Marijuana May Trigger False Memories: Study

A recent study shows marijuana may actually trigger false memories in users.

Nationwide, many states have legalized marijuana, and in Arkansas “medical” marijuana use has skyrocketed since the COVID-19 pandemic. But a growing body of scientific evidence shows marijuana is harmful.

Researchers at Washington State University published a study in the Journal of Psychopharmacology linking marijuana use to poor memory and recall. The study found “cannabis increased susceptibility to false memories and detrimentally impacted verbal memory.”

This is not the first study to find that marijuana hurts users’ working memory and causes cognitive problems.

High-potency marijuana can trigger serious mental health problems.

troubling study published in JAMA Psychiatry found that cannabis use among people with a history of psychosis “sharply increased” in states where recreational marijuana was legalized. The increase in prior 30-day use was three times higher than in the general population.

Another study from Massachusetts General Hospital showed teen psychiatric emergencies spiked after marijuana commercialization began in the state. Teen marijuana use jumped from 5% to 17.3% in psychiatric emergency cases, while cannabis-related disorders among teens increased from 3.2% to 12.1%.

Heavy marijuana use has also been linked to reduced brain activity.

All of this simply underscores what we have said for years: Marijuana may be many things, but “harmless” simply is not one of them.

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

Unpacking EFA Rules, Homeschool Measures at the Capitol

We are urging homeschoolers across the state to call the Arkansas House of Representatives and Arkansas Senate, and ask their lawmakers to oppose H.R. 1008S.R. 16, and a new set of Educational Freedom Account rules from the Arkansas Department of Education.

Call your senator: You can call 501-682-2902 between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. to leave a message asking your state senator to oppose these measures.

Call your representative: You can call 501-682-6211 between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. to leave a message asking your state representative to oppose these measures.

Here is more information about how these measures would affect homeschoolers.

H.R. 1008 and S.R. 16 Restrict Homeschoolers Under EFA Program

H.R. 1008 and S.R. 16 would restrict homeschoolers participating in the Educational Freedom Account (EFA) program.

Lawmakers created the EFA program in 2023, making it possible for Arkansas students to use public funds to pay for an education at a public or private school or at home. Thousands of students have taken advantage of school choice in Arkansas under this program, and many homeschool families have benefited from it.

H.R. 1008 and S.R. 16 would significantly reduce EFA funding for homeschoolers and implement mandatory assessment scores for students participating in the EFA program.

It would also expand the list of mandatory reporters to include education service providers who work with homeschoolers.

These proposed laws are homeschool control measures dressed up as accountability measures. They turn educational freedom into a state compliance program. The State is using EFA dollars as a way to standardize and regulate homeschooling rather than provide parents the freedom to tailor the education that is best for their children.

You can read our entire policy brief about these laws here.

The 2026 Educational Freedom Account Rules Stop Homeschoolers from Using EFA Money for Certain Team Sports

New rules from the Department of Education would prohibit Educational Freedom Account spending on team sports that require tryouts or that limit participation based on ability. That means that a homeschool student who wants to play basketball for a local school could not pay for athletic expenses with EFA money even though public schools pay for team sports with state money.

Arkansas law clearly caps extracurricular spending at 25% of a student’s total EFA funding, which means no more than one-fourth of a student’s EFA money can go toward team sports and extracurricular activities. The new rules go farther by prohibiting all spending on team sports that require tryouts.

The rules also limit EFA balances. Right now, EFA funds can roll over each year up to a maximum balance of $20,000. But the new rules set this limit at $8,500 or a lesser amount set by the Arkansas Legislature in a future session.

The proposed rules also set up a new framework differentiating between “core educational expenses” versus “qualifying expenses.”

Lawmakers could vote very soon on whether to approve the Department of Education’s new EFA rules.

You can read our entire policy brief about the new rules here.

Please contact your lawmakers, and ask them to oppose the bad homeschool laws H.R. 1008 and S.R. 16 and the Department of Education’s bad EFA rules.

You can call 501-682-2902 to leave a message asking your state senator to oppose these measures.

You can call 501-682-6211 to leave a message asking your state representative to oppose these measures.

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

Family Council Joins Letter Urging DOJ to Address Abortion Drugs

On Monday, Family Council joined a coalition of pro-life leaders from around the nation in a letter urging the U.S. Department of Justice to address abortion drugs.

Arkansas law generally prohibits abortion except to save the life of the mother, and it is a crime for an abortionist to mail abortion drugs like RU-486 into the state. But under President Biden, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration began allowing mail-order abortion drugs. Pro-abortion states have also enacted “shield laws” for abortionists who mail abortion drugs into states like Arkansas.

All of that has undermined Arkansas’ good, pro-life laws that protect women and unborn children from abortion.

Monday’s letter from 78 different pro-life organizations pointed this out, saying:

Pro-life states cannot meaningfully enforce their laws when FDA is siding with mail-order abortionists and DOJ is siding with abortion drug manufacturers. Virtually every state has some law on the books that makes the current mail-order abortion regime unlawful, even basic laws like practicing medicine without a license. Yet abortionists protected by so-called “shield laws” ship drugs nationally with impunity, pointing to FDA for cover. …

When abortion drugs are available through the mail, there is no accountability, state laws are made impotent, and women and girls are hurt. This is a harmful and politically dangerous path.

New evidence shows that abortion drugs are much more dangerous than the FDA previously thought.

A recent study by the experts at the Ethics and Public Policy Center found abortion drugs are at least 22 times more dangerous than the U.S. Food and Drug Administration labeling indicates. Nearly 11% of women experience serious health complications from abortion pills — including sepsis, infection, and life-threatening hemorrhage.

These drugs should not be available at all — much less through the mail.

Family Council is pleased to join with so many other excellent groups who are willing to stand up for innocent human life. We hope our federal officials will take swift action to protect women and unborn children from abortion drugs.

You Can Read The Letter Here.

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