Poll

Should Cannabis be legalised?

Yes66%66% - 146
No33%33% - 74
Total: 220
PekkaA
Member
+36|6665|Finland

Marconius wrote:

Legalize it and tax the hell out of it.  Hell, we might even be able to pay off our national deficit in a few years with that revenue stream alone...
Propably, if that money came out of nowhere. More likely it would decrease potters efficiency so much that tax income would collapse. Hopefully nobody takes this seriously, at least I don't. There's no reasoning for legalizing it. Just look how fucked up B Marley was.
Major_Spittle
Banned
+276|6655|United States of America

Marconius wrote:

Legalize it and tax the hell out of it.  Hell, we might even be able to pay off our national deficit in a few years with that revenue stream alone...
I am all for legalizing it if we do away with all welfare and can execute people caught living on the streets.
Better hope Mommy and Daddy let you live in their basement forever.
Marconius
One-eyed Wonder Mod
+368|6694|San Francisco
Mm hmm...so Major Spittle, do you smoke?  Do you support the tobacco industry?
Echo
WOoKie
+383|6720|The Netherlands

USED wrote:

yes indeed here in the netherlands its legal. if you have 5 grams or less.
Its not legal over here, cannabis still in the opium law as an illegal substance but police have been turning a blind eye since the 70's.

Last edited by General-Echo (2006-06-10 15:31:40)

Major_Spittle
Banned
+276|6655|United States of America

Marconius wrote:

Mm hmm...so Major Spittle, do you smoke?  Do you support the tobacco industry?
I smoke cigs sometimes when I'm drinking, but yes I am for outlawing manufactured cigaretts and manufactured chew.  Tabacco is not that bad or addictive, its the shit that is done to it by the companies.  Highly Addictive by design, also much worst for you.

Anyone ever addicted to smokes and quit knows what is up with that.  If I tried to sell a product that would harm you each time you used it and slowly killed you, the government would come after me.  Marlbro can though, that's the power of money in washington.

No I don't smoke weed, I have tried it and think you gotta be pretty immature to want kill off your brain cells and risk jail for that.  People like Ricky Williams baffle me, real weak minds.
[THE] comben
Wee and Biscuits
+43|6533|Cardiff
...well

ive been smoking weed for 12 years pretty much every day.

usually about 10-18 spliffs a day ( less when i first started obv.), recently its been mostly green, although thats mostly coz im sick of smoking plastic bits in resin.

firstly i would like to say that i wouldnt recommend taking drugs to anyone

mainly because cannabis in the long run will affect ur long term memory and can cause psychosis...mostly paranoid scitsophrenia (i cant spell obv.)

it will also cause sociaphobic behaviour, aggrophobia and paranoia including panic attacks ( not good man i had paranoia attacks at the age of 15...didnt know what they were but thought i was going mad and that was 2 years b4 i started smoking weed...im a skinny bitch tho so that was prolly due to the fact that i have a large metabolic rate or summat)

however it has to be pointed out that most of the conclusive evidence is based on hypothosis as theres no way to prove that most of the peeps who end up off there tits mentally wouldnt have turned out that way without weed or other drugs anyway ( although the study of nueroligcal chemicals in users would suggest that is the case u cant for example say that they wouldnt have developed certain mental disorders anyway since there havent been many studies that have encomposed peeps who have and havent taken weed scince a formative age and carried on being studied till there over the age of 50 or summat)

erk...mad babble

anyway mostly i think if u smoke weed in a moderate amount .bllx all will happen to u tbh ( and heres a head pickler 'everything in moderation, including excess...bleh my head!)

i know peeps who design multi story buildings which cost millions to build who smoke more than i do.  i think at the end of the day its down to the individual to decide in the case of cannabis to decide when they need to cut back/stop, or carry on.  there is no right/wrong tbh if u find urself being a lazy ass mofo and your not getting your head round things then take a break...or not and learn to deal with it.

personally im gonna smoke weed whenever i can get hold of it and bllx to the end result...bear in mind tho that ive worked fuck all and im always skint and although ive gotten over feeling paranoid and all that razamataz i still cant get a griip on my life and sort shit out.

its all bad lol ....but i still voted yes   i just hope that the rest of u can differentiate between user and addict

because i can... but i still cant stop smoking ganj

Last edited by [THE] comben (2006-06-10 15:40:19)

lowing
Banned
+1,662|6652|USA
It is no worse than alcohol, and in a lot of examples it has medicinal value......apply the same laws that govern drinking and I don't have a problem..
Major_Spittle
Banned
+276|6655|United States of America

lowing wrote:

It is no worse than alcohol, and in a lot of examples it has medicinal value......apply the same laws that govern drinking and I don't have a problem..
Much worse than alcohol.  No hang over, easily consealed, easy and quick to use, and anyone that knows an addict can tell you how much it fuchs up a brain.
lowing
Banned
+1,662|6652|USA

Major_Spittle wrote:

lowing wrote:

It is no worse than alcohol, and in a lot of examples it has medicinal value......apply the same laws that govern drinking and I don't have a problem..
Much worse than alcohol.  No hang over, easily consealed, easy and quick to use, and anyone that knows an addict can tell you how much it fuchs up a brain.
used moderately ( like alcohol ) what harm is caused??

screw up your brain or your liver......you are just as dead, so I will stand by my opinion.
[THE] comben
Wee and Biscuits
+43|6533|Cardiff
lol its good to see so many pros and cons in such a short period of time but i would seriously suggest that anyone who hasnt already done so google or research in some other way the effects of long term cannabis use...

coz frankly theres a lot of shit reason for both sides on this post already (mines prolly one of them despite the fact that i argued both sides, or tried too ....amusingly i havent been able to score weed for a couple of weeks so im drunk as a moneys uncle instead........AND when im straight i smoke fags (cigs to u americans b4 u say anything ) like there is no tommorow.

