Dr. Oz Warns That Legalizing Marijuana in Pennsylvania Would Aggravate Unemployment by Weakening 'Mojo'
The Republican Senate candidate is echoing decades of anti-pot propaganda, but evidence to support his hypothesis is hard to find.

Mehmet Oz, a Republican candidate in Pennsylvania's U.S. Senate race, argues that the Democratic nominee, Lt. Gov. John Fetterman, is wrong to support marijuana legalization because allowing recreational use is apt to aggravate the state's already high unemployment rate. "There are not enough Pennsylvanians to work in Pennsylvania," Oz said during a recent Newsmax interview, "so giving them pot so that they stay home is not, I don't think, an ideal move….We need to get Pennsylvanians back at work, gotta give them their mojo, and I don't want marijuana to be a hindrance to that."
Oz, who is still awaiting the results of a very close primary pitting him against businessman David McCormick, not only played a doctor on TV for 13 seasons (a fact that helped win him former President Donald Trump's endorsement); he is also a retired heart surgeon. Given that background, you might suppose that Dr. Oz was drawing on his medical expertise when he averred that a lack of "mojo" is a well-documented side effect of cannabis consumption. Instead he was simply repeating a hoary anti-pot trope that, like many of the claims Oz made on his syndicated talk show, has no firm scientific basis.
The charge that marijuana saps motivation goes beyond the commonsensical observation that the acute effects of cannabis, like the acute effects of alcohol, are generally incompatible with work. It alleges that regular marijuana use has a persistent impact, making people so lazy that they fail at school, neglect their personal responsibilities, and "stay home" rather than go to work or look for a job. Since Oz cited "addiction to marijuana" as a distinct concern, he implied that even moderate cannabis consumption, unlike moderate drinking, makes people disinclined to work for a living.
Harvard psychiatrist Dana Farnsworth put a name to this perceived problem during congressional testimony in 1970. "I am very much concerned about what has come to be called the 'amotivational syndrome,'" he said. "I am certain as I can be…that when an individual becomes dependent upon marijuana…he becomes preoccupied with it. His attitude changes toward endorsement of values which he had not before; he tends to become very easily satisfied with what is immediately present, in such a way that he seems to have been robbed of his ability to make appropriate choices."
A decade and a half later, Robert DuPont, a psychiatrist who directed the National Institute on Drug Abuse from 1973 to 1978, told anti-pot polemicist Peggy Mann that "millions of young people are living as shadows of themselves, empty shells of what they could have been and would have been without pot." In 1989, his first year as director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Bill Bennett explained how smoking pot affects young people: "It means they don't study. It causes what is called 'amotivational syndrome,' where they are just not motivated to get up and go to work."
DuPont and Bennett continued promoting that idea for decades, often conflating marijuana "dependence" or heavy use with cannabis consumption in general. In his 1997 book The Selfish Brain, DuPont describes marijuana's impact on its users' life prospects. "Unlike cocaine, which often brings users to their knees, marijuana claims its victims in a slower and more cruel fashion," he says. "It robs many of them of their desire to grow and improve, often making heavy users settle for what is left over in life…. Marijuana makes its users lose their purpose and their will, as well as their memory and their motivation….[Cannabis consumers] commonly just sink lower and lower in their performance and their goals in life as their pot smoking continues. Their hopes and their lives literally go up in marijuana smoke."
In their 2015 book Going to Pot: Why the Rush to Legalize Marijuana Is Harming America, Bennett and his co-author, Robert A. White, quote that passage from DuPont's book in the course of arguing that cannabis is much more dangerous than commonly believed. "Has anyone alleged anything like the foregoing with tobacco use?" they ask. In fact, many people troubled by the rise of mass-produced cigarettes in the early 20th century alleged that they caused strikingly similar effects. Those parallels suggest that responses to drug use have less to do with the inherent properties of the substance than with perennial fears that are projected onto the pharmacological menace of the day.
Despite its long appeal as a propaganda theme, the idea that smoking pot makes people unproductive remains scientifically controversial. In their 1997 book Marijuana Myths, Marijuana Facts, the sociologist Lynn Zimmer and the pharmacologist John P. Morgan examined the evidence and concluded: "There is nothing in these data to suggest that marijuana reduces people's motivation to work, their employability, or their capacity to earn wages. Studies have consistently found that marijuana users earn wages similar to or higher than nonusers."
A 1999 report from the National Academy of Sciences noted that amotivational syndrome "is not a medical diagnosis, but it has been used to describe young people who drop out of social activities and show little interest in school, work, or other goal-directed activity. When heavy marijuana use accompanies these symptoms, the drug is often cited as the cause, but there are no convincing data to demonstrate a causal relationship between marijuana smoking and these behavioral characteristics."
