US marijuana policy edges toward acceptance | Christian Science Monitor
Uncle Sam isn’t ready to light up just yet, but the Obama administration and at least some Republican governors seem to be edging toward a more accepting attitude toward marijuana use. Or at least they’re falling in line with that majority of Americans – 58 percent, according to Gallup – who favor legalization of marijuana.
US Attorney General Eric Holder this week said the federal government will issue banking regulations for state-approved marijuana businesses licensed to sell the drug for recreational or medical use.
Read more: US marijuana policy edges toward acceptance | Christian Science Monitor
Obama on the problem of criminalizing marijuana use | CNN
Waukesha, Wisconsin – When it was pointed out that the President’s remarks to The New Yorker magazine about marijuana – which he described as a bad habit but not any worse for a person than alcohol – contradict the administration’s official policy on marijuana, Obama stood by his views.
The President declined to say whether he would support removing marijuana as a “Schedule One” narcotic, a classification that includes heroin and ecstasy.
“I stand by my belief based on the scientific evidence that marijuana for casual users, individual users, is subject to abuse, just like alcohol is and should be treated as a public health problem and challenge,” Obama said in an exclusive interview with CNN.
Read more: Obama on the problem of criminalizing marijuana use | CNN
Barack Obama Says Marijuana Classification Change Job For Congress | TIME
President Barack Obama says in a new interview that that it’s up to Congress to remove marijuana from the federal government’s list of the most serious narcotics, implying but not explicitly saying that he might support such a move.
In an interview with CNN that aired Friday, Obama was pressed on recent remarks he made to the New Yorker that marijuana is no more dangerous than alcohol, and on whether he would push to remove pot from the Drug Enforcement Agency’s list of so-called “schedule I” narcotics.
Read more: Barack Obama Says Marijuana Classification Change Job For Congress | TIME