altho given the fact that most peeps dont amoke weed there prollly wont be a whole lot of research going on coz everyones too full of hate maaaaaan ( picture a hippy giving u the peace sign when u read maaaaaan lol)


on the plus side i have found over the years that ive become more inquisative as the years go but frankly i learnt about 10 times as much after i finished higher ed ( mostly i think because of those weird tangents u get in ur head when ur stoned.  did u know that it takes a sloth on average an hour or more to take a shit ....( they shit whilst on ground level for some reason but being slow climbers it takes forever to get to the floor)


also............. summer....and open windows...and moths....and cpu screens.....grrrrr franly

Last edited by [THE] comben (2006-06-10 16:05:16)

Whitegreek
Sniping with the pistol...
+4|6846
One in five people will develop some sort of mental condition/disease in their lifetime, the most common is sckitzophrenia (spelling???). Pot increases your brain activity to an abnormal rate which can in the logn run cause some mental illness.
I'll say yes purly on the fact that it'll cause casual potheads to turn away from illegal drug deals and to more legitimate companies, thus cutting off your average pothead from accessing more dangerous drugs. My second reason is that pot at the moment when grown is probably sprayed with every peticide and polluted by every household chemical under the sun. People also put dangerous chemicals into their pot to try and make it better than the competition's.
By legalizing it that takes the whole middleman bit of it out, thus meaning that when people buy legit pot it means that it won't have any nasty chemicals in it to make it dengerous.

In most developed countries (*cough*Amerca*cough*Australia) mental healthcare is a serious problem, even at the moment most people with a mental illness live on the street because they can't find a place to help them. So if there was an increase in mental illness none of the developed countries would be able to cope, causing people to take their own lives or other people's lives.
Roadhog_Uk
Artillery Magnet
+9|6546|Plymouth, England

Major_Spittle wrote:

Much worse than alcohol.  No hang over, easily concealed, easy and quick to use, and anyone that knows an addict can tell you how much it fuchs up a brain.
Never seen anyone get into a fight because they're stoned - alcohol causes so much trouble in every town & city around the world every w'end!

No hangover - what a f'ing bonus - shows what alcohol is doing to you & your liver - it's a poison to your system!

Just because someone smokes weed from time to time doesn't make them an addict, same as just because someone has a drink every now & then doesn't make them an alcoholic!!

Anything in excess is bad for you (apart from sex maybe! LOL)

Oh & for those that say "it only leads on to hard drugs" I've been smoking weed, occasionally & socially on & off for about 20 years! I don't use hard drugs & don't approve of them!

For me Cannabis used to be recreational, like alcohol - now I mostly use it on medical grounds
Rosse_modest
Member
+76|6776|Antwerp, Flanders
It's spelled schizophrenia people.
I've always assumed everyone knew that.
Ah well, you know what they say about assuming eh?
Marconius
One-eyed Wonder Mod
+368|6694|San Francisco
When you assume, you make an ass out of u and me.
JahManRed
wank
+646|6628|IRELAND

I think if someone wants to do ANYTHING in the comfort of their own homes that does not hurt or affect  anyone else as a direct result, should be allowed to do so.


   TOBACCO ........................ 400,000
   ALCOHOL ........................ 100,000
   ALL LEGAL DRUGS ................  20,000
   ALL ILLEGAL DRUGS ..............  15,000
   CAFFEINE .......................   2,000
   ASPIRIN ........................     500
   MARIJUANA ......................       0
   ----------------------------------------
   Source: United States government...
           National Institute on Drug Abuse,
           Bureau of Mortality Statistics


NUFF SAID
dankassasin42o
Member
+68|6679|Reefersyde, CA
Marijuana Myths
Health Risk Myths and Realities

Marijuana Overdose

No evidence exists that anyone has ever died of a marijuana overdose. Tests performed on mice have shown that the ratio of cannabinoids (the chemicals in marijuana that make you stoned) necessary for overdose to the amount necessary for intoxication is 40,000:1. For comparison's sake, that ratio for alcohol is generally between 4:1 and 10:1. Alcohol overdoses kill about 5,000 yearly but marijuana overdoses kill no one as far as anyone can tell.

Brain Damage

Marijuana is psychoactive because it stimulates certain brain receptors, but it does not produce toxins that kill them (like alcohol), and it does not wear them out as other drugs may. There is no evidence that marijuana use is a cause of brain damage. Studies by Dr. Robert Heath claimed the contrary in experiments on monkeys, but Heath's work has been sharply criticized by the Institute of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences on three primary counts:

its insufficient sample size (only four monkeys),
its failure to control experimental bias, and its misidentification of normal monkey brain structure as "damaged".

A far superior experiment by the National Center for Toxicological Research (NCTR) involving 64 rhesus monkeys that were exposed to daily or weekly doses of marijuana smoke for a year found no evidence of structural or neurochemical changes in the brains of rhesus monkeys. Studies performed on actual human populations will confirm these results, even for chronic marijuana users (up to 18 joints per day) after many years of use. In fact, following the publication of two 1977 JAMA studies, the American Medical Association (AMA) officially announced its support for the decriminalization of marijuana.

Contrary to a 1987 television commercial sponsored by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America (PDFA), marijuana does not "flatten" brain waves either. In the commercial, a normal human brain wave was compared to what was supposedly the (much flatter) brain wave of a 14-year-old high on marijuana. It was actually the brain wave of a coma patient. PDFA lied about the data, and had to pull the commercial off of the air when researchers complained to the television networks.

In reality, marijuana has the effect of slightly increasing alpha-wave activity. Alpha waves are generally associated with meditative and relaxed states which are, in turn, often associated with human creativity.

