The Newly Unveiled HHS Rationale for Rescheduling Marijuana Underlines Drug Warriors' Dishonesty
The points about marijuana's risks and benefits that the department now concedes were clear long before last August.

Last week, in response to a Freedom of Information Act request by Houston lawyer Matthew Zorn, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) revealed the rationale for its August 2023 recommendation that the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) move marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act. The document not only contradicts the position that the DEA has long taken on this issue; it contradicts the position that HHS itself took in 2016, when the DEA rejected a 2011 rescheduling petition. The reversal shows that marijuana's classification has always been a political question rather than a legal or scientific matter.
On October 7, 2022, the same day he announced a mass pardon for people convicted of simple marijuana possession under federal law, President Joe Biden instructed HHS and Attorney General Merrick Garland to "initiate the administrative process to review expeditiously how marijuana is scheduled under federal law." Biden noted that Schedule I, which includes "heroin and LSD," is "the classification meant for the most dangerous substances" and is "even higher than the classification of fentanyl and methamphetamine—the drugs that are driving our overdose epidemic." On Twitter, he reiterated that "we classify marijuana at the same level as heroin" and treat it as "more serious than fentanyl," which he said "makes no sense."
In short, it was clear that Biden did not expect HHS to confirm its previous position that marijuana belongs in Schedule I. He expected HHS to recommend that marijuana be moved to a lower schedule, which is what it ultimately did. As the details of the HHS recommendation clarify, that decision was not based on new scientific evidence. It was based on a reinterpretation of the criteria for Schedule I that could have been implemented much sooner if HHS and the DEA had been open to it, or if a previous president had encouraged it.
Under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), Schedule I supposedly is reserved for drugs with "a high potential for abuse" that have "no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States" and no "accepted safety for use…under medical supervision." The CSA authorizes the attorney general, in consultation with HHS, to decide whether a substance meets those criteria, and the attorney general historically has delegated that authority to the DEA. The DEA has long maintained that a substance can have a "currently accepted medical use" only if there is enough evidence to satisfy the Food and Drug Administration's requirements for approving a prescription drug.
In its response to a 2020 rescheduling petition, for example, the DEA conceded "the possibility that drugs containing marijuana or its derivatives might, in the future, be proven to be safe and effective for the treatment of certain conditions and thus approved…by the United States Food and Drug Administration [FDA] for marketing." But "until then," it said, "we will continue to identify opportunities to assist researchers in this area while never losing sight of the need to protect the public," which, as HHS and the DEA saw it, meant keeping marijuana in Schedule I.
Strictly speaking, the scenario described by the DEA had already come to pass. Back in 1985, the FDA approved Marinol, gelatin capsules that contain a synthetic version of THC (a.k.a. dronabinol) in sesame oil, as a treatment for the nausea and vomiting caused by cancer chemotherapy. It 1992, the FDA approved Marinol as a treatment for AIDS wasting syndrome. Marinol was originally placed in Schedule II, but in 1999 the DEA moved it to Schedule III, which also includes prescription drugs such as codeine, buprenorphine, and anabolic steroids. In 2016, the FDA approved Syndros, an oral THC solution, for the same indications as Marinol. Syndros remains in Schedule II. And in 2018, the FDA approved Epidiolex, an oral solution of marijuana-derived cannabidiol (CBD), as a treatment for two forms of severe, drug-resistant epilepsy. Epidiolex is a Schedule V drug.
Once those medications were approved by the FDA, the DEA had no choice but to place them in a schedule lower than marijuana. But despite the evidence that "drugs containing marijuana or its derivatives" were safe and effective medicines, marijuana itself remained in Schedule I, as required by the DEA's reading of the CSA. The recommendation that HHS produced in response to Biden's instructions rejects that interpretation of the statute, saying a drug can have a "currently accepted medical use" even if there is not enough evidence for it to pass muster with the FDA.
In place of the DEA's definition, HHS uses a two-part test. Part 1 asks "whether there is widespread current experience with medical use of marijuana in the United States by licensed HCPs [health care practitioners] operating in accordance with implemented state-authorized programs, where such medical use is recognized by entities that regulate the practice of medicine under these state jurisdictions." Since 38 states have approved medical use of marijuana, it easily satisfies this prong.
"More than 30,000 HCPs are authorized to recommend the use of marijuana for more than six million registered patients," HHS notes. That means there is "widespread clinical experience associated with various medical conditions recognized by a substantial number of jurisdictions across the United States."