In his 2002 book Understanding Marijuana, Mitch Earleywine, now a professor of psychology at the State University of New York in Albany, sums up the evidence concerning amotivational syndrome this way: "No studies show the pervasive lethargy, dysphoria, and apathy that initial reports suggested should appear in all heavy users. Thus, the evidence for a cannabis-induced amotivational syndrome is weak."
A 2018 systematic review published in Psychology of Addictive Behaviors found that "cross-sectional evidence of a cannabis-specific effect on motivation is equivocal," although "there is partial support from longitudinal studies for a causal link between cannabis use and reduced motivation." A 2022 study of college students, reported in Experimental and Clinical Psychopharmacology, cast doubt on that purported causal link. "The results provide preliminary evidence suggesting that college students who use cannabis are more likely to expend effort to obtain reward, even after controlling for the magnitude of the reward and the probability of reward receipt," the researchers reported. "Thus, these results do not support the amotivational syndrome hypothesis."
Fact-checking Oz's claim about the impact of marijuana legalization, Newsweek looked at unemployment rates as of April in the 18 states that allow recreational use. Overall, it found, "the average seasonally adjusted employment rate for those states was around 4%," which was "slightly higher than the national rate" of 3.6 percent. But Newsweek noted that the unemployment rate in Pennsylvania, where marijuana is legal for medical purposes but not for recreational use, was 4.8 percent, "among the highest in the country." And while "states like California, New Mexico and Nevada," where recreational use is legal, had higher-than-average unemployment rates, "many states where marijuana is not fully legalized are also experiencing above average unemployment," including Ohio, Louisiana, Maryland, and Texas as well as Pennsylvania.
While such crude comparisons do not tell us much, it is fair to say they provide little support for Oz's hypothesis. The link he suggests also seems inconsistent with early research indicating that legalizing medical or recreational use is associated with higher GDP growth and/or higher employment. In Colorado, a 2021 study found, state-licensed recreational sales were "associated with a 0.7 percentage point decrease in the unemployment rate with no effect on the size of the labor force." Given "the lack of a reduction in labor force participation or wages," the researchers concluded, "negative effects on labor supply are likely limited, in line with the existing literature."
Although Newsweek rates Oz's claim as "false," a fairer assessment would be "unproven." As Newsweek notes, Oz "did not state exactly what evidence his claim is based on, nor does there appear to be any publicly available data to support it."
Since the primary is over and Oz, assuming he wins the Republican nomination, now needs to broaden his appeal, the political wisdom of opposing marijuana legalization seems questionable. Just a quarter of Pennsylvanians share Oz's position, according to a 2021 Muhlenberg College poll, while 58 percent disagree with him. Support for legalization is even higher in national surveys. The latest Gallup poll found that 68 percent of Americans, including 83 percent of Democrats and 50 percent of Republicans, thought marijuana should be legal.
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Gosh, it feels good to get to go back to the only libertarian topic that every had main stream appeal.
So I guess this means that the party email says Dr. Oz bad, indicating that he probably won the primary with votes cast by election day but will probably lose thanks to some extra votes found days or weeks later.
He opposes alcohol. It demotivates and is deadly.
Well he would if he had any sense. Or was a real doctor.
Elite heart surgeons don't qualify?
Oz. The name seems appropriate.
This oz guy might be on to something.
It is well established that pot contributed to the loss of the vietnam war, as accurately depicted in a classic episode of gary & mike.
Skip ahead to 4:40
https://vimeo.com/59620890
Oh look, another game of "Whose Scientific Paper is Biggest!"
It is wrong to prohibit people from putting drugs in their body. That they aren't working isn't a justification. Unemployment, natural pathogens, productivity- none of these things justify the government's claimed power to mandate what must and must not put in our bodies.
Arguing the science is a fools task. The government used shoddy science to lockdown MJ in the first place, or maybe activists are using it now to change opinions the other way. It doesn't matter. Give people the data they want to make their own decisions and get out of their business.
If PA is really concerned about Unemployment, there are about a thousand regulations and other stupid rules that they could be addressing within the state that cause real jobs to be lost. Fix that first.
I'm not a libertarian. But I can draw on libertarian principles for a lot of my personal ideology.
This pithy statement is the basis for all of it for me.
The world would be a much better place if people would just mind their own goddamned business.
I'd be on board with a "Mind Your Own Damn Business" Party.
Making the libertarian argument for things is so 2000.
"No studies show the pervasive lethargy, dysphoria, and apathy that initial reports suggested should appear in all heavy users. Thus, the evidence for a cannabis-induced amotivational syndrome is weak."
Man, I want more context on that quote. Because without context that seems to be saying that if the correlation of heavy usage and lethargy isn't one-to-one then the evidence is weak. That is not how you do these types of studies. That would be like saying the correlation between lung cancer and cigarettes are weak. It's so weird I'm going to say I'm reading it wrong, or the comment has some context that makes sense of it.
