“It sounds like you’ve been hanging around with Nancy Reagan in 1983,” Maher told him.
“I used to have your position, I used to think marijuana was no big deal,” said Kennedy, who leads the organization Smart Approaches to Marijuana. “When I learned more of the facts, I changed my views on this.”
Kennedy’s primary complaint was that legalization would lead to rampant use among children. “If you give a permissive environment you’re gonna have more kids use,” he told Maher.
“Come on, man,” Maher said. “This is like global warming denying. This is stuff we heard years ago.”
Kennedy argued that the marijuana legalization would primarily benefit major corporations, who would follow the tobacco industry’s lead in targeting children.
“You’re reasoning is adults shouldn’
“I led the effort in Congress for drug courts, because I don’t believe people out to be incarcerated because of an addiction,” Kennedy said to applause, the only time in the segment the audience was with him. He insisted that if the public knew the facts about marijuana, they would change their minds about the drug. “If you legalize, there’s going to be greater use, that’s a fact.”
“You still haven’t proved to me why that’s a bad thing,” Maher said, but added, “I don’t think kids should use it.”
This was Kennedy’s sticking point. “We know with a developing brain, if kids think there’s no big deal with this thing, and more of them use, it’s going to impact their developing brain. The bottom line is if we care about kids’ healthy development, why do we want to add a new drug—”
“Well, it’s hardly a
Watch the segment here, via HBO:
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