Menu
Washington DC
DC Dispensaries
DC Weed Reviews
DC Medical Reviews
How to Buy Weed in DC
I-71 Information
History of Legal Weed in DC
DC Medical Marijuana Guide
Virginia
Find the BEST weed in...
DEA’s New ‘Drug Quiz’ Admits That Youth Marijuana Use Is Declining As Legalization Expands
Mar 18, 2026
Kyle Jaeger
Marijuana Moment
The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) is acknowledging that, even as
more states have legalized marijuana, youth cannabis use has “declined”
over the past several decades.
As part of an online quiz on DEA’s “Just Think Twice” platform, the agency
asked about a variety of drug trends, including questions about substance
use disorder, drug overdose deaths, signs of a heroin overdose and cannabis
use among youth.
Notably, the answer to one question about past-year marijuana use by
adolescents and teens directly contradicts a frequently debunked
prohibitionist narrative about the risks of state-level legalization, with
anti-cannabis organizations claiming the reform would drive more teens to
use marijuana.
That’s not the case, DEA said.
“From 1995 to 2025, past-year cannabis use decreased among 8th, 10th, and
12th grade students,” reads one of the items, with respondents asked to
decide whether the statement is “Fact” or “Fiction.”
It turns out, contrary to prohibitionist fears, it’s a fact that teen
marijuana use has declined since states began enacting laws to allow
medical or recreational use.
“Use of cannabis within the past year declined from 15.8 percent to 7.6
percent for 8th grade students, 28.7 percent to 15.6 percent for 10th grade
students, and 34.7 percent to 25.7 percent for 12th grade students, from
1995 to 2025,” the quiz explains once the respondent makes their choice,
citing data from the National Institute on Drug Abuse- (NIDA) backed
national Monitoring the Future (MTF) survey.
Via DEA.
For those who’ve been closely following cannabis policy and research, the
question was likely a no-brainer. Numerous studies have found that rates of
youth marijuana use either declines or remains stable after states enact
legalization, which advocates point to as evidence of the effectiveness of
regulations over criminalization.
When adults have legal access to cannabis at age-gated licensed retailers,
many transition away from the illicit market, where sellers generally
aren’t checking IDs or following other protocols ensuring product safety
and quality. States with legalization laws also tend to incorporate public
education initiatives into their programs to deter teens from misusing
cannabis.
Of course, DEA didn’t endorse marijuana legalization in the quiz answer.
And in its answer to another question about cannabis—specifically quizzing
people about whether states are legalizing because marijuana “has been
proven not to have adverse effects”—the agency took the opportunity to link
the plant to a variety of health issues and impaired driving, despite
conflicting evidence on those claims.
“While several states have legalized marijuana, the drug is still linked to
mental health problems like anxiety and psychosis, can slow brain
development, and is the substance most often found in the blood of drivers
involved in and frequently responsible for car crashes,” DEA said.
This is one of the latest examples of DEA using interactive online quiz
formats as part of its effort to raise awareness about drug issues. Last
year, for example, the agency DEA put out a five-question quiz to assess
people’s drug slang knowledge for substances such as marijuana, MDMA and
fentanyl.
Not unlike its drug emoji guide that DEA recirculated last year, the test
made several claims about the terminology used by consumers and sellers
that might give those populations pause.
DEA’s emoji decoding guide has been around, and somewhat updated, since
2021, drawing some criticism from consumers who’ve questioned the
credibility of the agency’s interpretation of how people communicate about
drugs in texts and social media.
DEA, which is currently involved in a process to consider rescheduling
marijuana—has long been considered out of touch with youth culture as it
concerns drug use and sales. And it’s been partnering with other anti-drug
groups recently that hasn’t done much to disabuse the public of that
perception.
For instance, to mark “National Prevention Week,” DEA promoted a campaign
last May that encouraged people to share memes with dubious claims about
the effects of cannabis—including the theory that it is a “gateway drug” to
using other substances.
In 2023, DEA also advised young people that, rather than doing drugs, they
should focus on becoming Instagram influencers. The agency promoted tips on
how to get a “natural high” as an alternative to drugs, sharing what it
said were “7 Better Highs” such as becoming famous on Instagram, playing
video games and going to a pet store to look at animals.
In the background, cannabis advocates and stakeholders have been closely
monitoring agencies including DEA as they await action on marijuana
rescheduling—a process President Donald Trump in December directed the
attorney general to quickly finalize. Moving cannabis from Schedule I to
Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), as proposed, would not
federally legalize it, however.
The post DEA’s New ‘Drug Quiz’ Admits That Youth Marijuana Use Is Declining
As Legalization Expands appeared first on Marijuana Moment.







