According to a survey of the Pew Research Center, one in about six Americans (61%) should legitimize the use of marijuana, reflecting steady growth over the past six years. In a survey conducted in October, the percentage of American adults who support legalization of marijuana has not changed very much since one year ago, 57% of which supported marijuana - but almost twice that in 2000 (31%).
As in the past, legalization of marijuana has a wide range of differences between generations and factions. Most millennial generation (70%), generation X (66%), baby boomers (56%) state that the use of marijuana should be legal. Not a legitimization of marijuana (35%), only the generation of silence, the proportion of opponents is large (58%)
Nearly one-seventh of Democrats say that the use of marijuana should be legal. In contrast, only 43% of Republicans support legalization of marijuana, 55% oppose
Both sides are classified by age from the viewpoint of legalization of marijuana, but the difference between Republicans is particularly evident.
Among Republicans and Republican-oriented independents, people under the age of forty agree to legalize the use of marijuana, 62% to 38%. There are differences in Republicans from 40 to 64 years old (48% are legal and 49% are illegal), while Republicans 65 years and over have 2 to 1 (67% to 30 years old ) Against the legalization of marijuana%)
A considerable number of Democrats and Democrats are younger than 40 years old (79%) and 40 years old to 64 years old (70%) who are promoting legalization of marijuana. The elderly - people over the age of 65 - are further divided (50% supports legalization and 42% has disagreed)
As more and more states legalize drugs for entertainment purposes, the public is increasingly supporting legal marijuana. Since voters legalized this practice in November 2016, California stores began selling casual marijuana this week. We are also legalizing drugs for entertainment purposes in the other seven states and the District of Columbia. At the same time, 29 states (including the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico) are legalizing medicines for medical purposes.
According to federal law, marijuana is still illegal and Jeff Sessions Minister of Justice announced this week that the Ministry of Justice could strengthen law enforcement in jurisdictions where drugs are legalized.
A new study by the Pew Research Center shows that one in six Americans (62%) should use cannabis use should be legalized, reflecting steady growth over the past decade I will. The proportion of American adults that support legalization of marijuana has remained almost unchanged from a year ago - 61% at that time supported marijuana - but it was twice as much as in 2000 (31%). As in the past, legalization of marijuana has a wide range of differences between generations and factions. Most millennial generation (74%), generation X (63%), baby boomers (54%) say that the use of marijuana should be legal. Members of the silent generation do not support legalization the most (39%), but they have become more supportive in the past year.
The masses are increasingly supporting the legitimization of marijuana. A recent survey found that voters in the United States are supporting the legitimization of marijuana. According to the survey, nearly seven of the ten voters in the United States are supporting the legalization of marijuana, legalization of marijuana includes all political parties, the majority of gender and ethnic groups 7.2018 On 3 May, at the Quinnipiac University Poll, lawfully supported cannabis recorded record highs in New York State, 63% of New York voters endorse legalization of regulated adult cannabis It showed that it is 8.
According to a survey of the Pew Research Center, one in about six Americans (61%) should legitimize the use of marijuana, reflecting steady growth over the past six years. In this survey conducted in October, the proportion of American adults who supported the legalization of marijuana has not changed so much since one year ago, 57% supported marijuana. Times. As in the past, legalization of marijuana has a wide range of differences between generations and factions. Most millennial generation (70%), generation X (66%), baby boomers (56%) state that the use of marijuana should be legal. Not a legitimization of marijuana (35%), only the generation of silence, the proportion of opponents is large (58%)