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On Feb. 9 the New York Times editorial board — which has long supported marijuana legalization — published a major reassessment, saying the loosening of U.S. marijuana policies has produced worse outcomes than expected and calling for stronger regulation.
The board cited survey data showing roughly 18 million Americans use marijuana almost daily, up from about 6 million in 2012 and under 1 million in 1992.
It highlighted rising health harms including nearly 2.8 million annual cases of cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome, more hospitalizations for marijuana-linked paranoia and chronic psychotic disorders, and injuries tied to impaired driving.
The editorial rejects a return to broad criminalization — noting the disproportionate harms of past drug enforcement on Black, Latino and poor communities — but argues the current hands-off, commercialized approach has gone too far and urges lawmakers to adopt stricter controls on availability, potency, advertising and other aspects of the legal market.
The piece follows federal easing of restrictions in December and comes as states consider ballot measures and regulatory changes.
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