Hollywood's favorite
narrator Morgan Freeman is a longtime marijuana user. And in a new interview
has opened up about being an advocate for legalizing marijuana, because
according to him, that 'pot is very useful'.
Freeman, 77, was turned on to the drug by his first wife 'many years ago'.
Freeman, 77, was turned on to the drug by his first wife 'many years ago'.
'I'll eat it, drink it,
smoke it, snort it! This movement is really a long time coming, and it's
getting legs -longer legs,' he said.
The Oscar-winning film
legend was in a car accident seven years ago, in which he suffered injuries
that still cause pain, according to the Daily Beast. He was driving
through Mississippi when his 1997 Nissan Maxima skidded off the road and
flipped several times.
Emergency responders rescued Freeman from the crash using the Jaws of Life, and he was taken to the hospital with a shattered left shoulder, arm and elbow, and nerves had to be repaired with a four-hour surgery. Freeman still wears a yellow compression glove on his left hand - which he hasn't regained full use of - to prevent blood pooling.
Pointing to the glove, Freeman told the Daily Beast that 'Marijuana has many useful uses'. He said:
Emergency responders rescued Freeman from the crash using the Jaws of Life, and he was taken to the hospital with a shattered left shoulder, arm and elbow, and nerves had to be repaired with a four-hour surgery. Freeman still wears a yellow compression glove on his left hand - which he hasn't regained full use of - to prevent blood pooling.
Pointing to the glove, Freeman told the Daily Beast that 'Marijuana has many useful uses'. He said:
'I have fibromyalgia
pain in this arm, and the only thing that offers any relief is
marijuana. They're talking about kids who have grand mal seizures, and
they've discovered that marijuana eases that down to where these children can
have a life. That right there, to me, says, "Legalize it across the
board!"
And what negative effects
does it have? Look at Woodstock 1969. They said, "We're not going to
bother them or say anything about smoking marijuana," and not one problem
or fight. Then look at what happened in '99,' he says, referencing the less marijuana-friendly
30th-anniversary event, which resulted in riots and arrests.'