ALEX BERENSON: I warned about cannabis dangers 7 years ago and nobody wanted to listen

Foxnews
Wed, Feb 18
Key Points
  • Recent reports and media coverage have highlighted increasing concerns about marijuana addiction, teen usage, and mental health issues linked to high-potency cannabis, including rising cases of psychosis and violence in the cannabis industry.
  • Kevin Sabet, CEO of Smart Approaches to Marijuana, emphasizes that cannabis legalization and commercialization have downplayed the drug’s psychiatric risks, especially for young people, despite decades of research linking THC to mental illnesses like schizophrenia.
  • The author’s 2019 book, "Tell Your Children," which discusses cannabis-related mental health risks, faced significant pushback and media blacklisting, but recent events and personal testimonies (such as from conservative commentator Brett Cooper) are bringing attention back to these dangers.
  • Although a majority of Americans currently support full cannabis legalization, growing awareness of the drug’s harms, particularly among youth, may be shifting public opinion as firsthand stories and scientific evidence challenge the industry’s narrative promoting cannabis as harmless or medicinal.

Smart Approaches to Marijuana CEO Kevin Sabet joins 'America's Newsroom' to discuss growing concerns of widespread marijuana addiction, use among teenagers and issues surrounding legalization policies.

Suddenly warnings about cannabis are everywhere.

At the beginning of February, researchers reported severe mental illness has spiked in young people in Canada alongside access to high-potency cannabis.

The next day came the release of "A Killing In Cannabis," a book about a 2019 murder in California — and the violence that plagues the marijuana business and that legalization has not resolved.

Then, on Feb. 9, the New York Times dropped its support for full cannabis legalization. Writing that the United States has "a Marijuana Problem," the paper admitted cannabis addiction and psychosis have become a crisis. It called for a ban on THC extracts, a move that would recriminalize much of the legal industry. (THC is the chemical in the plant that gets users high, and vapes offering near-pure hits of THC are now popular among users — and a big driver of industry profits.)

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Recreational cannabis is available at legal retail stores in many U.S. states. (iStock)

I don’t want to say I told you so.

But I did.

In 2019, I wrote "Tell Your Children," meticulously documenting the decades of research linking cannabis and THC to mental illness, especially psychosis and schizophrenia.

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The runaway legalization of cannabis risked the mental health of teens and young adults, I wrote. And cannabis advocates and companies had spent a generation pretending the drug was a medicine, not a recreational intoxicant. That marketing trick encouraged its use in the most dangerous way, for conditions like anxiety and depression by people already at high risk of mental illness.

When "Tell Your Children" came out in 2019, the industry tried to discredit it, as I’d expected.

But I didn’t expect the Times and other supposedly independent, fact-driven legacy media outlets would help them.

The Times refused to review "Tell Your Children," even though I had been a reporter there for a decade and the book offered new research on an important issue. Outlets like NPR scheduled and then canceled interviews with me. The Washington Post outright attacked it, calling it a "polemic."

As I wrote in "Pandemia," the storm over "Tell Your Children" showed me personally just how bad the woke groupthink in the legacy media had become. Reporters at the Times believed — wrongly — many Black Americans were in prison for minor cannabis-related crimes. Therefore, cannabis legalization was an issue of racial equality. Any debate over it ended there. And anyone who said otherwise was a racist.

I suspect that the real reason people are waking up to the psychiatric harms of cannabis is that they have seen the problems for themselves — in their friends, their cousins, their siblings and their children.

So, I took my lumps. And I waited for the truth to come out.

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Now it has.

But why?

The wall of woke media groupthink is still mostly intact.

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Cannabis grows under lights in a greenhouse on July 26, 2021, in Oklahoma. (RJ Sangosti/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post)

I suspect that the real reason people are waking up to the psychiatric harms of cannabis is that they have seen the problems for themselves — in their friends, their cousins, their siblings and their children.

On Feb. 10, conservative commentator Brett Cooper offered personal testimony to the drug’s psychiatric risks.

In a post on X, Cooper wrote she had learned that cannabis has caused her brother’s schizophrenia, the devastating brain disease, marked by episodes of hallucinations, delusions and paranoia in its sufferers. Later, in a podcast, she did not disguise her pain as she spoke about his episodes of homelessness.

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Unfortunately, Cooper’s story is all-too-typical. People with schizophrenia rarely work, marry or have kids. Many spend their lives shuttling through institutions and taking antipsychotic drugs that have serious side effects. The disease frequently devastates their families, too.

Cooper’s post has been seen almost 5 million times on X.

And despite the Times’s reach and the importance of the Canadian research, her words may have more impact than anything else over the last two weeks.

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First-person stories have an emotional impact that the most thoughtful editorial or research paper cannot match. As a friend of mine told me many years ago in critiquing something I’d written, "People like to read about people."

The Times refused to review "Tell Your Children," even though I had been a reporter there for a decade and the book offered new research on an important issue.

We are a long way from undoing the mess of cannabis legalization and unrestrained commercialization — and President Donald Trump’s decision in December to "reschedule" cannabis is a step in the wrong direction.

But it has been clear to me for years that the fight over cannabis is fundamentally cultural and medical, not legal and political. A majority of Americans now support full legalization. Most of them do not use cannabis and do not realize how dangerous it can be, particularly for young people who use heavily.

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Only when they see for themselves — or hear from people that they trust — that the industry has lied will support for legalization decrease.

That cycle seems to be starting, because the risks that I wrote about in "Tell Your Children" are becoming too obvious to be ignored. Even before the flurry of the last two weeks, sales were ticking up, an unusual gain for a book released over seven years ago. I can only assume that parents are seeing their teenaged and young adult children fall victim to the harms of cannabis and looking for answers.

And now, with the sudden wave of attention, "Tell Your Children" is out of stock on Amazon. (It will be back.)

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What happens next?

Nothing right now.

A majority of Americans now support full legalization. Most of them do not use cannabis and do not realize how dangerous it can be, particularly for young people who use heavily.

This particular wave of attention to the harms of cannabis will fade. And the industry still has powerful momentum after decades of propaganda, paid and free, about the drug’s wonders.

But for the first time since I wrote "Tell Your Children," I wonder if the pendulum is swinging back, reality is overcoming the myths so many legacy outlets have offered and the billions spent to promote commercialization.

Only time will tell. But voices like Brett Cooper’s are hard to ignore.

Tell Your Children.