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How Australians Feel About Legalising Cannabis

poledriver

Bluelighter
Joined
Jul 21, 2005
Messages
11,543
How Australians Feel About Legalising Cannabis

In January 2015, Roy Morgan Research asked Australians 14+ the question, "In your opinion should the smoking of Cannabis* be made legal - or remain illegal?". Judging by more recent media reports, the use of Cannabis for medical purposes could become legal in Australia in the foreseeable future. Politicians such as New South Wales Premier Mike Baird and Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews expressed their support for the idea, and clinical trials are to start in 2016. But how do Australians feel about the legalisation of Cannabis?

Over the last decade, the proportion of the population who believe it should be made legal has grown from 26.8% (2004) to 31.8% (2014). In this time, the 65+ age bracket has seen the largest proportional increase in favour of legalisation, rising from 16.9% to 25.5% (a 50% growth rate). However, this is still well behind young Australians aged 18-24 (35.7%), the age group with the most support for making smoking Cannabis legal.


marijuana-attitude-chart.jpg


The belief that smoking Cannabis should be made legal has become more widespread across all ages except 25-34 year olds (among whom it has declined fractionally). Even 14-17 year olds, traditionally the least likely to support legalisation, seem to have become more open to the idea in the last 10 years, having gone from 15.5% in favour to 20.7%. University-educated Australians are more likely than those who didn’t complete high school to agree that smoking Cannabis should be made legal: 35.8% of people currently at university and 32.3% of tertiary graduates are in favour, compared with 30.9% of people who finished at year 10 and 28.4% of people with ‘some secondary’ education.

Of course, Aussies’ growing conviction that Cannabis smoking should be made legal means the proportion who want it to remain illegal is declining. In 2004, 64.1% of the population thought smoking Cannabis should remain illegal; by 2014, it sat at 56.8%. Still a majority, it has to be said, but not such a large one. Meanwhile, the proportion of Australians who are undecided on this issue has risen from 9.2% to 11.4%.

Michele Levine, CEO, Roy Morgan Research, said:

“Whether someone feels that smoking Cannabis should be made legal or not often indicates how progressive or traditional their social attitudes are in general. In fact, the gradual increase in the proportion of Australians who support legalisation corresponds with an increase in the proportion who describe their ‘viewpoint with regard to social issues and social trends in Australia’ as somewhat or very progressive.

However, the current debate is centred on medical use rather than personal recreational use, so this casts a different light on the issue, and may provide a clue as to why there has been significant growth in support for legalisation among Australians aged 50 and over. Medical Cannabis has been found to provide relief from, or slow the progress of, several conditions that are not uncommon among older people: glaucoma, cancer, Alzheimer’s, arthritis, Parkinson’s disease and more (of course, it’s also worth noting that many Aussies aged 50+ would have been part of the hippy movement in the 1960's and 1970's, which had very liberal views on Cannabis use).

Having measured Australians’ attitudes to societal, political, environmental and health issues for many years, Roy Morgan Research has accumulated data that can assist government departments wishing to gauge how the population is feeling about particular issues at any given time”.

http://hempedification.blogspot.com.au/2015/10/how-australians-feels-about-legalising.html
 
I think that it should be made legal because they have syntehtic weed in every single shop that sells bongs and stuff gives people seizures and has killed people , weed has never killed anyone :)
 
+1 on what Drderms said.

I'm a schizophrenic with repressed memories/PTSD and i can't touch weed, it causes me psychosis but i still think it should be legalised for the harm reduction factors. Also i know many cannabis users who can function fine and smoke it. Just because they're are mentally people like me doesn't mean it should remain illegal
 
The whole fallacy of what once was legal and fake weed, angers me a lot as a REAL green smoker. I would feel honoured to have just a single day where i could buy at a store.
 
14-17 year olds with the highest percentage saying "no"? Well that was unexpected. I guess the DARE-type-of-thing is working well, or somebody explain this to me...
 
Sadly, it matters less what the people think than what the government plans in order to keep the war on drug(user)s going.
 
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