Memory

Marijuana does impair short-term memory, but only during intoxication. Although the authoritative studies on marijuana use seem to agree that there is no residual impairment following intoxication, persistent impairment of short-term memory has been noted in chronic marijuana smokers up to 6 and 12 weeks following abstinence.

Heart Problems

It is accepted in medical circles today that marijuana use causes no evident long-term cardiovascular problems for normal persons. However, marijuana-smoking does cause changes in the heart and body's circulation characteristic of stress, which may complicate preexisting cardiovascular problems like hypertension, cerebrovascular disease, and coronary atherosclerosis. Marijuana's effects upon blood pressure are complex and inconsistent.

Hormones

Chronic marijuana use has not been found to alter testosterone or other sex hormone levels, despite the conclusions of Dr. R.C. Kolodony's 1974 study. Seven similar studies have been performed since then, the most recent by a Dr. Robert Block at the University of Iowa, and none have reproduced Kolodony's results. In contrast, heavy alcohol use is known to lower these same testosterone levels.

Reproductive Damage

No trustworthy study has ever shown that marijuana use damages the reproductive system, or causes chromosome breakage. Dr. Gabriel Nahas reached the opposite conclusion in his experiments performed in the early 1980s, but did so in part using the in vitro (i.e., in test tubes and petrii dishes) cells of rhesus monkeys. His rather unjustified claim that these changes would also occur in human bodies in vivo (in the body) was criticized by his colleagues and, in 1983, he renounced his own results.

Studies of actual human populations have failed to demonstrate that marijuana adversely affects the reproductive system. Wu et al. found in 1988 a correlation between marijuana use and low sperm counts in human males. But this is misleading because (1) a decrease in sperm count has not been shown to have a negative effect on fertility, and (2) the sperm count returned to normal levels after marijuana use had ceased.

Claims that marijuana use may impair hormone production, menstrual cycles, or fertility in females are both unproven and unfounded.

The Immune System

Studies in which lab rats were injected with extremely large quantities of THC have found that marijuana (in such unrealistically huge quantities) does have an "immunosuppressive effect" in those lab rats, in that it temporarily shuts off certain cells in the liver called lymphocytes and macrophages. These macrophages are useful in fighting off bacterial, not viral, infections. But this is only for the duration of intoxication. There also exists some evidence that marijuana metabolites stay in the lungs for up to seven months after smoking has ceased, possibly affecting the immune system of the lungs (but not by turning the cells off). This said, doctors and researchers are still not sure that the immune system is actually negatively affected in realistic situations since there are no numbers to support the idea. In fact, three studies showed that THC may have actually stimulated the immune system in the people studied.

Birth Defects

Unlike alcohol, cocaine, and tobacco, studies show that there exists no evident link between prenatal use of marijuana and birth defects or fetal alcohol syndrome in humans. In fact, marijuana use during the third trimester has been found to have a positive impact on birthweight. It is known that Delta-9-THC does enter the placenta, so mothers are advised against consuming large quantities.

Cancer

Smoking marijuana has the potential to cause both bronchitis and cancer of the lungs, throat, and neck, but this is generally no different than inhaling any other burnt carbon-containing matter since they all increase the number of lesions (and therefore possible infections) in your airways. There are a couple of studies that claim on the basis of carcinogens that smoking marijuana is worse for your body than smoking a cigarette, but these are rather simplified. There are actually some very convincing reasons to believe that smoking cigarettes is relatively more dangerous to the body than smoking marijuana on more than one count: (1) It is accepted by a growing number of scientists today that all American cigarettes contain significant levels of polonium-210, the same sort of radiation given off by the plutonium of atom bombs (ionizing alpha radiation). It just so happens that the tobacco plant's roots and leaves are especially good at absorbing radioactive elements from uranium-containing phosphate fertilizers that are required by U.S. law, and from naturally occurring radiation in the soil, air, and water. It is the opinion of C. Everette Koop that this radioactivity, not tar, accounts for at least 90% of all smoking-related lung cancer. Other estimates that have been made are, about 50% according to Dr. Joseph R. DiFranza of the Univ. of Mass. Medical Center and according to Dr. Edward Martell, a radiochemist with the National Center for Atmospheric Research, 95%. Dr. R.T. Ravenholt, former director of World Health Surveys at the Centers for Disease Control, agrees with the risk, asserting that "Americans are exposed to far more radiation from tobacco smoke than from any other source". Supporting the radioactivity notion is the finding that (a) Relatively high levels of polonium-210 have been found in both cigarette smoke and the lungs of both smokers and nonsmokers alike [60]; (b) Smokers of low-tar-and-nicotine cigarettes die of lung cancer just as much as smokers of other cigarettes; and also, (c) Even the most potent carcinogen that has been found in cigarettes, benzopyrene, is only present in quantities sufficient to account for about 1% of the lung cancer cases that occur from smoking.

Why don't you know any of this?

Because the tobacco industry is suppressing the information. (2) Tobacco smoke is theorized to work as a kind of "magnet" for airborne radioactive particles such as radon, causing them to deposit in your lungs instead of on walls, rugs, or draperies. (3) Tobacco, unlike marijuana, contains nicotine, which may harden arteries and cause many of the cases of heart disease associated with tobacco use. It also breaks down into cancer-promoting chemicals called N Nitrosamines when burned, and perhaps even when it is inside the body. (4) THC is a bronchial dilator, which means it works like a cough drop by opening up your lungs and therefore aiding in the clearance of smoke and dirt. Nicotine has the exact opposite effect. (5) Unlike the chemicals in marijuana, nicotine has a paralyzing effect on the tiny hairs along the body's air passages. These hairs normally work to keep foreign matter out of the lungs. This means that carcinogenic tar from cigarette smoke is relatively much harder to purge from your lungs than is that from marijuana. And finally, (6) Marijuana users smoke significantly less than cigarette smokers do because of both marijuana's psychoactive properties (this is called "auto-titration") and nicotine's high potential for physical addiction. It is important to note that the NCTR study found no signs of lung cancer in its autopsied rhesus monkeys who had smoked marijuana for one year.

