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You are at:Home»Business»Teens Didn’t Just Discover Weed. So Why Is The Wall St. Journal Acting Like They Did?
Business

Teens Didn’t Just Discover Weed. So Why Is The Wall St. Journal Acting Like They Did?

adminBy adminMarch 6, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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Teens Didn’t Just Discover Weed. So Why Is The Wall St. Journal Acting Like They Did?
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Vapes are newer. Teen cannabis use isn’t. The Wall Street Journal frames a familiar school problem like legalization invented it, even as the data says youth use has declined.

The Wall Street Journal has a new teen-cannabis panic on offer: vape clouds in school bathrooms, sneaky hits during class and administrators playing cat-and-mouse with students who keep finding ways to get high. The gadgets are newer. The hardware is newer. The hiding spots may be newer, too. But the underlying behavior? Please. American teenagers did not just discover weed because a dispensary opened in town. What the Journal really found is an old adolescent ritual in updated packaging, then stretched it into a referendum on legal cannabis.

Let’s get the obvious part out of the way. Teen cannabis use is real. The risks are real. THC can be harmful to developing brains, and schools have every right to care about what students are doing on campus. But that is not the same as proving legalization created some brand-new youth cannabis crisis. That leap is where the piece gets slippery.

Because once you leave the anecdote and look at the trendline, the panic starts to wobble. The University of Michigan’s Monitoring the Future report shows past-year marijuana use among 12th graders at 26.0% in 2024, down from 35.7% in 2019. Among 8th graders, it was 7.0% in 2024, down from 11.8% in 2019. That is not an explosion. That is a decline.

Zoom out further and the same pattern holds. A 2026 Addictive Behaviors paper, “Trends in US adolescent cannabis use, 1991–2023”, found that youth cannabis use rose through the 1990s, peaked in 1999 and then broadly declined. Lifetime use fell from 47.3% in 1999 to 30.1% in 2023. Recent use dropped from 27.1% to 17.8%. Early initiation fell too. In other words, if you want to tell a dramatic story about teen cannabis, the most inconvenient fact is that the peak is a quarter-century behind us.

And if the argument is specifically that legalization caused kids to start using more, the best recent policy literature does not back that up either. A 2024 JAMA Psychiatry study, “Recreational Marijuana Laws and Teen Marijuana Use, 1993-2021”, found no evidence that recreational marijuana laws were associated with current or frequent teen use. A separate 2024 JAMA Pediatrics study, “Recreational Cannabis Legalization, Retail Sales, and Adolescent Substance Use Through 2021”, found no net increases in adolescent cannabis, alcohol, cigarette or e-cigarette use tied to recreational legalization or retail sales. That does not mean every concern is fake. It means the Journal is hinting at a causal story the evidence does not support.

That is the framing trick. The article keeps pointing to real things, then attaching them to the wrong villain. Teens getting THC vapes from older friends? Real. Peer-to-peer sales through Snapchat? Real. Bad packaging that looks too much like candy? Also real. But none of that means adult legality itself is the root problem. If a kid gets cannabis from an older sibling, a sloppy adult or some classmate running a side hustle through social media, that is a diversion problem. A safeguards problem. An adults-failing-kids problem. It is not proof that legal access for adults was the mistake. If an eighth grader grabs a parent’s car keys and takes off, the problem is not that cars are legal for adults. The problem is access, supervision and adults failing to secure something meant for grown people.

The same goes for the article’s “even during class” shock. Come on. High schools have been dealing with students sneaking substances on campus forever. Cigarettes behind the gym. Joints in the parking lot. Booze in soda bottles. Pills traded between periods. Bathrooms have been unofficial teenage embassies since before half these editors were born. What’s different now is not that students experiment. What’s different is the delivery system, the stealth and the surveillance. Vapes are easier to conceal than joints. Sensors are more sensitive than a teacher catching a smell in the hallway. Cameras are better at documenting who went in and out of the bathroom than a vice principal with a clipboard. That may increase visibility. It does not automatically mean that prevalence increased.

That distinction matters because the Journal leans hard on principals saying they are “seeing more” cannabis at school, even as national youth-use data moves in the other direction. Those two things can coexist. Schools can monitor more aggressively and detect more incidents while overall use falls. They can become more alert to vaping, more suspicious of bathrooms and more likely to interpret a familiar adolescent behavior through a legalization lens. But “administrators feel like they’re seeing more” is not the same as “legalization caused more kids to use cannabis.” One is anecdotal. The other is a claim about causality.

Even the Journal’s own reporting keeps stumbling into more interesting explanations than the one it wants to sell. At one point, a principal says students increasingly see nicotine as unhealthier than cannabis. At another, he suggests some of the behavior is “self-medication” tied to anxiety, school pressure and social stress. That’s not a simple legalization story. That’s a story about youth mental health, risk perception, coping and the ways teenagers respond to pressure. In other words, the article keeps brushing up against reality, then backing away so it can keep blaming legal weed.

And yes, there is a fair criticism to make about certain cannabis products and branding. When THC products blur into candy aesthetics, cartoon logic or child-coded packaging, regulators should notice. We’ve said that ourselves. In When Cannabis Brands Blur Into Youth Culture, Regulators Notice: Lessons From Tobacco’s Past, we argued exactly that: if the industry fails to draw a clear line between adult fun and kid-friendly branding, regulators will draw it for us. But that is not the same thing as saying legal cannabis as a whole is driving some new schoolhouse collapse. In fact, the existence of legal markets is precisely what makes guardrails possible: age checks, packaging rules, warning labels, product testing and enforcement against copycats. The illicit market never cared about any of that.

This is also part of a broader pattern. We’ve seen major outlets do this before: flatten a complicated issue, grab the scariest angle and sell it like a revelation. We called it out in The New York Times Isn’t Examining the Real-World Evidence on Cannabis. It’s Ignoring It. We called it out again in How The NY Post Found a Boring Cannabis Study and Turned It Into a Scare Story. And when the media turned CHS into clickbait spectacle, we said so there too: Big Alcohol Says Weed Will Make You Puke? Hmm… The pattern is familiar by now. Find a real issue, strip it of context and then use it to imply something much bigger than the evidence actually shows.

So let’s call this what it is. The Wall Street Journal did not uncover a new teen behavior. It found a newer device for an older one, wrapped it in alarm and treated that as evidence that legalization broke something. But the trend data says youth cannabis use is down. The policy literature says legalization did not drive a teen-use spike. And history says high schoolers finding ways to get high is about as new as locker combinations.

If the goal is to protect kids, then tell the truth about the problem. Don’t pretend vape pens invented adolescent mischief. Don’t confuse surveillance with causation. And don’t use an old teenage behavior as a lazy excuse to relaunch a war on legal weed.

The device changed. The behavior didn’t. The data didn’t cooperate.

Photo by Randy Laybourne on Unsplash

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