HHS thus embraces one of the main arguments that Zorn and his colleague Shane Pennington made on behalf of marijuana researcher Suzanne Sisley in a 2020 brief asking the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit to reject the DEA's interpretation of the criteria for Schedule I. Zorn and Pennington argued that "widespread acceptance" of medical marijuana by the states, "the traditional gatekeepers of the medical profession" under our federalist system of government, "forecloses placement in Schedule I."
In 2021, a 9th Circuit panel rejected that appeal, ruling that the plaintiffs had "failed to exhaust their administrative remedies." But in a concurring opinion, Judge Paul Watford observed that the DEA "may well be obliged to initiate a reclassification proceeding for marijuana, given the strength of petitioners' arguments that the agency has misinterpreted the controlling statute by concluding that marijuana 'has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.'"
Part 2 of the new HHS test for that criterion asks "whether there exists some
credible scientific support for at least one of the medical conditions for which the Part 1 test is satisfied." After reviewing the relevant literature, HHS concludes that there is "credible scientific support" for marijuana's use as a treatment for pain, for nausea and vomiting, and for "anorexia related to a medical condition." That conclusion, it emphasizes, is "not meant to imply that safety and effectiveness have been established
for marijuana that would support FDA approval of a marijuana drug product for a particular indication."
What about the other Schedule I criteria? Regarding "potential for abuse," the HHS analysis underlines the slipperiness of the concept, which the CSA does not define. The fact that people like marijuana, for example, counts as one piece of evidence that suggests its potential for abuse. As HHS puts it, "there is ample epidemiological evidence that marijuana is self-administered by humans because of its ability to produce rewarding psychological effects, such as euphoria." But while HHS notes widespread nonmedical use of marijuana, it draws a distinction between use and abuse even in that context—a distinction that has always been anathema to the DEA.
"Evidence shows that some individuals are taking marijuana in amounts sufficient to create a hazard to their health and to the safety of other individuals and the community," HHS says. "However, evidence also exists showing that the vast majority of individuals who use marijuana are doing so in a manner that does not lead to dangerous outcomes to themselves or others."
Marijuana use "may lead to moderate or low physical dependence, depending on
frequency and degree of marijuana exposure," HHS says. "It can produce psychic dependence in some individuals, but the likelihood of serious outcomes is low, suggesting that high psychological dependence does not occur in most individuals who use marijuana." While "experimental data and clinical reports demonstrate that chronic, but not acute, use of marijuana can produce both psychic and physical dependence in humans," it says, "the symptoms associated with both kinds of dependence are relatively mild for most individuals."
HHS also notes that "the risks to the public health posed by marijuana are low compared to other drugs of abuse," such as heroin (Schedule I), cocaine (Schedule II), and benzodiazepines such as Valium and Xanax (Schedule IV). That conclusion is "based on an evaluation of various epidemiological databases for [emergency room] visits, hospitalizations, unintentional exposures, and most importantly, for overdose deaths." Although "abuse of marijuana produces clear evidence of harmful consequences, including substance use disorder," HHS says, they are "less common and less harmful" than the negative consequences associated with other drugs.
In "various epidemiological databases" compiled from 2015 to 2021, HHS notes, "the utilization-adjusted rate of adverse outcomes involving marijuana was consistently lower than the respective utilization-adjusted rates of adverse outcomes involving heroin, cocaine, and, for certain outcomes, other comparators. Also, the rank order of the comparators in terms of adverse outcome counts typically placed alcohol or heroin in the first or immediately subsequent positions, with marijuana in a lower place."
Given the conclusion that marijuana has a "currently accepted medical use," it plainly does not belong in Schedule I. And given the evidence regarding its relative hazards, HHS now thinks, placement in Schedule III makes sense. "While marijuana is associated with a high prevalence of abuse," it says, "the profile of and propensity for serious outcomes related to that abuse lead to a conclusion that marijuana is most appropriately controlled in Schedule III under the CSA."
The practical implications of that change, assuming the DEA agrees to it, are relatively modest. The biggest immediate impact would be felt by state-licensed marijuana suppliers, which under Section 280E of the Internal Revenue Code cannot deduct standard business expenses on their federal tax returns. That disability, which applies to illegal suppliers of Schedule I or Schedule II drugs, results in punitively high effective tax rates that make it difficult to turn a profit, let alone invest in expansion. Moving marijuana to Schedule III also would facilitate medical research by eliminating regulatory requirements that are specific to Schedule I.
