*By Carlo Versano* On Tuesday, Missouri could become the 32nd state in the U.S. to legalize medical marijuana. On the ballot are three proposals on the issue ー regarding regulation, taxation, and the distribution of tax revenues. The amendments are byzantine and confusing, but if one passes, medical marijuana will become the law of the land in the "Show-Me" State. Cannabis legalization has garnered more public support in recent years, and medical pot is often thought to be the gateway to fuller legalization. While the Missouri medical community is [split](https://kcmedicine.org/survey-results-physician-attitudes-medical-marijuana/) on the drug's medicinal value, much of the student body at the University of Missouri has a pro-legalization stance. CheddarU went to Mizzou's campus to hear what students had to say ahead of the vote. "I just can't see any good reason not to have it medicinally available here," said In'lana Henderson, VP of Students for Sensible Drug Policy at Mizzou. "People think that it's very taboo here," she added. That possibility that Missouri, a reliably red state in the country's heartland, could pass a progressive drug law, gives some students hope that the end result could galvanize public support for cannabis legalization. "I think that if we can legalize it, it will help other states do that, too," freshman Payton Nichols-Pittman said. Or, as senior Meg Rogers put it: "It's just something that we don't need to make people feel bad for." She added: "It's just a plant."

Share:
More In Business
Dimon: Bank rules should change after Silicon Valley Bank
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said the U.S. and the banking industry should amend regulations following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank last month, saying that the financial system needs to be adjusted so that one bank's failure does not “cause undue panic and financial harm.”
Disney-DeSantis War of Words Heats Up at Annual Meeting
Disney CEO Bob Iger on Monday said any retaliatory actions by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Republican-controlled Florida Legislature against the company that threaten jobs or expansion at its Florida resort is not only “anti-business ... but anti-Florida.”
Load More