19 States That Legalized Marijuana Use Nevertheless Say It Should Disqualify People From Owning Guns
They are joining the Trump administration in urging the Supreme Court to uphold a federal law that disarms "unlawful" drug consumers.
If you are a cannabis consumer who owns a gun, you are committing a federal felony right now, even if you live in one of the 40 states that have legalized marijuana for medical or recreational use. That perplexing situation is perfectly reasonable and constitutional, according to 19 of those states, which are urging the Supreme Court to uphold the federal ban on gun possession by "unlawful" users of "any controlled substance."
That law is at the center of a case that the Court is scheduled to hear on March 2, which involves a Texas man, Ali Hemani, who was charged with illegal gun possession after an FBI search of his home discovered a Glock 19 pistol, two ounces of marijuana, and less than a gram of cocaine. The potential implications extend far beyond Hemani because this ban applies to millions of peaceful Americans who pose no plausible threat to public safety.
As I explain in my new book, Beyond Control, that policy authorizes severe criminal penalties for drug users who try to exercise their Second Amendment rights. Under the law that Hemani violated, it does not matter whether someone handles guns while intoxicated or otherwise endangers the public.
Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld a federal judge's dismissal of the gun charge against Hemani. That outcome was dictated by a 2024 ruling in which the 5th Circuit held that the Second Amendment barred the government from prosecuting a gun-owning cannabis consumer "based solely on her 'habitual or occasional drug use.'"
Such prosecutions, the 5th Circuit said, are not "consistent with this Nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation"—the Second Amendment test that the Supreme Court established in 2022. While "our history and tradition may support some limits on a presently intoxicated person's right to carry a weapon," the appeals court said, "they do not support disarming a sober person based solely on past substance usage."
The Trump administration wants the Supreme Court to reject that conclusion and reinstate the charge against Hemani. Solicitor General D. John Sauer implausibly argues that all "unlawful" drug users, including occasional cannabis consumers and state-registered patients who use marijuana for symptom relief, pose a danger that justifies disarming them.
Sauer likens drug users to "habitual drunkards," who historically could be confined to workhouses as "vagrants." But the law he is defending is more analogous to a categorical ban on gun possession by alcohol consumers, which would be clearly unconstitutional.
The Trump administration's position, which echoes the Biden administration's, seems inconsistent with the president's avowed commitment to the Second Amendment. The states that have joined Sauer in asking the Supreme Court to overrule the 5th Circuit likewise seem to be contradicting their own policies.
Illinois and a bunch of other states that allow recreational use of marijuana complain that the 5th Circuit's understanding of the Second Amendment constrains their ability to impose restrictions aimed at "preventing firearms from coming into the hands of people likely to misuse them." Those people, they imply, include everyone who buys and consumes marijuana in compliance with state law.
That position is puzzling, since all these states have decided that marijuana should be treated like alcohol. If drinkers are not categorically forbidden to possess firearms, why should cannabis consumers be disarmed simply because they use a different intoxicant?
In their attempt to justify that arbitrary distinction, Illinois et al. warn that drug users may suffer "lasting mental disturbances," commit crimes to support their habits, or "interact with" violent "drug dealers and traffickers." Those concerns make little sense as applied to the typical cannabis consumer, especially when he is buying marijuana from state-licensed stores.
These states are so eager to justify gun control that they are willing to throw those businesses and their customers under the bus. The Trump administration, meanwhile, is so eager to reinforce hoary anti-drug stereotypes that it is willing to sacrifice a constitutional right it supposedly is determined to defend.
© Copyright 2026 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Didn't feel like listing the 19 states?
My fave AI "Perplexity" says...
The article itself never lists the 19 states by name, but the amicus brief it cites does; those 19 are: Illinois, Texas, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Utah.
My comment: I see Texas in the list. Texas has hardly legalized Mary Jane in any meaningful way. Weed-derived weak shit such as gummies etc. have a ridiculously low allowed level of THC, and not much more is legally available.
