Marijuana is no big deal at all, according to Colorado high school students.

“The figures are disturbing, especially since much of the marijuana supply has become stronger and more potent,” one expert said.

The Healthy Kids Colorado Survey found that fewer students see regular marijuana use as risky behavior. The most recent survey, based on 2015 data, found that 54 percent of participants see it as less risky, up from 48 percent the previous year.

Twenty-one percent of Colorado high school students used marijuana at least once in the last month, and use among high school students is as high as 30 percent in some areas of the state.

Colorado also ranks first in the nation for past-month marijuana usage in kids 12 to 17 years old, National Surveys on Drug Use and Health reports.

“Colorado voters were promised marijuana would be kept out of the hands of Colorado kids. And yet, after three-and-a-half years of commercialized recreational marijuana and after over six years of commercialized medical marijuana, that has yet to happen,” Diane Carlson, a co-founder of Smart Colorado, said in a statement.

Carlson said the figures are disturbing, especially since much of the marijuana supply has become increasingly stronger and more potent. The danger to kids in Colorado are “far more serious and potentially long-lasting” due to today’s high-potency product.

“Too few Colorado kids are aware of how harmful and risky today’s high-potency pot can be.”

“And yet too few Colorado kids are aware of just how harmful and risky today’s high-potency pot can be,” she added.

Dr. Bertha K. Madras, a psychobiology professor at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, said that the idea of preventing adolescent access to marijuana was nothing more than a “fantasy.”

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The drug has been legalized, advertised, and normalized widely for medicinal and psychoactive purposes in Colorado.

“Parents, older siblings, strangers in the street are using the drug — and so do adolescents,” she told LifeZette.

On a monthly basis, she said, more and more research comes in showing the adverse effects on youth. Despite those warnings, the public perception of harm is declining among Colorado youth.

Clearly, they aren’t getting the message.

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In related news, youth tobacco use is down. Nine percent of high schoolers in the state said they smoked a cigarette at least once in the past month.