
New York Times Admits Marijuana Crisis After Years of Cheerleading for Legalisation
After years of advocacy for the drug, the New York Times concedes that legal marijuana has delivered addiction, health harms, and deeply troubling social consequences.
The New York Times editorial board has admitted that its predictions about marijuana legalisation were “wrong” and is now calling for federal taxation and stricter controls on the drug after years of championing unfettered access.
In an editorial published last Sunday titled “It’s Time for America to Admit That It Has a Marijuana Problem,” the board conceded that addiction, health consequences and daily use have surged far beyond what advocates originally predicted.
The Times originally ran a six-part series in 2014 urging US Congress to repeal the federal marijuana ban.
At the time, the board described marijuana addiction as a “relatively minor” problem, and suggested legalisation would not lead to a significant increase in its use.
“It is now clear that many of these predictions were wrong,” the editorial explained over the weekend. “Legalisation has led to much more use.”
The reversal comes as approximately 18 million Americans now use marijuana almost daily — up from six million in 2012, and less than one million in 1992. More Americans now use marijuana daily than alcohol, according to the Times’ own reporting.
Harms Exceed Predictions
The editorial cites rising rates of cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome — a condition causing severe vomiting and stomach pain — which affects nearly 2.8 million people annually in the US.
Hospital admissions for paranoia and chronic psychotic disorders linked to marijuana have also increased, as well as injuries and death caused by drug-impaired driving.
The editorial identifies commercial marijuana companies — collectively known as “Big Weed” — as a driver of misleading health claims and aggressive marketing. Companies have falsely claimed their products treat cancer and Alzheimer’s, and have sold marijuana in packaging that mimics snacks marketed to children, including brands called “Trips Ahoy” and “Double Stuf Stoneo.”
By 2024, the legal marijuana industry had grown to more than US$30 billion. More than half of industry sales cater to the roughly 20 percent of customers classified as heavy users, the editorial notes.
‘Grudging Toleration’ Proposed
The Times stops short of calling for re-criminalisation of the drug. It opposes efforts to ban recreational marijuana sales, and claims that “a society that allows adults to use alcohol and tobacco cannot sensibly arrest people for marijuana use.”
Instead, the board advocates for what it calls “grudging toleration” — a framework popularised by the late drug policy scholar Mark Kleiman. If adopted, this approach would keep marijuana legal but impose stricter controls to curb its harms, similar to existing regulations on alcohol and tobacco.
The editorial proposes three measures: a federal tax on marijuana set at “dollars per joint, not cents,” to deter excessive use; restrictions on high-potency products, including an outright ban on marijuana that exceeds 60 percent THC; and federal action against dispensaries making false medical claims, including the closure of businesses found to be non-compliant.
Trump Reclassification Criticised
The Times criticised President Donald Trump’s December decision to reclassify marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III under federal law. The Grey Lady described Trump’s move as a windfall for marijuana companies rather than casual users, arguing his reclassification will reduce the tax burden on marijuana businesses and thereby increasing their profits.
“Marijuana companies, not casual smokers, are the biggest winners of Mr Trump’s decision,” the editorial claims.
The editorial concludes that “the loosening of marijuana policies — especially the decision to legalise pot without adequately regulating it — has led to worse outcomes than many Americans expected.”
“It is time to acknowledge reality and change course,” the board writes.
The reversal marks a significant shift for the Times, which has been among the most prominent cultural voices arguing for the legalisation of marijuana over the past decade.
The editorial’s acknowledgment of harm echoes warnings from Australian experts about the marijuana industry’s manipulation of public perception, and the documented links between chronic cannabis use and psychosis, mental illness and violence.
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Too late for some families
In the meantime in Australia, in the home of politics Canberra, weed is legal to grow and smoke. Rather than focus on something happening somewhere else on the other side of the world, how about Kurt, you do a deep dive into what’s going on in our own Capital of Australia and the outcomes and health concerns there. They’ve had weed for yrs there. Surely there are some stats you can dig up from Drs and hospitals there, as well as the Police there rather than rely upon some media source overseas! Think about it. Canberra has had legal marijuana use for yrs longer than most of the places in the US. Surely if there are any real telling outcomes then Canberra is the go to! We have its use long term here in our own backyard and your go to is the US!?
Strange!
Misleading Headline “New York Times Admits Marijuana Crisis After Years of Cheerleading for Legalisation”. This framing is loaded and adversarial. It implies: A total ideological reversal, A “crisis” narrative, Reckless advocacy (“cheerleading”). Even based on the article’s own summary, the editorial in The New York Times does not call for recriminalisation, nor does it describe legalisation as a total failure. It advocates tighter regulation — a policy refinement, not an admission of catastrophe. Calling this a “marijuana crisis” is deliberately misleading.
The piece cites: 18 million daily users, 2.8 million annual cases of cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, Rising hospital admissions, $30 billion industry revenue. The claim is presented without: Source clarification, Diagnostic criteria explanation, Comparison to other substance-related conditions. That figure is debated in medical literature and depends heavily on diagnostic coding assumptions. Also, “More Americans Use Marijuana Daily Than Alcohol”. This claim is presented dramatically but without clarifying: “Daily use” of alcohol is far less common than total alcohol consumption. Alcohol-related deaths (~140,000 annually in the U.S.) far exceed cannabis-related mortality. The comparison may be technically true but rhetorically misleading.
The article adopts advocacy terminology such as: “Big Weed”. This mirrors “Big Tobacco” framing. While large cannabis corporations do exist, the phrase is rhetorically designed to: Invoke corporate villain imagery; Suggest corruption and deception; Pre-judge industry motives. It substitutes framing for analysis.
Unverified or Overgeneralised Claims. “documented links between chronic cannabis use and psychosis, mental illness and violence.” This is an oversimplification. Research shows: An association between heavy cannabis use and increased risk of psychosis in vulnerable individuals. Correlation does not equal causation. Violence links are far more contested and not strongly supported as direct causal evidence. The inclusion of “violence” without qualification is especially problematic and sensational.
Benefits of legalisation (tax revenue, reduced arrests, reduced incarceration disparities), Reduced black market activity, Criminal justice reform impacts, The harms are emphasised; the benefits are omitted, such as Reduced marijuana arrests, Reduced racial disparities in enforcement, State tax revenue funding education and public services, No consistent evidence of increased teen use post-legalisation. By excluding these, the piece presents a one-directional harm narrative.
The article highlights criticism of Donald Trump for reclassification but frames it as: a windfall for marijuana companies. This ignores that Schedule III classification would: Allow medical research expansion; Reduce federal-state legal conflict; Improve banking access for regulated businesses. Whether one supports or opposes reclassification, the article presents only the corporate-profit angle.
The final paragraph frames the editorial as: “a significant shift”” echoes warnings from Australian experts”. This reinforces a culture-war narrative: progressive institutions being forced to concede defeat. It reads less like policy reporting and more like ideological score-settling.
Yeah lazy journalism parotting something from a source totally unrelated to Australia when we have an actual place here that can be investigated with things like harm, hospitalizations, police reports etc.
Weak story, lazy journalism.
You’re welcome to disagree with the article David, but posting a rapid series of critiques under a concealed identity isn’t acceptable here. We expect good-faith engagement under a real name, not comment-flooding. Please consolidate your points into one comment and engage transparently. Further issues will lead to moderation.
Great and needed article Kurt! I have a number of my friends who were heavy users of Marijuana who became psychotic if not deranged. Marijuana is an evil insidious drug and I am glad to see the truth coming out!
Thank you Kurt for this article …massive problems I am aware of through addictions to weed in communities in Central Australia