I do see a general trend of those arguing for weed legislation that they claim there is no downside. It's why I increasingly don't see weed legalization as a libertarian win. It seems people are for it, not out of a belief in the right-to-choose, but a shift in belief towards marijuana being explicitly good. It's people saying the government should tweak the parameters of good things allowed, rather than saying people should be free to choose.
I realize this is a fine line to draw. I still think that the reason why people argue for an outcome often matters more than the specific outcome.
It seems people are for it, not out of a belief in the right-to-choose, but a shift in belief towards marijuana being explicitly good.
Excellent.
It fits in with the “freedom is a bad thing” we have going on.
Well damn. I guess all those raises, promotions, and bonuses for excellence were 'just a pipe dream'.
I may have to add PA to my personal "do not travel" list.
Shooting up the reefers only causes lethargy in white folks, it causes the darkies to go on drug-fueled raping sprees.
who won the stupid primary?
You can't just count up the votes per precinct in a day, and then add up the precinct totals the next day. This is literally rocket science. It could take weeks to do the calculations. And you never know when another box of ballots is going to show up.
He's just afraid marijuana will cut into the sales of the snake oil he peddles.
Well, he IS a doctor. Sounds 'sciency'. We should probably follow the science.
"We should probably follow the science."
Out the door and down the street apiece.
Oz and Fauci should be stripped of their credentials
Didn't read yet, but considering that "mojo" is slang for morphine, and that cannabis can be used as adjunctive or substitute pain treatment for narcotics, maybe there's something to this.
Well, weaking Mojo would make the Powerpuff girls happy. At least now I know how they got their name.
"weakening"
Goddamn the lack of an edit button!
This fucking guy. what a tool.
I'd rather have Dick fucking Cheney that this shit.
Don't be a fool. Cheney is the first republican dope smugger I ever met.
Oz has always been a quack
It's true, in places where there is legal weed there are higher rates of unemployment. This is because namblanese catholic mafia upset about their number one tool of drug smuggling just up and left their filthy whore hands, so, they banned everyone who smoked a joint in the last seven years from getting a job.....
This is what happens when you let a criminal organization run your government.
Drug test the feds.
Weed not included.
Wait...is he saying having fewer people wanting to work would worsen the unemployment rate? Doesn't it work the other way around?
It's not politicians job to be making PERSONAL CHOICES for everyone. It's certainly not their job to be enforcing those PERSONAL DICTATIONS by use of Gov-Guns. They are not "Gods".
It is however their job to ensure Individual Liberty and Justice for all..
Same with sex, masturbation, and porn. Saps the competitive spirit, grows hairy knuckles, reduces the birth rate and weakens the seed, distracts from purposeful procreation in favor of mere enjoyment.
About time a political party brought these ideas back into the public arena.
The billy bennett greatest hits album
Dr. Oz, the guy who made millions peddling raspberry immunoketones that burn fat while you eat bags of Cheetos, "miracle breakthrough" elixirs that burn fat while you eat Cheetos, magic beans, and a number of alien-concocted "miracle in a bottle" cures to rubes?
The guy who sold huge volumes of quack products based on rat studies, illusory "science," and astrology to his gape-jawed daytime television audience?
I am not sure which is worse. A cynical, greedy, low-character grifter like Oz or the useless fucking idiots he separates from their cash.
My question is, if homos all hate all the foxnewz quacks then why do they keep hiring quacks?
Did anyone really still not know fox news was owned by a bunch of left wing homos? Why else do you think they all look so ridiculous? Why else do you think rush had not been on a fox channel since 1991?
Why else does every other credible stand alone right wing pundit somehow get fired?
Fox is a fgt clown car. Nuff sed.
Asshole bigot, who makes M/W if he's lucky, posts lies after lies here.
Eat shit and die, asshole.
Btw, all the way tired of being censored by libertarian junky faggot monkeys falsely claiming being aligned with logic and reason.
Just another spinny marginalized turdstool lead by slime bags.
"Jerry Brown Opposes Legal Pot Because 'We Need To Stay Alert'"
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/jerry-brown-marijuana_n_4885455
Don't recall a peep from Reason at that time.
The Republican candidates seems to have a low opinion of their own voters. Dr. Oz see Pennsylvanians will all becoming pot heads. While in Ohio, Vance thinks that smuggled fentanyl is killing off all the Republicans. The former President thought his January 6th supporters looked "low class". With Republicans the more you insult them the more they like you.
My wife and I voted for Oz last week primarily due to his past support for women's right to abortion (as all GOP candidates now claim to be "pro-life", which is code word for they'll vote to ban many, most or all abortions.
But if Oz wants to keep marijuana banned at the federal level, and claims he'll support a federal abortion ban and/or will oppose a federal law protecting a women's right to abortion, I'll be voting for Fetterman in November (even though I disagree with nearly all of his left wing views).
Should we blame Oprah first of all for unleashing this dumbass upon mainstream society?
That title was a very satisfying belly laugh...
How did this clown become a serious candidate?