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Ten Talking Points about the Cannabis Debate

SAM MN (OCTOBER 2019)

1. Cannabis is NOT a safe drug.
a. Cannabis is NOT a harmless drug; the part of the plant that gets you high, THC, is addictive (between 9% to 30% may develop a cannabis use disorder), and the THC potency these days is much stronger than in the past.
b. THC contributes to many health problems (e.g., mental illness, learning and memory impairment and impaired driving)
c. We have enough problems already with the two legal “recreational” drugs (nicotine and alcohol); adding a third legal intoxicant is a bad idea.

2. Cannabis may or may not be a medicine that helps Vets (or non-Vets).
a. It is too early to say if the marijuana plant is effective medicine in treating pain or PTSD, although there are many studies underway.
b. Current research showed insufficient evidence to draw conclusions about the benefits and harms. One study showed it was significantly associated with worse outcomes for PTSD.
c. Smoking marijuana is not medicine. d. MN has a medical marijuana program that could be improved. We do not need to commercialize it to improve this program.

3. Marijuana does not replace opioids for pain
a. February 1, 2019 study showed low strength evidence that marijuana alleviated neuropathic pain and that marijuana as an efficacious treatment for opioid use was even weaker.
b. New study reverses finding of 2014 study and found an increase of 23% in opioid deaths

4. The state will not benefit from sizeable tax revenues.
a. Commercialization backers rarely discuss the costs associated with widespread use of the drug on health care, mental health services, law enforcement, businesses and consumers.
i. Estimated health and social costs per dollar of tax revenue
1. Alcohol $13
2. Tobacco $9
3. Estimated marijuana $4.5
b. California’s pot-related tax revenue missed projections by more than 50 percent, and the former governor of Colorado has said tax revenue from pot won’t solve fiscal challenges faced by states and municipalities.

5. Adolescent use will likely increase because the minimum legal age will be 21.
a. The US Surgeon General just stated “No amount of marijuana use during pregnancy or adolescence is known to be safe.”
b. Recent data indicate an overall higher rate of underage cannabis use in commercial cannabis states vs non-commercial cannabis states.
c. If history is informative, the rate of drug use by adolescents eventually increases if that drug becomes more accessible.
d. How is the minimum legal age of 21 for alcohol working?

6. Cannabis users have been unjustly punished by law enforcement.
a. Commercializing cannabis has not resolved social injustice issues. African Americans are twice as likely to be arrested for marijuana in commercialization states of Colorado and Washington. Denver: cannabis stores are clustered in minority neighborhoods, similar to liquor stores in low income areas.
b. Minnesota: Possession of less than 1 ½ ounces is a petty misdemeanor.
c. A very small percent of Minnesotans are incarcerated for cannabis use, and many of those had prior felony convictions.
d. We support decriminalization not commercialization

7. The black Market will not be eliminated.
a. The opposite is occurring in legalization states. In 2018 CA grew 15 million pounds of pot but only sold 2.5 million.
b. The black market is expanding as they undercut the retail price.

8. Cannabis is not commonly used.
a. Most Minnesotans older than 25 do not use cannabis (~11% report prior year use); the majority of users are in the 18-25year-old range (~37% report prior year use).
b. These MN rates are similar to the national average.

9. Legalization is not necessarily inevitable.
a. 10 states in the past two years have applied the brakes to full legalization efforts (CT, FL, MN, ND, NH, NJ, NM, NY, WI, VT).
b. What does legalization mean? When poll questions are properly asked, only about one-third of Americans favor full, commercial legalization.

10. Prohibition was not a failed policy.
a. Governments legislate all kinds of “prohibitions” in the name of public health and public safety and they work (e.g., indoor smoking restrictions)
b. The prohibition on alcohol decreased liver disease, domestic abuse and public drunkenness
c. We have enough problems with the two legal recreational drugs – nicotine and alcohol. We do not need another one added to the legal list. d. Should we lift the prohibition on all illicit drugs?

References

  1. www.nationalacademies.org/cannabishealtheffects
  2. Volkow, N. D., Swanson, J. M., Evins, A. E., DeLisi, L. E., Meier, M. H., Gonzalez, R., … & Baler, R. (2016). Effects of cannabis use on human behavior, including cognition, motivation, and psychosis: A review. JAMA Psychiatry, 73(3), 292-297.
  3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28806794
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6258013/
  5. https://www.pnas.org/content/116/26/12624
  6. https://learnaboutsam.org
  7. https://learnaboutsam.org Costs
  8. http://alcohol-psr.changelabsolutions.org/alcohol-psr-faqs/alcohol-taxes-faq/alcohol-tax-revenues-social-and-health-costsgovernment-expenditures/#sec3q7
  9. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/12/141210121403.htm and https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/economics/econ_facts/index.htm
  10. https://learnaboutsam.org/new-report-cost-of-marijuana-legalization-far-outweighs-tax-revenues/
  11. https://www.hhs.gov/surgeongeneral/reports-and-publications/addiction-and-substance-misuse/advisory-on-marijuana-use-anddeveloping-brain/index.html
  12. National Survey of Drug Use and Health. (2017). https://www.samhsa.gov/data/nsduh/reports-detailed-tables2017-NSDUH
  13. https://www.mjfactcheck.org/potency
  14. https://learnaboutsam.org Lessons Learned Social Justice
  15. MN Department of Corrections Fact Sheet: Drug Offenders in Prisons, 2018
  16. https://learnaboutsam.org Lessons Learned Black Market
  17. National Survey of Drug Use and Health. (2017). https://www.samhsa.gov/data/nsduh/reports-detailed-tables2017-NSDUH 18 https://learnaboutsam.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/ECP_SAM_National_Poll_20190218-2.pdf

Marijuana prison stats

Despite the false narrative being pushed by Representative Winkler, here are the real facts from our own Minnesota Department of Corrections:

Out of 10,114 people in prison ONLY 50 people are there for marijuana and 70 % of those have prior felony convictions.

Remember: Minnesota decriminalized marijuana possession many years ago; only sales and possession of large amounts remains a felony!

Fact sheet: MN DOC – Drug Offenders

Fact sheet: Cost of legalization in Colorado

Fact sheet: ONDCP “Who’s really in prison for marijuana?”

LOCK PICKING AND SPECIALIZED ENTRY TECHNIQUES

Hosted by Minnesota State Association of Narcotics Investigations
(MSANI)
Presented by
HOLLOTEC

COURSE DESCRIPTION: Patrol officers, investigators, probation and parole officers, narcotic officers, and tactical teams are often faced with the task of entering a building to serve search and arrest warrants, to carry out hostage rescues, or to conduct welfare checks on elderly persons or the reported victims of violence. Military special operations personnel have to resort to stealth entries to secrete themselves in hostile environments, to conduct sensitive building entries, and to place forward observers and precision shooters. Conservation officers are often required to access areas protected by padlocked gates. This course will introduce students to
basic lock picking skills, as well as a variety of other options for lock bypassing beyond the conventional forced entry. Students will have an opportunity to develop new skills by picking more than 150 different training locks. In addition, important intelligence gathering and preplanning issues will be discussed that facilitate a mission conclusion.

Each student will receive a syllabus which highlights the information presented during the training, their own lock pick set, and a list of suggested specialty tools. All equipment needed during the course will be provided.

DATES: April 8-9, 2019 / 0800-1700 (M/T)
LOCATION: Blue Earth County Justice Center
401 Carver Rd.
Mankato, MN 56001