These Photos Of Legal Recreational Marijuana Users Shatter Stereotypes
The stereotypical marijuana user — the “stoner” — hasn’t adequately represented the actual people who responsibly enjoy marijuana for some time. But the stoner myth seems more antiquated than ever as more states lift prohibitions on marijuana use.
To combat these stoner myths of the past, Drug Policy Alliance has put together a set of stereotype-shattering stock photos depicting modern, real-life marijuana users from all walks of life.
Shot in March in Boulder, Colorado — where recreational marijuana is legal — the DPA photos feature adult marijuana users in their 30s all the way up to their 60s, doing everyday activities while also consuming marijuana in a variety of ways, from joints to vaporizers to pens.
“Marijuana is being covered by the media in an increasingly sophisticated and nuanced way now that the laws are changing and more people are ‘out’ as marijuana users,” said Sharda Sekaran, managing director of communications for DPA. “We all know that many marijuana smokers look more like your Aunt Bettie or your accountant than “The Dude” from “The Big Lebowski,” but most images in the public sphere still do not reflect this.”
As marijuana’s annual holiday of 4/20 approaches this year, recreational weed is now legal in four states — Colorado, Washington, Oregon and Alaska — as well as the District of Columbia. Medical marijuana is also legal in 23 states and Washington, D.C.
Legalizing the drug has created a billion-dollar industry, and it is poised to grow even larger as at least 10 states are considering recreational legalization by 2016. One recent study forecast that by 2019, all of the state-legal marijuana markets combined will make for a potential overall market worth almost $11 billion annually.
Despite the reforms when it comes to marijuana policy, the nation has continued the war on drugs. There is approximately one marijuana arrest every 51 seconds in the U.S., according to the Marijuana Policy Project. And while marijuana arrests are down overall, nearly 700,000 people were arrested for marijuana crimes in 2013 — about half of all drug arrests in the nation. And blacks and Latinos are still more likely to be arrested for marijuana than whites, despite similar rates of use.
The United States is home to just 5 percent of the world’s population, but a full 25 percent of the world’s prisoners. Harsh and lengthy sentences for nonviolent drug possession or distribution crimes have helped bolster that figure. In 1980, there were roughly 40,000 drug offenders in U.S. prisons, according to research from the Sentencing Project, a prison sentencing reform group. By 2011, that number had ballooned to more than 500,000, though most of these prisoners were not high-level operators and did not have prior criminal records.
But attitudes are changing rapidly on marijuana policy in the U.S. Recent polling shows that a majority of Americans across party lines continue to support legalization nationally.
In states that have ended prohibition of the plant, criminal charges have plummeted.
More federal legislation aimed at rolling back the war on drugs continues to be introduced, signaling there may be even bigger changes up ahead.
Read more about “weed day” here, and check out our Weedvent calendar as we count down the days to 4/20.
In the meantime, here’s what marijuana legalization looks like:
All photos by photographer Darrin Harris Frisby and appear courtesy of Drug Policy Alliance. Check out more of their photos here