Rescheduling marijuana would not make it legally available as a prescription drug, except in the form of products approved by the FDA. Nor would it address the conflict between state laws that allow medical or recreational use and a federal law that treats state-licensed marijuana businesses as criminal enterprises. Those businesses would still have trouble obtaining financial services, and they would still be subject to criminal penalties and civil forfeiture, outcomes that recreational marijuana suppliers avoid only thanks to prosecutorial discretion.
The HHS recommendation is nevertheless significant as an implicit acknowledgment that drug warriors for decades have bent reality and the law to fit a predetermined conclusion that marijuana belongs in Schedule I. The points that HHS is finally conceding about marijuana's risks and medical potential were clear long before last August. Way back in 1988, the DEA's chief administrative law judge, Francis Young, concluded that marijuana did not meet the criteria for Schedule I, only to be overruled by DEA Administrator John Lawn.
Meanwhile, the whole controversy about how to classify marijuana has been overtaken by events beyond the control of federal bureaucrats. Three-quarters of the states have legalized the medical use of marijuana, and most Americans now live in states that also have legalized recreational use. And while federal regulators quibble about which schedule is appropriate for marijuana, an overwhelming majority of Americans think it should not be scheduled at all.
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Three-quarters of the states have legalized the medical use of marijuana, and most Americans now live in states that also have legalized recreational use.
Amazing what happens when you return thorny questions to the states.
Not really the states, much of this is driven by referendums and it is the people speaking.
True. When state legislatures get involved they just make as many bullshit laws as they can to make it hard to enjoy a liberty.
Amazing what happens when you leave it up to populism in the states.
Alcohol manufacturers and distributors may soon be hardest hit.
You can pry the 40 from my moderately warm and wet hands.
/sarcasmic
At least until he misunderstands what tu quoque and strawmen are, and then passes out.
Two trailer park sarcs go round the outside, round the outside, round the outside.
Are you referring to booze, or the firearm?
See / and know sarcasmic admitted to being a pussy regarding guns and is an alcoholic.
I don't think so. Most of the people not smoking weed now won't start because it's legal. Buying weed for kids will be punished like buying booze for kids so I doubt there will be much change in that black market. The people who will be smoking weed when it's legal will be the people who smoked it when it was illegal. They will just smoke it more often.
I used to argue that legalizing pot would result in lower cost which would kill the black market and reduce the associated crime.
Government regulation proved me wrong.
Government regulators are desperate to prove you wrong. They are trying so hard to make getting legal weed so annoying that people will still go to black market sources.
The fact that I didn't see the argument that marijuana produces psychic dependency in some individuals coming makes me think I don't smoke enough marijuana.
Video games and cheeseburgers also produce psychological dependency, so all such arguments reduce to the Neo-Puritan [1] dogma that if you enjoy it, it's bad.
[1] "Neo" because this meme mainly comes from long after the Puritan movement faded to a sort of generic low-church Protestantism. The original Puritans hugely enjoyed many things without guilt, including oversized meals, beer, and married sex.
When you dig deep enough these prohibitionists take the "Gawd won't give you a burden you can't carry" mindset into the use of both illegal AND legal/prescription drugs. They pride themselves on not even using aspirin. Mind you downing a fifth of crown royal in a night is perfectly fine.
I've had these special kind of idiots tell me I shouldn't take my prescription medications, they figure my kidney disease would have cleared up without the meds and I'd not have needed a transplant and the new list of pharmaceuticals. All you need is heavy drinking and chewing tobacco.
Just like Gensler/SEC and crypto. Yet another example of government acting in bad faith.
They’ll fuck it up anyway.
The control schedules did not contemplate the possibility that we now find ourselves in: of a substance that's very popular and widely used, though rarely for health reasons, but with little "abuse".
Beer?
No, the statute anticipated that one, by exempting malt beverages. What the administrative scheme was made for was pharmaceuticals — substances developed as ingredients of preparations for medical use.
Pussy?
Totally off topic. Ron Pearlman has an AMAZING monologe in Son's of Anarchy about the almighty pussy and basically how western civilization wouldn't exist if it weren't for men wanting to get pussy. Worth finding.
Any regulatory authority differentially attracts - and rewards - people who approve of continued regulation of the object the authority regulates.
Cannabis shouldn't be on any schedule - which is true of pretty much all drugs, IMO.
Weed is the easy one to police. It's mostly unarmed hippies selling baggies to each other.
Guys dealing cocaine are fucking serious with guns and shit.
Dave's not here
Dave's been gone for 45 years now. Why in the world would anyone be expecting his return?
PS Tommy Chong will turn 86 in May.
