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zug_zug | 6 days ago
"Based on data from 2023–2025, approximately 15% to 17% of American adults currently consume cannabis." - Gallup
So though this may be technically true in some sense, it should also be understood that if cannabis had any major immediate drastic effects we would have noticed them decades ago. Perhaps weed, like alcohol, needs a legal minimum age of 21.
in-silico|6 days ago
Generally, it already does have a legal minimum age of 21.
intrasight|6 days ago
Very few things in life pass that test, which is why we have research studies
zug_zug|6 days ago
When it's a drug more than 10% of the US population uses, we can immediately say the risk increase can't really be that big or we'd have noticed it by now.
Edit: after looking at the paper, it looks like among the weed group the prevalence is roughly twice as high -- so instead of 1/100 having psychotic issue it'd be 2/100... and again for people who used when they were 13-17 year olds, which is underage in every state.
So you could frame that as doubling the risk OMG, or a 1 percentage point increase in risk, or it could all just be self-medicating, we really don't know much. Probably still safer than alcohol.