According to the latest Gallup survey, 58 percent of Americans favor legalizing marijuana for recreational use.
据权威调查机构盖洛普公司发布的一份最新民调结果显示,高达58%的美国民众支持将休闲娱乐用大麻合法化。
Gallup says the poll
culminates1 a year of "
unprecedented2 success" for marijuana advocates and is almost certainly the
harbinger(先驱) of future legalization efforts. Support for legalization has climbed more than 10 percent in the past year alone.
"Whatever the reasons for Americans' greater acceptance of marijuana, it is likely that this
momentum3 will spur further legalization efforts across the United States," Gallup says in its analysis of the poll.
And as Gallup points out, the 58 percent support for legalization is a
stark4 contrast to the group's first legalization poll in 1969, in which only 12 percent of respondents said they favored making marijuana legal.
Gallup also found that 38 percent of respondents said they had personally tried marijuana at some point.
The largest area of growth has been among independent voters, 62 percent of whom now say they support legalization. Sixty-five percent of self-identified
Democrats5 say they also support legalization. Republicans remain the only significant voting block opposed to legalization with just 35 percent support such an effort.
There is a also a direct
correlation6 between legalization support and age, with voters over 65 representing the only age block opposed to legalization. Fifty-three percent of voters 65 and older say they oppose legalization, compared with just 31 percent of voters
aged7 18 to 29.
An August
memo8 from US Deputy Attorney General James Cole stated that the federal government will not attempt to
interfere9 with Washington and Colorado's efforts to
implement10 marijuana legalization laws passed by state voters.
Currently, 20 states and the District of Columbia have passed laws legalizing medicinal marijuana use for patients who receive written permission from a doctor.
Several states are planning legalization
ballot11 initiatives set for 2014, including California, Alaska, Arizona and Oregon. Other states, including Rhode Island and Hawaii, are planning legalization initiatives for 2016 to coincide with the next presidential election.
"Because of Colorado and Washington, it's created a
cannabis(印度大麻) tidal wave across the country," marijuana
activist12 Mike Jolson said in an interview with Bloomberg. "We want to capitalize on this wave."