No more than you did. Seems even SQRSLY has more gumption than you, and whines less.
It's legal in MO, but I'm yet to have anyone ask for proof that I'm not a gun owner at the dispensaries.
Because the vast majority of them will be blue states that otherwise seek to ban guns outside the control of the state.
Yes. Guilty until proven innocent by some politicians 'moral' living standards isn't what freedom is about. People need to recognize the importance in innocent until proven guilty before all freedoms are lost to pre-mature assumptions of guilty.
JS;dr
I've known too many people who became schizophrenic psychos through drug use and even just weed. I don't think weed use on its own should bar you from 2A rights, but I've also seen where some potheads are too unhinged or irresponsible to be armed. Legally I'm against this, but in practice I'm not completely opposee.
I always revert back to booze. My personal observation is that booze makes people more crazy/violent than weed.
How many people have used guns irresponsibly while drinking vs stoned?
Finally, if you can't be trusted with guns, why are you walking around the rest of us? This applies to everyone legally barred from guns.
As Idaho-Bob said, alcohol abuse is far more likely to lead to violence than marijuana. If casual (that is, legal) alcohol users are allowed to own guns, there is no logical or moral reason to forbid them from casual marijuana users.
Prohibitions on use while intoxicated make sense and are legally sustainable regardless of your choice of intoxicant.
Also: correlation is not causation.
Not my experience. Those I've known with psychotic symptoms were that way without weed or drugs. Though, I think crazy people tend to like weed or drugs, they're crazy regardless.
Who would you trust more (or distrust less) with firearms someone high on weed or drunk?
Nineteen States have antigun governments that are willing to seize on any pretext to disarm their citizens that they can get away with, and that would love to impose the Feinstein Dream: "Mr. and Mrs. America, turn them all in."
BINGO!!!
If you aren't incarcerated, you should have all of the rights protected by the US Constitution.
If you can't have a gun, you shouldn't have any social media accounts.
"They are joining the Trump administration in urging the Supreme Court to uphold a federal law that disarms "unlawful" drug consumers."
Didn't take long at all for the TDS-addled lying pile of steaming shit Sullum to get to TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!, TRUMP!.
Dude, you're deranged by Trump. That means you're TDS-addled. I think what the Libertarian Party needs to do is to concentrate it's efforts on defeating Republicans in all the swing districts. Run well-financed candidates in the swing districts to siphon libertarian votes away from the Republican causing Republican defeat.
In what way will having more Democrats in office make anything better?
It's the threat to allow Democrats in office that would cause the Republicans to back off on social conservatism.
The worst thing about the Democrats is their gun-control. Tell the Democrats that if they offer up a pro-gun candidate, we'll run a candidate who will draw votes from the Republican, enabling the pro-gun Democrat to win. Though, if the Democrats ran pro-gun candidates, they'd likely win without a Libertarian siphoning away Republican votes.
Whether it would be better if more Democrats get elected depends upon what Trump and the Republicans ultimately do. I don't want a drug warrior. Trump hit those drug boats, but on the other hand, he reclassified cannabis as not being quite as federally illegal. So he offset his drug-warriorness with cannabis reform. If Trump and the Republicans ever try to crank up the drug war and get us into a war with Mexico, then maybe having less Republicans in office would be a good thing. Hopefully, the Donald and the Republicans won't be that stupid.
Why is it that TDS-addled steaming piles of lying shit claim OTHERS are TDS-addled?
Fuck off and die, asswipe.
Because you're obsessed with Trump. Look, you're pasting his name all over the place like you're deranged. TDS-addled? Sounds more like you than me. Personally, I don't care about Trump. I only care about what he does.
What about people who hold their pistol sideways?
Maryland says that they are not concerned about marijuana card holders potentially also being firearm owners (presently). Still, fuck this untrustworthy state, my guy delivers better product at lower prices anyway.