Mexico\u2019s Interior Secretary recently announced that the country\u2019s government will host a upcoming series of public debates in early 2016 on the risks and benefits of marijuana legalization.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n
The Mexican government is set to host a series of national public debates on whether or not to legalize marijuana in the country, <\/span>Yahoo! News<\/span><\/a> reports. Despite Mexican President Enrique Pe\u00f1a Nieto\u2019s <\/span>emphatic condemnation<\/span><\/a> of legalization, the public will get to share their own voices on the topic in the five debates, which will start the third week of January and continue on through February.<\/span><\/p>\n
The announcement of the debates arrives on the heels of what seems to be a growing support for marijuana policy reform in Mexico. Just this past November, the Mexican Supreme Court <\/span>ruled<\/span><\/a> that personal marijuana use is constitutionally legal under the individual right to “free development of personality.” <\/span><\/p>\n
Since the Supreme Court ruling, Mexico City mayor Miguel Angel Mancera <\/span>introduced a proposal to legalize medical marijuana<\/span><\/a> and Cardinal Norberto Rivera, the archbishop of Mexico City, <\/span>came out in support of medical marijuana<\/span><\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n
Those in support of legalization believe it would help curb\u00a0the major source of revenue for drug cartels and subsequently reduce violence in the country: the lives of <\/span>more than 90,000 Mexicans have been taken<\/span><\/a> since the start of the drug war in 2006. President Pe\u00f1a Nieto doesn\u2019t buy the argument.<\/span><\/p>\n
\u201cIt isn\u2019t valid, and I don\u2019t agree, that this legalization would make it easier to fight organized crime by reducing the illicit income and profits from this activity,\u201d he says<\/a><\/span>. \u201cThat would beg the question, should we put the health of Mexican children and youths at risk in order to combat organized crime?\u201d<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
“I am not the truth,” says\u00a0Pe\u00f1a Nieto at an event, as reported by the <\/span>San Francisco Chronicle<\/span><\/a>. “I am open to listening to well-documented positions that are scientifically sustainable and could lead to a different position.”<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons<\/a><\/em> \t<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"