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Here's how legal weed will play out in America

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Tuesday is 4/20 and naturally one’s mind—or at least my mind—turns to weed.

The big news here is that the tide has turned for marijuana acceptance in this country. And it’s quite likely national marijuana laws will be reformed sometime this year. Note I did not say weed would be fully legalized, I said "laws will be reformed," an important distinction, but still huge as I’ll explain.

Consider where things stand. Already this year New Mexico, New Jersey, New York and Virginia have legalized weed, which if you add them to the existing legal states, means some 43% of the U.S. population now lives in states where recreational marijuana is legal, as noted by Vox in a recent story headlined "Marijuana legalization has won." On tap this year are possibly Connecticut, Delaware, Minnesota and Rhode Island, while others like Wisconsin and Maryland are considering it as well. The record years for states legalizing weed were 2016 and last year at four. It’s conceivable that could be doubled this year.

Eliana Miss Illi, General Manager of Weed World poses as she smokes a joint on 7th Avenue in Midtown New York City, March 31, 2021. - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed legislation legalizing recreational marijuana on March 31. 2021, with a large chunk of tax revenues from sales set to go to minority communities. New York joins 14 other US states and the District of Columbia in permitting cannabis after lawmakers in both state chambers, where Cuomo's Democratic Party holds strong majorities, backed the bill on March 30. (Photo by Kena Betancur / AFP) (Photo by KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images)
Eliana Miss Illi, General Manager of Weed World poses as she smokes a joint on 7th Avenue in Midtown New York City, March 31, 2021. - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed legislation legalizing recreational marijuana on March 31. 2021, with a large chunk of tax revenues from sales set to go to minority communities. New York joins 14 other US states and the District of Columbia in permitting cannabis after lawmakers in both state chambers, where Cuomo's Democratic Party holds strong majorities, backed the bill on March 30. (Photo by Kena Betancur / AFP) (Photo by KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images) · KENA BETANCUR via Getty Images

In 2000, only one-third of Americans were in favor of legalization and as recently as a decade ago not a single state allowed for recreational marijuana use. Now two-thirds of Americans support legalization, according to Gallup, an all-time high and 18 states are fully legalized, with weed-friendly bills even passing in red states. My fave ballot factoid: “In the 2020 election, the legalization initiative in swing state Arizona got nearly 300,000 more votes than either Joe Biden or Donald Trump.”

Mexico is set to legalize recreational marijuana this year, which is already driving down prices and unsettling growers for the cartels. That would leave the U.S. flanked to the north and south by two of the three only legal weed countries on the planet. (The third being Uruguay.)

All this gives proof yet again to that old business maxim, change happens slowly at first and then all of a sudden. Weed’s now inexorable acceptance reminds me of what happened with same-sex marriage during the previous decade. Beginning around 2010, primarily blue states made same-sex marriage legal. Then came a flood of states a few years later, and finally, Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court decision in 2015, made same-sex marriage legal in all 50 states.

Indeed the news is coming so fast and furious that this article will likely be sorely dated this summer. Consider what just happened in Virginia. Last week, the Commonwealth legalized recreational weed, making it the first Southern state to do so. Gov. Northam said that legalization was at least in part “...to address racial disparities in our criminal justice system…” (More on that later.) Here’s the wrinkle, weed wasn’t going to be legal in Virginia until 2024, but constituents pushed and the governor fast-tracked it to July 1. So just 10 weeks from now, adult Virginians can possess or grow marijuana, though there still won’t be any sales in the state until 2024.