"It can produce psychic dependence in some individuals, "
So, does coffee. Every been around those people who have a cup in their hands most of the day? Ever been around someone who decided to give up coffee? The person giving it up is usually as pleasant as a wounded bear, until the caffeine withdrawal is over
George Carlin has a great routine about "the day the office coffee machine broke".
(the one line I remember is " . . . and that's when we learn that caffeine really is the low end of the speed spectrum.")
I will look it up as I love George Carlin.
I recall reading a story of road rage gone bad in Ohio. No one will ever know what caused those 2 CCW permitted men to chase each other for a number of miles before ending up in a car wash parking lot and shooting each other dead. Neither man had any alcohol or 'drugs' in them according to toxicology but both men tested positive for high levels of caffeine.
"The reversal shows that marijuana's classification has always been a political question rather than a legal or scientific matter."
I am shocked, shocked.
Next thing we know someone will claim the democrats just want to rule instead of govern.
3 days ago Biden bragged he told Iran to stay out of things.
Today Iran hits a US consulate in Iraq and openly takes credit.
Today Iran hits a US consulate in Iraq and openly takes credit.
Really? That sounds like an act of war. Do you have a citation?
Jeff. You claim to be an intelligent person. Do you know how to do a search? Hunt: "Iran attack us consulate"
Axios, ABC News. Financial times...
Choose whichever source you want. Figure out the narrative you want to use to dismiss it.
Russian channel “Military Informant” claims it was either an Iranian missile or drone. They included video of the strikes in Erbil with audio of (likely) Iranian Shaheds in the background. Video from Sabreen News. They claim it was the US consulate.
Geopolitics Live reports that an US official reported to Sputnik that no US assets hit.
Governor of Erbil called the attack by IRGC an act of terrorism per Kurdish Front News.
Per Bellum Acta, Iraqi security forces told ABC that eight sites near the US consulate were targeted.
Looks like the fog of war hasn’t fully cleared.
Clearing away the fog of war produces "conspiracy theories" according to the government.
I'm sure that he millions of folks who had their lives ruined by convictions for simple possession and smalltime dealing feel a lot better now.
No. I don't.
So, an update about the three migrants who died over the weekend trying to cross the Rio Grande.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/01/15/us/what-we-know-about-the-drownings-of-3-migrants-in-eagle-pass-texas/index.html
The Border Patrol claimed that they tried to call the Texas authorities about the distressed migrants, couldn't get through, then went to the park but were denied access to the park.
The Texas authorities claim that the migrants had already died by time the Border Patrol showed up and that is why they were refused entrance.
Also, what exactly does the "Texas Military Department" do? Why do they need a "military department"?
Also, the Texas authorities took over this park in Eagle Pass against the wishes of the local authorities, to try to stop those damn illegals. But the very predictable happened as a result:
The migrants are just finding a way around the park.
Ultimately the government cannot stop the migration of determined migrants wanting to come here. They will just find a way around the barriers or walls that the government erects.
I read that freedom of speech does not mean freedom from consequences.
The same principle applies equally to freedom of travel. The freedom of travel does not mean freedom from consequences.
“Ultimately the government cannot stop the migration of determined migrants wanting to come here.”
https://www.statista.com/statistics/329256/alien-apprehensions-registered-by-the-us-border-patrol/
Something about our policies must have changed between 2019 and 2022 for the numbers to have doubled, so it seems like there IS something the federal government can do. (I think it’s pretty obvious why 2020 was a slower than usual year, although it seemed pretty average from the 5 or 6 years prior.)
The department oversees the Army and Air National Guards, as well as the State Guard. So basically a centralized command for all three. I’d be willing to bet other states have a similar department as all 50 have Army and Air National Guards as part of the organized militias.
I'm still looking for the Constitutional Amendment that gave the Union government authority for a Health, Food and Drug nanny departments.
Why it's almost like reading the definition of the USA and comparing it to the Union-of-States government we have today and seeing completely opposite forms of government being described.
So many government problems could've been avoided if our government was actually held to the limits of a USA government.
I’m still looking for the Constitutional Amendment that gave the Union government authority for a Health, Food and Drug nanny departments.
I bet it's the commerce clause. It's always the commerce clause!
Ironically even that massively manipulation-of-a-case ends at "among the States".
Or filed as an emergency.
China and Russia are salivating at the thought of how easy it will be to overthrow a nation of idiot stoners.
Surely ... because if it wasn't for the all-mighty gods (politicians) making everyone's choices for them with gov-'guns' we'd all be but sheep running off the edge of a cliff. /s
Sounds to me like someone needs to re-evaluate the plan difference between god himself and Satan.