Smoking cigarettes and smoking marijuana negatively affect different areas of the body, and therefore cause different problems. But everything considered, marijuana-only smokers who average 3 - 4 joints per day show similar symptoms to cigarette smokers who polish off 20 in a day. Although one well-done study tells us that frequent marijuana smokers have a 19% greater risk of respiratory diseases than people who smoke nothing at all [66], it seems that neck and throat cancers are much more likely to result than lung cancer or emphysema. This is because, unlike tobacco, marijuana does not penetrate deeply into the lung. In order to minimize the risk of acquiring neck or throat cancer from marijuana smoke, it is best to (1) avoid as much as possible cigarette-smoking and heavy drinking while smoking marijuana, and (2) eat plenty of vegetables (such as carrots, broccoli, squash, and sprouts) or vitamin supplements of beta carotene, vitamins A, C and E, and selenium. These are believed to impede cancer's progress.

In addition, there are actually things that can be done to reduce and even entirely eliminate the bodily harm that may potentially result from smoking marijuana. This is possible because all of the principle psychoactive ingredients of marijuana (THC and the cannabinoids) are neither mutagenic (gene-mutating) nor carcinogenic (cancer-causing).

Legalizing marijuana would make (better) water bongs and marijuana foods, drinks, and pills both less expensive and more accessible. Smoking marijuana through a water-filled bong will cool the smoke and there is reason to believe that it will filter some of the carcinogens. Eating or drinking marijuana effectively eliminates all negative effects. In addition, it is conceivable that an aerosol contraption or vaporizer, commonly called a tilt pipe, could easily be constructed that would surpass joints in efficiency, match them in onset and control of effects, and yet would be effectively harmless to the body.

Fat Cells

One of the more ridiculous myths being circulated is that marijuana stays in your fat cells and can keep you high for months. Even though they may have similar names, the psychoactive THC (Delta-9-THC) is different from the metabolites (for instance, 11-OH-THC and 11-nor) that your body breaks it down into in that the latter will not get you stoned. It is the metabolites that stay in your fatty cells and show up on drug tests. Your body is depleted of Delta-9-THC only hours after ingestion.


Other MJ Myths and Realities

Amotivational Syndrome

Amotivational syndrome is defined as a condition in which a person loses ambition or motivation to complete tasks that he would normally like to have completed. Claims made in the 60's that marijuana use resulted in amotivational syndrome were predominantly founded on stereotypes. But more recently, the carefully-designed NCTR study has actually confirmed these suspicions under certain conditions. It found that marijuana use may consistently produce something akin to amotivational syndrome in adolescent monkeys. It did not however prove that marijuana makes adolescents apathetic or depressed. A full recovery to normal motivation levels was typically observed to occur between two to three months following cessation of exposure. For unknown reasons, one monkey was observed to never fully recover. Surprisingly, the willingness to work appeared to be equally affected in both the daily and weekend rhesus smokers in the study. Other studies have failed to prove amotivational syndrome in adults, so there is much reason to believe that this effect only occurs during adolescent use.

Marijuana Potency

Marijuana is not significantly more potent today than it has been in the past. It is generally agreed that this myth was the result of bad data. The researchers making the claims used as their baseline the THC content of marijuana seized by police in the early 1970's, which had deteriorated since then because of poor storage conditions. In reality, it seems that domestic marijuana's average potency probably doubled in the 70's with the advent of sinsemilla, but has remained more or less constant since then. Scare tactics claiming that marijuana potency has increased are rather irrelevant anyways since marijuana users typically stop smoking when the desired effect is achieved (once again, "auto-titration"). Contrary to one of DARE's allegations, it is generally agreed that marijuana does not create a tolerance, withdrawal symptoms, or physical dependence in the user. Lester Grinspoon adds, "there are many who assert that there is nevertheless drug dependence because of [marijuana's] capacity to generate psychic dependency. However it is not at all clear that this type of dependency is essentially any different from that which a man may develop with respect to his trousers, his automobile, or his wife".

Driving

Driving in any inebriated state is adding complication to what already amounts to a constant life-threatening situation. That said, the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) summarized all of its studies by saying that there was "no indication that marijuana by itself was a cause of fatal accidents," and that alcohol was by far the "dominant problem" in drug-related accidents. The Victorian Institute of Forensic Pathology and Monash University's Department of Forensic Medicine in Melbourne, Australia have found that drivers who use cannabis are actually less likely to cause fatal accidents than drug-free drivers, and are no more likely than other drivers to be killed or seriously injured in road accidents. One experiment tested marijuana-intoxicated drivers on both a closed course and on a crowded city street. It found that the elements of driving most affected were concentration and judgment. An experiment involving a driving simulator that tested actual driving ability according to how many mistakes are incurred by sober, drunk, and high subjects found that marijuana, unlike alcohol, does not significantly affect driving ability. It was found that these results hold true for even higher doses (within reason) and inexperienced marijuana users. In fact, the only significant difference reported by the stoned subjects was an altered perception of time, which effectively made them drive relatively slower. A similar study found that marijuana additionally impairs the driver's ability to attend to peripheral stimuli. One theory attempting to explain these surprising findings states that marijuana users, in instances requiring seriousness, are in fact able to willingly "bring themselves down," such that they are no longer high. Studies that in the past have shown that marjuana-intoxicated drivers cause significantly more accidents than sober drivers are typically unreliable on one or more of the following counts: (1) They use drug tests to determine whether or not a person is high, and drug tests in use only indicate use over the past 30 days; (2) Some studies have not corrected for alcohol use, or do not provide a control group; and (3) In many studies there were relatively more stoned drivers killed, but it was not their fault. And when the police "culpability scores" were tallied and factored in, marijuana was generally not to blame for the accidents. It must be emphasized however that one study shows that daily marijuana smokers tend to have a 30% higher risk of injuries than non-users [66]. In fact, accidents resulting from intoxication are thought to be "the number one hazard of marijuana use".

