marijuana.

First set in 1970, marijuana's classification under the Controlled Substances Act has become increasingly out of step with scientific research, public opinion, medical use and state law. Citing marijuana's potentially significant therapeutic potential for a number of serious ailments, including chronic pain and epilepsy, organizations such as the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics have called on the DEA to change the drug's scheduling status.

A Schedule 1 classification means that there is no accepted medicinal use of the drug. In marijuana's case, this is simply untrue: the drug is used to treat everything from anorexia to glaucoma and has been for years. There's no reason to keep the drug at Schedule 1, and doing so is impeding important medical research that could change people's lives.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos