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Home 🌿 Marijuana Politics 🌿 Marijuana's Biggest Enemy Is Not Jeff Sessions – It's Big Pharma 🌿Marijuana's Biggest Enemy Is Not Jeff Sessions – It's Big Pharma
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Like most grassroots movements, cannabis legalization has its own bogeymen–nebulous entities backed by kings and queens of industry who are as feared as they are loathed. Big Tobacco is in there, of course, as are the corrections and law enforcement industries. But as marijuana gains legitimate footing as a bonafide medicine accepted by top health associations and medical journals–most notably as treatment for chronic and neuropathic pain–legalization's biggest villain is, perhaps, the well-heeled pharmaceutical industry.
Activists' worst fears about this David-versus-Goliath scenario have come true over the last six months. Recent news could very well represent a tipping point in Big Pharma's quest to squash voter-approved pot-legalizing initiatives while preserving the medical marijuana market for its own products: pills and sprays made of synthetic cannabis components such as THC and CBD.
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In November, Arizona was one of nine states voting on marijuana legalization measures. Some initiatives were shoe-ins, including Proposition 64 in neighboring California, while others, such as measures in Arkansas and North Dakota, were up for grabs. But Americans woke up on November 9 to the news that there would soon be eight newly legal cannabis markets scattered throughout the country. Nearly all of the initiatives had passed, and weed's major storylines that morning included a behemoth of a legal market in California, the first recreational laws on the East Coast in Maine and Massachusetts, and a Bible Belt surprise in the form of a medically legal Arkansas. The only measure that didn't pass on election day? Arizona, where Prop 205 was narrowly defeated in a 51-49 percent split.
PRO-MARIJUANA BALLOT MEASURES PASSED IN RED STATES, BUT NOT ARIZONA. WHY?
Insys' ties to America's full-throttle opioid market were newsworthy before the election on a number of levels. The company was (and is) facing multiple federal and state investigations into its aggressive sales and marketing practices; Insys or its personnel allegedly paid medical professionals to step up their Subsys prescriptions and also marketed the opioid for off-label use, a federally illegal act for pharmaceutical companies. Also worth noting, especially given the timeframe: 2016 was the year America's opioid problem blossomed into a federally recognized epidemic, and it was also the year significantly less-addictive cannabis gained traction as a possible alternative to opioids, luring progressive supporters like Elizabeth Warren to the cause.
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"It appears they are trying to kill a non-pharmaceutical market for marijuana in order to line their own pockets," a spokesperson for the Arizona legalization campaign said in a statement at the time. More than 20 years into America's meandering history with legal medical cannabis, with public sentiment on marijuana legalization at a record high, Big Pharma was ready to claim its piece.
WITH PUBLIC SENTIMENT ON MARIJUANA LEGALIZATION AT A RECORD HIGH, BIG PHARMA WAS READY TO CLAIM ITS PIECE.
And this is only the beginning. The donation made by Insys surely helped the campaign against legalization in Arizona, and now it is quite likely that Arizona residents will have access to a Syndros script before they can purchase recreational marijuana. More importantly, it will always be remembered as one of Big Pharma's first public stiff-arms to legal weed–and likely a sign of battles we'll see in the years ahead.
When marijuana becomes even further normalized, federally rescheduled and decriminalized and, eventually, legalized throughout America–how hard will Big Pharma be fighting for a piece of that industry?
My guess: We haven't seen anything just yet.
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