The Gateway Effect

Marijuana use has not been found to act as a gateway drug to the use of harder drugs. Studies show that when the Dutch partially legalized marijuana in the 70's, heroin and cocaine use substantially declined, despite a slight increase in marijuana use. If the stepping stone theory were true, use should have gone up rather than down. In reality, it appears that marijuana use tends to substitute for the use of relatively more dangerous hard drugs like cocaine and heroin, rather than lead to their use. Thus, oftentimes strict marijuana laws themselves are the most significant factor involved in moving on to harder drugs like cocaine. Such is the case in Nevada and Arizona, the states toughest on marijuana use. A recent study by Columbia University's Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse attempts to show, like many past studies have, that marijuana users are more likely to use heroin or cocaine. But what the study actually does show is that a large number of heroin or cocaine users have used marijuana, not the reverse. What is not mentioned is that just as many or even more had probably also drank alcohol, smoked cigarettes, had sex, or eaten sandwiches prior to their hard drug use. In fact, a National High School survey tells us that in 1990, 40.7% of all high school students had tried marijuana or hashish at least once, whereas only 9.4% and 1.3% had ever used cocaine and heroin, respectively. Thus, at maximum, only 23% of marijuana users go on to use cocaine, and only 3% go on to use heroin. Thus, the stepping stone theory fails on even empirical grounds.

Marijuana and Crime

DARE literature would have you believe that there exists a strong correlation between marijuana use and juvenile and young adult crime. And a recent study attempts to present a link between marijuana use and violence by stating that 2/3 of all students who admit to taking a gun to school at least once had smoked marijuana. In fact, DEA head Thomas Constantine recently stated in a Washington Times interview that "Many times people talk about the nonviolent drug offender. That is a rare species. There is not some sterile drug type not involved in violence who is contributing some good to the community; that is ridiculous. They are contributing nothing but evil." But these allegations are unsupported by research because test results show that changes in personality resulting from marijuana use, even though they are not relatively significant, include among other things a lessening of aggressive trends. And large population studies such as the La Guardia report have found that, if anything, marijuana use inhibits antisocial activity such as violence. The drug-inspired violence myth, including a comprehensive history of its conception, is discussed at great length in Lester Grinspoon's book, where it is shown to be based largely on a distorted Persian story that is hundreds of years old. The problem inherent in drawing conclusions based on correlations such as the 2/3 statistic above is that causality cannot be inferred from correlation. In other words, there is no way of determining whether marijuana use contributed in some way to the existence of certain traits of marijuana users, i.e. bringing a gun to school, or, as seems entirely more likely, people with such traits are drawn to marijuana use. One study found that chronic marijuana users had significantly higher WAIS IQ scores (113.08) than both moderate users (102.15) and nonusers (103.26). It is simply impossible to make sense of such statistics as presented.






References

[1] Mikuriya, T.H. "Historical Aspects of Cannabis Sativa in Western Medicine," New Physician, 1969, p. 905.
[2] Cotts, Cynthia, "Hard Sell in the Drug War." The Nation. March 9, 1992. p 300 - 302.

[3] Nadelmann, Ethan A. "Drug Prohibition in the United States: Costs, Consequences, and Alternatives," Science, Vol 245: 943, 1 September 1989.

[4] Heath, R.G., A.T. Fitzjarrell, C.J. Fontana, and R.E. Garey. "Cannabis sativa: Effects on brain function and ultrastructure in Rhesus monkeys," Biological Psychiatry. 15:657-690, 1980.

[5] Marijuana and Health, Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, 1982.

[6] Slikker, William Jr. et al. "Behavioral, Neurochemical, and Neurohistological Effects of Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Nonhuman Primate" in "Marijuana Cannabinoids Neurobiology and Neurophysiology,'' Laura Murphy, Andrzej Bartke ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1992.

[7] Matsuda, L.A., S.J. Lolait, M.J. Brownstein, A.C. Young, and T.I. Bonner. "Structure of a Cannabinoid Receptor," Nature, 346 (issue 6824): 561-564. August, 1990.

[8] Co, B.T., D.W. Goodwin, M. Gado, M. Mikhael, and S.Y. Hill. "Absence of cerebral atrophy in chronic cannabis users," Journal of the American Medical Association, 237: 1229-1230, 1977.

[9] Kuehnle, J., J.H. Mendelson, K.R. Davis, and P.F.J. New. "Computed topographic examination of heavy marijuana smokers," Journal of the American Medical Association, 237: 1231-1232, 1977.

[10] Lancaster, Cattell. Mayor's Committee on Marijuana. The Marijuana Problem in the City of New York. 1944.

[11] Freedman and Rockmore, "Marihuana: A Factor in Personality Evaluation," 7: 765-781, 1946.

[12] Siler et al., "Marihuana Smoking in Panama," The Military Surgeon, 73: 269-280, 1933.

[13] R. L. Dornbush, M.D., M. Fink, M.D., and A. M. Freedman, M.D. "Marijuana, Memory, and Perception," presented at the 124th annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, May 3-7, 1971.

[14] Block, Robert, M.D. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 28: 121-8, 1991.

[15] Hollister, Leo E. "Marijuana and Immunity", Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 24 (issue 2):159-164, April, June, 1992. pub. Haight-Ashbury Publications in association with the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic, San Francisco, CA.