The stoners are already getting stoned. Are you saying if weed becomes legal you will start smoking it?
And the killers are already killing.
Normalizing it into society accomplishes nothing positive. Just gets us a society of legal junkies/addicts.
Or maybe, "China and Russia are salivating at the thought of how easy it will be to overthrow a nation of" drunken sailors?
Killing someone produces a definite victim. The dead guy. Smoking weed, like drinking vodka shots or eating food with a lot of fat and sugar don't produce a definite victim. Claiming "society" is harmed is what the political left does to justify their social justice agenda.
I noticed you didn't answer the question.
If Marijuana is legalized in your state and is rescheduled at the federal level to be the same as hard liquor will you start smoking it so you will become a mind numbed zombie ripe for communist takeover?
And yet they haven’t tried to invade or attack a nation full of drunkards.
Interesting word swaps there, Nate.
More sensible than smoking weed = killing.
Insofar as they're both crimes, and should be, they are.
For the life of me I'll never understand this leftist mentality of, "Well they're just going to keep doing it, so make it legal and normalize it into society I guess."
As if a society of junkies is something we should aspire to.
Prohibitionists had the same feelings. There is no victim in anyone just smoking weed and legal doesn’t require supporting or normalizing. As-if ‘normal’ behavior was suppose to be defined by government.
At the federal level it's down right UN-Constitutional.
And yet, making it legal always seems to immediately turn to supporting and normalizing, doesn't it.
Can see that clear as day with the gay/trans crowd, and their pedo brethren champing at the bit to be next in line.
If you give a mouse a cookie.
So we need to ban alcohol and tobacco since we don't aspire to be a society of drunks or smelly smokers. We need to ban fatty foods and sweet treats since we don't aspire to be a society fat fucks. We need to ban reality television since we don't want to be a society of back stabbing, self centered dick heads.
We've already normalized those (and don't forget pornography). And, as you so clearly articulate, to our social detriment.
Why would you want to add more detriments like that? We're still in a position to keep that from happening. We can avoid letting that particular fox into our already collapsing henhouse.
Why is "stoner junkie" more redeeming than drunks or smelly smokers or fats or self-centered jerks? Or is this just some petulant, "You can be a fat drunk jerk, but I can't be a stoner junkie? Th...that's not f-f-f-faaaair" sort of thing?
the attorney general historically has delegated that authority to the DEA.
Why? It doesn't make sense that a law-enforcement agency gets to decide what a law can be applied to. That should be decided by others, and the enforcers should apply the law as they are directed to. They have a vested interest in expanding the scope of situations in which they can act (or preventing its contraction). If the AG has authority to change that "delegation", he should do so.
It's all bullshit. LSD is in Schedule I but it has little to no "potential for abuse".
Heroin is no more dangerous or less effective than the better Schedule II analgesics.
No, but heroin was put in a newly-created "X" class (precursor of schedule 1) once authority to market it pharmaceutically was withdrawn. Then they could say it had no accepted medical use.
Heroin is used in other countries as a post surgical analgesic. Safe and effective. The War on Drugs takes surgical patients as collateral damage.
What? No science?! How could that possibly be? You can't seriously expect anyone to believe that the HHS and DEA are political! By the way - Federal law and regulations have always followed at least ten years behind public opinion. Never let it be said that politicians are courageous leaders in the vanguard of social change.
What? No science?! How could that possibly be? You can’t seriously expect anyone to believe that the HHS and DEA are political!
Yes, they are political now just like they were a couple of decades ago. Why do you think they did this?
By the way – Federal law and regulations have always followed at least ten years behind public opinion.
Can you make up your effing mind whether laws and regulations should be decided by "science", "politics", or "public opinion"?
It's not my fault if your sarcasm detector is glitching!
No, public opinion elects culture warriors who want to punish drug users.
The biggest problem with "illegal" drugs has been the consumer has no idea what they are actually getting.
Quick reference:
Libertarian argument: "The government has no business prohibiting substances because market mechanisms will do a better job at communicating potential harm to users and suppliers through price mechanisms and liability."
Progressive argument: "Marijuana doesn't cause significant harm and therefore the government should permit it."
It took both to carry the issue. No business prohibiting it, and doesn't cause harm. Neither argument alone is enough.
Yet there is a notable vast difference there.
One position thinks government is their babysitter.
Bath salts are Schedule I. Whoda thunk it?
What schedule is bath soap?
Schedule 1, in France.