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Six states to vote Tuesday on legalizing marijuana: Implosion Update

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Voters in six states will decide on Tuesday whether or not to legalize the use of marijuana for medical use, and even for recreational use. This should be deeply disturbing to Americans who see the country heading towards moral, spiritual and cultural implosion. Illegal drug use is already on the rise in the U.S. Young people often start by experimenting with marijuana, but then move on to even harder, more dangerous drugs. Marijuana use is already soaring among all Americans, and especially young people in the U.S. Now heroin use among suburban teens is soaring, too.

There are numerous reasons for growing drug abuse by teens. One is that American young people are in deep pain over seeing their families implode. Far too many youths are seeing their parents at war with each other, fighting, at times physically abusing one another, having affairs, committing adultery, getting separated, getting divorced. The break up of the American family is a pandemic. Increasingly, many kids are self-medicating to numb the emotional and spiritual (and at times physical) pain they are experiencing.

Advocates of legalizing marijuana try to portray pot as harmless. But the facts say the opposite: marijuana is an addictive, harmful and often destructive drug. Now is no time to legalize it and make it readily available for adults and teenagers.

According to the National Institute of Drug Abuse:

According to WebMD:

“Marijuana advocates have placed measures on ballots in six states dealing with the recreational or medical use of the drug, defying federal  efforts to crack down on use where it’s already legal,” reports Bloomberg news. “From Massachusetts to Oregon, measures on tomorrow’s ballots aim to make three states the first in the nation to allow recreational marijuana use and expand on the 17 states that already allow its medical use. ‘The attitudes about marijuana have changed sufficiently to make the issue of legalization politically viable and these initiatives are one way to measure that change,’ said Allen St. Pierre, executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, a Washington-based group that advocates legalizing marijuan. Voters in Oregon, Washington and Colorado will decide whether their states will become the first to legalize recreational use of marijuana. In Massachusetts and Arkansas, voters will consider legalizing it for medical use. In Montana, they’ll decide whether to affirm or reject a 2011 law that scaled back a 2004 initiative legalizing medical marijuana. St. Pierre said ballot measures in Washington state and Massachusetts have the best chance at winning voter approval. The Washington measure has the best political support, he said. The initiative has 55 percent backing among likely voters, with 38 percent opposed, according to a KCTS-9 Washington poll.”

>> To read Implosion: Can America Recover From Its Economic & Spiritual Challenges In Time?, please click here

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