[16] Kaklamani, et al. "Hashish smoking and T- lymphocytes," 1978.

[17] Kalofoutis et al. "The significance of lymphocyte lipid changes after smoking hashish," 1978.

[18] Wallace, J.M., D.P. Tashkin, J.S. Oishi, R.G. Barbers. "Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte Subpopulations and Mitogen Responsiveness in Tobacco and Marijuana Smokers," Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, 1988.

[20] Kaplan, John. Marijuana, The New Prohibition, New York, World Publishing Co., 1969.

[21] Health Consequences of Smoking: Nicotine Addiction, Surgeon General's Report, 1988.

[22] Winters, T.H., and J.R. Franza. "Radioactivity in Cigarette Smoke." New England Journal of Medicine, 1982: 306 (6): 364-365.

[23] Mikuriya, Tod H., M.D., and Michael R. Aldrich, Ph.D. "Cannabis 1988, Old Drug New Dangers, The Potency Question" , Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. Vol. 20, Issue 1: 47-55. pub. Haight-Ashbury Publications in association with the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic San Francisco, Calif.: January March, 1988.

[24] Dennis, Richard J. "The Economics of Legalizing Drugs," The Atlantic Monthly, Vol. 266, No. 5, Nov 1990, p. 130.

[25] Data supplied by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration. Revised January, 1991. For more information contact the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Info., P.O. Box 2345, Rockville, Maryland 20847 / (800) 729-6686.

[28] the name of the DARE pamphlet is "Facts About Marijuana; Marijuana: Drug of Deception"

[29] Nationally-televised speech in 1990

[30] Singer, Jerome L. "Ongoing Thought: The Normative Baseline for Alternate States of Consciousness," Alternate States of Consciousness.

[32] The NHTSA report, "The Incidence and Role of Drugs in Fatally Injured Drivers," by K.W. Terhune, et al. of the Calspan Corp. Accident Research Group in Buffalo, NY (Report # DOT-HS-808-065) is available from the National Technical Information Service, Springfield VA 22161.

[33] Bruer, Mark. Age, March 23, 1994, p. 3 [Melbourne, Australia; this report is also published in the university's

Business Victoria].

[34] Halpern. "Emotional Reactions and General Personality Structure," The Marihuana Problem, pp. 130 - 131.

[35] Martell, Edward. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Biophysics, and Biological Science, March 1983.

[36] Hoffmann, Dietrich, Gunter Rathkamp, and Ernest L. Wynder. "Comparison of the Yields of Several Selected Components in the Smoke From Different Tobacco Products," Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 31, No. 3, 1963, p. 627-635

[37] Hofmann, D., J.D. Adams, K.D. Brunnemann, and D.D. Hecht. "Formation, occurrence and carcinogenesity of N-nitrosamines in tobacco products," Am. Chem. Soc. Symp. Ser., 174:247-273, 1981.

[39] Hammond, E.C., L. Garfinkel, H. Seidman, and E.A. Lew. "Some Recent findings concerning cigarette smoking," In: Origins of Human Cancer. New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 1977. p. 101-112.

[40] Starks, Michael, "Marijuana Chemistry Genetics, Processing, and Potency'," Ronin Inc., 1990.

[41] Murphy, Laura, and Andrzej Bartke. "Marijuana Cannabinoid Neurobiology and Neurophysiology," CRC Press Boca Raton, FL, 1992.

[42] Mendelson, Dr. Jack H., "Behavioral and Biological Concomitants of Chronic Marijuana Use," 1974.

[43] "Marihuana A Signal of Misunderstanding," U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, 1972.

[44] Wu, Tzu Chin, Donald P. Tashkin, Behnam Djahed, and Jed E. Rose. "Pulmonary Hazards of Smoking Marijuana as Compared with Tobacco," New England Journal of Medicine, 318 (issue 6): 347-351, 1988.

[45] Slikker, William Jr, H.C. Cunny, J.R. Bailey, and M.G. Paule. "Placental Transfer and Fetal Disposition of Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) During Late Pregnancy in the Rhesus Monkey," pp. 97-102.

[46] Lyman, W.D., J.R. Sonett, C.F. Brosnan, R. Elkin, and M.B. Bornstein. "Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol A Novel Treatment for Experimental Autoimmune Encephalitis" by in Journal of Neuroimmunology, 23: 73-81. 1989.

[47] Cabral, Guy A., Amy L. Stinnet, John Bailey, Syed F. Ali, Merle G. Paul, Andrew C. Scallet, and William Slikker, Jr. "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Alters Alveolar Macrophage Morphology and Protein Expression," 1991.

[48] Ponte, Lowell. "Radioactivity: The New-Found Danger in Cigarettes," Reader's Digest, March 1986, pp. 123-127.

[49] Litwak, Mark. "Would You Still Rather Fight Than Switch?" Whole Life Times, Mid-April/May, 1985, p. 11.

[50] Crancer, A., et al. "Comparison of the Effects of Marihuana and Alcohol on Simulated Driving Performance," Science, 164:851-854, 1969.

[51] Caldwell, D.F., et al. "Auditory and Visual Threshold Effects of Marihuana in Man," Perceptive and Motor Skills, 29:758-759, 1969.

[52] Klonoff, H. (1974). "Effects of marihuana on driving in a restricted area and on city streets: Driving performance and physiological changes." In L. L. Miller (Ed.), Marijuana, Effects on human behavior (pp. 359-397). New York: Academic Press.

[57] Westlake, Tracy M., Allyn C. Howlett, Syed F. Ali, Merle G. Paule, Andrew C. Scallet, William Slikker, Jr. "Chronic Exposure to Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Fails to Irreversibly Alter Brain Cannabinoid Receptors," Brain Research, 544: 145-149, 1991.

