Video: A Few Facts About Abortion in Arkansas
Here are a few facts about abortion in Arkansas.
Here are a few facts about abortion in Arkansas.

This week KFSM reported that so-called “medical” marijuana sales have topped $35.69 million in Arkansas since last May.
About $3.7 million of that money will go to the state in tax revenue — which is hardly enough to cover the state’s annual expenses, much less pay back the millions of dollars Arkansas already has spent establishing the “medical” marijuana program.
More than 5,463 pounds of marijuana have been sold in the past nine months.
That’s enough to make upwards of 5 – 7 million marijuana joints.
Based on these numbers, marijuana in Arkansas sells for a little over $400 an ounce or about $14 – $15 per gram, on average.
An estimated 35,000 people currently have “medical” marijuana ID cards.
That means a little over one-tenth of the state’s population is spending millions upon millions of dollars on marijuana.
It’s important to remember that marijuana is not harmless.
Marijuana use is tied to stroke, heart problems, and hypertension as well as permanent loss in IQ and an increased risk for schizophrenia.
That’s part of the reason why the U.S. Surgeon General issued a warning about marijuana last August.
Marijuana is a dangerous drug, and it is costing the State of Arkansas millions of dollars. As we have said for years: Marijuana may be many things, but “harmless” simply is not one of them.

Southland casino in West Memphis is offering sports betting ahead of Super Bowl Sunday, according to the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
Journalist Mike Wickline reports,
The casino’s retail sportsbook began accepting wagers on Sunday’s big game, NBA games, college basketball, NASCAR racing, PGA tournaments and more, Southland marketing manager Natalie Carlson said.
Sports betting is also offered at the Saracen casino annex in Pine Bluff — which is operated by the Quapaw Tribe out of Oklahoma — and at Oaklawn’s casino in Hot Springs.
Sports betting poses a real threat to sports leagues — especially at colleges and universities. It threatens to undermine the integrity of school athletic programs.
In 2017, Arkansans reported nearly a quarter of a billion dollars in gambling losses on their income taxes, according to the Department of Finance and Administration.
Simply put: Casino gambling and the state lottery are sapping hundreds of millions of dollars out of Arkansas’ economy every year.