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mahatmakanejeeves

(60,739 posts)
Thu Aug 7, 2014, 09:28 AM Aug 2014

Since marijuana legalization, highway fatalities in Colorado are at near-historic lows

The article has more to do with how to analyze statistics than it does with drug policy. People who want to make the statistics show that we're headed to hell in a hand basket will find just what they need, as will people who are looking for the opposite conclusion.

Since marijuana legalization, highway fatalities in Colorado are at near-historic lows

By Radley Balko August 5 

Since Colorado voters legalized pot in 2012, prohibition supporters have warned that recreational marijuana will lead to a scourge of “drugged divers” on the state’s roads. They often point out that when the state legalized medical marijuana in 2001, there was a surge in drivers found to have smoked pot. They also point to studies showing that in other states that have legalized pot for medical purposes, we’ve seen an increase in the number of drivers testing positive for the drug who were involved in fatal car accidents. The anti-pot group SAM recently pointed out that even before the first legal pot store opened in Washington state, the number of drivers in that state testing positive for pot jumped by a third.

The problem with these criticisms is that we can test only for the presence of marijuana metabolites, not for inebriation. Metabolites can linger in the body for days after the drug’s effects wear off — sometimes even for weeks. Because we all metabolize drugs differently (and at different times and under different conditions), all that a positive test tells us is that the driver has smoked pot at some point in the past few days or weeks.

It makes sense that loosening restrictions on pot would result in a higher percentage of drivers involved in fatal traffic accidents having smoked the drug at some point over the past few days or weeks. You’d also expect to find that a higher percentage of churchgoers, good Samaritans and soup kitchen volunteers would have pot in their system. You’d expect a similar result among any large sampling of people. This doesn’t necessarily mean that marijuana caused or was even a contributing factor to accidents, traffic violations or fatalities.

This isn’t an argument that pot wasn’t a factor in at least some of those accidents, either. But that’s precisely the point. A post-accident test for marijuana metabolites doesn’t tell us much at all about whether pot contributed to the accident.
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Radley Balko blogs about criminal justice, the drug war and civil liberties for The Washington Post. He is the author of the book "Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces."
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Since marijuana legalization, highway fatalities in Colorado are at near-historic lows (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Aug 2014 OP
"drugged divers" on state roads are the worst! tridim Aug 2014 #1
Because they're all driving 45mph on the freeway..lol misterhighwasted Aug 2014 #2

tridim

(45,358 posts)
1. "drugged divers" on state roads are the worst!
Thu Aug 7, 2014, 10:14 AM
Aug 2014

The ocean called...

Seriously, the big point here is that the drug warriors are proven liars. None of their dire warnings are coming true, and reality is usually the opposite of what they predict.

The debate is over. We won.

misterhighwasted

(9,148 posts)
2. Because they're all driving 45mph on the freeway..lol
Fri Aug 8, 2014, 08:04 PM
Aug 2014

I remember driving the Interstate highway & thinking I was speeding. A quick glance at the car's speedometer I read "45 mph".
We'd all be safer on the road . But we'd all be really late 4 work..everyday.

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