[58] Ali, Syed F., Glenn D. Newport, Andrew C. Scallet, Merle G. Paule, John R. Bailey, William Slikker, Jr. "Chronic Marijuana Smoke Exposure in the Rhesus Monkey IV Neurochemical Effects and Comparison to Acute and Chronic Exposure to Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) in Rats" Pharmacology, Biochemistry & Behavior, 40: 677-682. 1991.

[59] Radford EP Jr, and V.R. Hunt. "Polonium-210: a volatile radioelement in cigarettes." Science. 1964; 143:247-9.

[60] Little JB, E.P. Radford Jr, H.L. McCombs, V.R. Hunt. "Distribution of polonium-210 in pulmonary tissues of cigarette smokers." New England Journal of Medicine. 1965, 273:1343-51.

[66] Polen, Michael. "Health Care Use by Frequent Marijuana Smokers Who Do Not Smoke Tobacco," West J Med 1993: 158.

[67] Gieringer, Dale. "Marijuana, Driving and Accident Safety," Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, Jan-Mar, 1988.

[68] Weil, Andrew, and Winifred Rosen, From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything You Need to Know About Mind-Altering Drugs. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1993.

[69] Cozzi, Nicholas. "Effects of Water Filtration on Marijuana Smoke: A Literature Review." MAPS Newsletter IV #2 (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, 1993). Reprints available from California NORML.

[70] "Cannabis and Memory Loss," (editorial) British Journal of Addiction, 86:249-252 (1991).

[71] Muskowitz, H., Hulbert, S., & McGlothlin, W.H. (1976). "Marihuana: Effects on simulated driving performance." Accident Analysis and Prevention, 8(1), p. 45 - 50.

[72] Astley, Susan, Dr. "Analysis of Facial Shape in Children Gestationally Exposed to Marijuana, Alcohol, and/or Cocaine," Pediatrics, 89 #1: 67 - 77 (June 1992).

[73] Day, Nancy, et. al. "Prenatal Marijuana Use and Neonatal Outcome," Neurotoxicology and Teratology, 13: 329-334 (1992).

[74] Tashkin, Donald, et. al. "Effects of Habitual Use of Marijuana and/or Cocaine on the Lung," in C. Nora Chiang and Richard L. Hawks, ed., Research findings on Smoking of Abused Substances, NIDA Research Monograph 99 (US Dept of Health and Human Services, 1990).

Suggested Reading

[61] Grinspoon, Lester. Marihuana Reconsidered. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1971.

[62] Herer, Jack. The Emperor Wears No Clothes. Van Nuys, CA: Hemp Publishing, 1990.

[63] Hendin, Herbert. Living High: Daily Marijuana Use Among Adults. New York: Human Sciences Press, 1987.

[64] Himmelstein, Jerome L. The Strange Career of Marihuana: Politics and Ideology of Drug Control in America. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983.

[65] Dale Gieringer, Ph.D from California's NORML. "Health Tips for Marijuana Smokers," Feb. 1994 edition. To receive this very comprehensive 32-page compilation of reports, send a $5 donation to California NORML, 2215-R Market St. #278, San Francisco, CA 94114 or call (415) 563-5858 and ask for the paper by name. The packet includes detailed instructions on how to construct a vaporizer.
__________________
420 Times Magazine
Creating Cannabis Awareness Since 1993
http://www.420Times.com


Also Please Visit :   www.norml.org
Gladiator08
Russell Crowe's Loin Cloth
+49|6713|Philadelphia, PA
my friends smoked it all at the after prom party this past week. buds, marijuana, and other stuff. i didnt smoke it i just played beer pong but wow my eyes were bloodshot. i was also up for 24 hours straight and had the time of my fuckin life. HOOOAH
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6675|Canberra, AUS

the_heart_attack wrote:

it is legal here already!
No, it isn't. In the ACT, possession is ILLEGAL. People only think it's legal because of SCON - which says if you possess 25g or less of cannabis or two plants then it is a civil offence. No criminal record, but you still have to pay the fine.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
TrollmeaT
Aspiring Objectivist
+492|6673|Colorado

PekkaA wrote:

I voted no, because there is scientifical proof, that cannabis in a long run affects negatively persons mind. Even causes psychosis. UnOriginalNuttah, give me a break.
Give me a break , you obviously have no idea what your talking about.

It should be legalized & taxed in order to support our already drained social services system, schools, public transit, library's, etc. Our government says they will take care of this every year but then does not.

Anyone driving on it should be handled as a dwui but it doesn't affect the motor skills, but it does affect your time perceptions.

Its way over due to make use of the money this would generate instead of draining thru prosecution of innocent users & the drug lords reaping all the benefit.
Not
Great success!
+216|6577|Chandler, AZ

Xietsu wrote:

UnOriginalNuttah wrote:

No one left a (serious) "No" reason yet...

Anyway (edit: Yes... ), mainly because the whole production process can take place in privacy without affecting anyone but the producer and their electricity bill, and if everyone could grow it then there would be no link to organised crime, and none of the other bullshit reasons the governments give for it being illegal.  And the 'health risk' reason is complete bollocks, or tobacco, alcohol, cars, sugar, caffeine, pizza and stressful jobs would all be outlawed as well.
LoL, an entertainment outlet is by no means comparable to any of the mentions made above, excluding alcohol. Vehicular transportation is so essential to modern society, that talking about banning it (even analogously so) is just psychotic. Sugar and caffeine are also nowhere equal when it comes to side effects, as they do nothing. Tobacco is only similar in that it can degrade ones health, but then again, so can most forms of smoking. Alcohol is an extreme reference to make, as it has many more consequential inhibitions. Marijuana just promotes lethargy, degradation of cognitive intellect, and development of moodiness.
I have to argue against that. Caffeine contributes to a massive decrease in metabolism, which is why a lot of diets now recommend that soda addicts switch to not only diet, but diet with caffeine free drinks. Sugar as well promotes hyperactivity, and both of these substances are main contributing factors in childhood obesity, as well as general obesity. Now, if you'd like to argue that obesity isn't a problem, I'll go on to find you some statistics regarding the number of obese people particularly in the United States, and the health risks included with the disease. Including but not limited to: High blood pressure, diabetes, early onset arthritis and many other joint issues, depression/anxiety, and lethargy.

