Group Raises Nearly $173K for Marijuana Amendment

Arkansans for Patient Access has raised nearly $173,000 for its marijuana amendment campaign, according to reports filed with the Arkansas Ethics Commission.

The group has until July 5 to collect 90,704 petition signatures from registered voters to place the marijuana amendment on the ballot.

The amendment would drastically expand Arkansas’ medical marijuana law to enable recreational marijuana statewide. Marijuana users would no longer need to show they suffer from a specific medical condition listed in state law.

The amendment lets people grow and use marijuana at home, making it easier for people to use marijuana recreationally.

The amendment also would openly legalize marijuana in Arkansas if federal laws against marijuana are repealed.

Nationwide, since 2019, the number of kids diagnosed with cannabis-induced mental disorders, including schizophrenia and psychotic episodes, has increased by 50%.

Across the board, media outlets have repeatedly reported that legalization of marijuana has fueled black market operations rather than reducing them — emboldening drug cartels that operate industrial scale marijuana cultivation sites.

Fox News and CBS News have highlighted how Chinese investment and organized crime are driving illegal marijuana production across the U.S., and CBN reported last October that Chinese investors with “suitcases full of cash” are buying U.S. farmland to grow black market marijuana.

Arkansas voters rejected marijuana legalization at the ballot box in 2022. That amendment was opposed by a broad coalition of churches, business groups, elected officials, and citizens who knew that marijuana would be bad for Arkansas. We anticipate similar opposition to the 2024 marijuana amendment.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Chemical Abortion on the Rise in the U.S.: New Report

According to the Wall Street Journal, drug-induced abortion is on the rise in the U.S.

The article cited a report from the pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute. The group estimates that nearly two-thirds of all abortions performed in the U.S. during 2023 used abortion drugs like the RU-486 regimen.

Abortion drugs end the life of an unborn child, and they carry significant health risks for women.

In some cases, abortion drugs actually can be more dangerous that surgical abortion procedures. Despite these risks, the federal government has gone to great lengths to de-regulate abortion drugs.

When the FDA first approved RU-486 in 2000, a woman seeking a drug-induced abortion was required to visit the doctor three times — which included an initial medical evaluation and follow-up appointments to ensure that the woman did not experience health complications.

In 2016, that number of visits was reduced from three to one.

Then in 2021, the FDA removed the in-person visit with a doctor altogether — making it possible to obtain RU-486 through the mail without medical exam or sonogram.

Today, abortion is prohibited in Arkansas except to save the life of the mother, but over the years Arkansas’ legislators also have enacted various laws restricting chemical abortion and preventing abortion drugs from being delivered illegally by mail into Arkansas.

When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, we talked about how the decision marked a turning point for the pro-life movement. Going forward, we and others said that pro-lifers would need to shift our focus from making abortion illegal to making abortion unthinkable. This latest abortion data goes to show that is likely to be a long-term process.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.