Marijuana is currently illegal to possess, grow, distribute or sell in Ireland. People caught possessing small amounts of marijuana may receive a fine of up to €1,269. Those in possession of large amounts of marijuana may be charged with trafficking and sentenced to long prison terms.
76% Yes |
24% No |
59% Yes |
24% No |
10% Yes, but only for medical use |
0% No, and increase penalties for non-violent drug offenders |
7% Yes, and legalise, tax, and regulate marijuana instead of criminalizing it |
|
1% Yes, and immediately release anyone serving time solely for drug offenses |
See how support for each position on “Marijuana” has changed over time for 135k Ireland voters.
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See how importance of “Marijuana” has changed over time for 135k Ireland voters.
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Unique answers from Ireland users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@97YCF7S1yr1Y
Yes, but it's use should be limited to private locations
@96CRC9R2yrs2Y
yes but it should be legal to those who have permits
@DylanWoods7772yrs2Y
Marijuana should be legalized, and could be taxed and regulated, it should absolutely be decriminalised. I strongly believe that those who were imprisoned for drug offenses should be immediately released in addition to the legalization of marijuana.
@ISIDEWITH3mos3MO
Yes, but mainly for medical use. Decriminalise it and provide harm reduction safeguards and education for everyone as well as addition treatment for anyone dealing with addition
@8QJHVBS3yrs3Y
Decriminalise drugs, get addicts help.
Stay up-to-date on the most recent “Marijuana” news articles, updated frequently.
@AgileClam5mos5MO
From a thriving fentanyl business with Mexican cartels, to connections in illegal marijuana busts across the nation, alarms are being raised about Beijing's fingerprints being found on the US drug addiction crisis.The Drug Enforcement Administration has substantial evidence dating back a decade of Beijing’s role in flooding U.S. citieswith a wide range of addictive and harmful drugs.“I'm just saying that from a strategic plan of the CCP, it's a brilliant concept that if we can get into America and sell this very pure marijuana and destroy Americans' brains, so then they go to pills and other drugs, that's a brilliant, unrestricted warfare,” former DEA Chief of Special Operations Derek Maltz Sr. told Just the News on Wednesday.“When you look at the Chinese Communist Party. And you look at the role of China and their criminal networks in the overall drug crisis in America – because people are not connecting the dots – this is way bigger than just a bunch of, you know, illegally selling marijuana up in Maine. First of all, it's all over the country. It's not just Maine, Oklahoma, Oregon, Washington State, California. And, you know, all different states,” Maltz said during a wide-ranging interview on the John Solomon Reports podcast.
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