I agree with you on the point about cars, as that's not recreational and your point was quite well made.

However I'll again disagree that comparing marijuana to alcohol is unfair. They're both used recreationally, however, nobody I've ever heard of has died from "Pot Poisoning". That's not true of the binge-drinking horror stories we've all heard usually involving frat parties.

As a very, VERY casual marijuana smoker myself, and someone who smokes about a pack of Newport 100's a day I can attest to the physical addiction of marijuana being null. Especially in comparison to the legal cigarettes.

The only reasons that marijuana isn't legal here are:

The DEA and FBI drug raids confiscate marijuana primarily. They bring more pot in than any other drug by an incredible margin. If pot was legal, a lot of those men and women in drug enforcement would be out of jobs, or dealing with violent people in the cocaine and methamphetamine trades much more frequently.

And,

There would be no way to regulate it and make a serious profit which is what our government has degraded to. It takes some serious know-how and quite a bit of equipment that the average drinker can't afford to make a very good brandy. Likewise, producing cigarettes en masse just isn't cost effective or convenient for an individual consumer, so they let the big tobacco businesses do it for them. It takes a pot, some light, and water to grow bud. Now sure, you probably won't be growing strawberry kush your first try, but it'll get the job done. There would be no way to make a profit like they can with alcohol or tobacco, so it's not an idea we're willing to even think about. No money? No legalization.


In a perfect world though, yeah, it'd be legal. Sure there would be the occasional stoned bus driver, but that point is moot since I'm quite sure there's a bus driver out there that puts some liquor in his coffee every morning. Trying to make the argument that everyone would be high all day long every day is just silly to be fair. There would be the same laws and same consequences for being inhibited as there are now for alcohol. There would be no difference.
PekkaA
Member
+36|6665|Finland
I have a real life proof of marihuanas side effects. My friend spent almost a year in a mental hospital recovering from psychosis, my other friend has been taking drugs for last two years to get along with panic disorder. So all of you little snotnosed brats, please keep that "knowledge" in your own immature heads.
PekkaA
Member
+36|6665|Finland

TrollmeaT wrote:

PekkaA wrote:

I voted no, because there is scientifical proof, that cannabis in a long run affects negatively persons mind. Even causes psychosis. UnOriginalNuttah, give me a break.
Give me a break , you obviously have no idea what your talking about.

It should be legalized & taxed in order to support our already drained social services system, schools, public transit, library's, etc. Our government says they will take care of this every year but then does not.

Anyone driving on it should be handled as a dwui but it doesn't affect the motor skills, but it does affect your time perceptions.

Its way over due to make use of the money this would generate instead of draining thru prosecution of innocent users & the drug lords reaping all the benefit.
I very seldom take things from forums personally, but this issue is one of those. So stuff your head back to your rectum. I promise that if you were standing in front of me now, I'd give you time of your life and I don't mean in a nice way.
TrollmeaT
Aspiring Objectivist
+492|6673|Colorado
This is debate & serious talk, if you cannot conduct yourself in a civilized manner then please exit the conversation.
Sounds like your friend already had some mental issues & they make medicine for panic attacks these days.
Not
Great success!
+216|6577|Chandler, AZ

PekkaA wrote:

I have a real life proof of marihuanas side effects. My friend spent almost a year in a mental hospital recovering from psychosis, my other friend has been taking drugs for last two years to get along with panic disorder. So all of you little snotnosed brats, please keep that "knowledge" in your own immature heads.
Speaking of immaturity...

Anyway, there are a few things to consider. Let me begin by saying I'm sorry to hear about your friends, it's not an easy thing to deal with as I've seen friends of mine in similar positions.

But let me say this...The odds of your friend developing psychosis from smoking pot are about a billion to one. I'd be absolutely floored if there wasn't a handful of other contributing factors, or another issue of brain chemistry going on.

As far as taking drugs to deal with panic disorder, well, I wouldn't say I'd recommend that but don't a lot of people also self medicate with alcohol? And by a lot of people I mean...a LOT of people.

Let me relate some of my own personal life proofs of marijauna with you as it relates to my friends. I have a friend who worked at an assisted living home for learning disabled kids. While they were at the beach, one of the kids went too far out into the water, and at the lake we live by the waves can kick up instantly as there are very few hills, the lake is enormous, and winds change direction and speed in the blink of an eye. That resident drowned and was never found that day. My friend spent well over an hour in freezing cold water during a storm looking for him.

He was devastated, as well as the rest of the residents and employees. After counceling, the grief councelor decided to put him on anti-depressants but he was allergic. His family wasn't there for him, and he knew he had a problem with alcohol when he was younger. He decided to try pot after that. Now he's by no means Snoop Dogg smoking up an ounce a night, but he smokes very casually when he knows he'll have a rough time getting to sleep. It works just fine for him and without it, well, he very well might be in a mental institution from the grief and sleeping disorders.





Just because people have different experiences and opinions than you does not make them immature. Lacking the facts about an issue and calling other people names however, is immature. Please try to think about these things before flaming others.
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|6675|Canberra, AUS
It is many, many times more damaging to the lungs than tobacco (15x, I think. Verification needed.)
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman

Board footer

Privacy Policy - © 2024 Jeff Minard