Drug schedules under the Controlled Substances Act are based on accepted medical use and abuse risk, not a linear 'hardness' scale or sentencing guide. Misunderstanding this lets advocates and media present rescheduling as proof of safety or as decarceration when neither necessarily follows.
— Clarifying what schedules mean could prevent policy errors and improve public reasoning on marijuana, psychedelics, and opioids.
Kevin Sabet
2025.08.21
100% relevant
The article’s walkthrough of why heroin and marijuana share Schedule I (no accepted medical use) and why dronabinol sits in Schedule III.
2025.08.21
65% relevant
The newsletter warns that moving marijuana to Schedule III sends an unwarranted safety signal—specifically for young men—aligning with the point that drug schedules are often misread as harm rankings, distorting policy and public understanding.
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