.... cannabis tended to result in slower, more cautious driving..
That rings a bell
"Whoa babe, there's a traffic light up there. I'd better, like, slow down."
"It's half a mile away, and if you drive any slower we'll be going backwards"
.... cannabis tended to result in slower, more cautious driving..
Well yes I admit a pro legalisation bais. I find some of the attempts at legalisation by the back door to be problematical.
The industial hemp approach for example results in people running around overstateing the advantages of hemp as a crop. This kind of misinformation spreading to be a worring mirror of the tactics used by the anti recreational drugs loby. It's particularly irritating in the UK where industrial hemp can and is legaly grown (although france grows far more).
The medical one though is has the potential to have far more serious consequences. It encorages people to spread false information about medical benifits (which unquestionably exist. arsenic has medical benifits) which risks in people abandoning more effective treatment.
The medical one is also mildly insulting. Are you seriosly suggesting that we can't isolate the active ingredients and thus provide far better dosage control?
So argue for the legalisation of recreational cannabis (heh even the victorians mostly viewed it as harmless) but please do so dirrectly.
You know, I have to agree with this. I don't smoke pot at all, (don't even know where to get it!) and I agree it should be legal. However, getting pot legal through medical means seems counter productive to me.
I really don't see why people who are pro-legalization just come out and be honest and say what has been said here: you can't overdose on pot, it's safer than alcohol, etc, and have it treated exactly like alcohol is regulated.
Seems far more honest to me and far easier for the government to tax it.
I don't disagree but you have to admit that legalization got nowhere until they started trying to backdoor it. It's the wedge strategy![]()
Nope. So far there is not one country where cannabis is fully legal, although there are several where it is decriminalized or the laws aren't sufficiently enforced. Most of these, however, are developing or Third World nations like Afghanistan. The only place it's even remotely close to legal is The Netherlands; and even there it is still technically illegal, there is simply a government policy of non-enforcement of possession (although trafficking can still be prosecuted).
Nope. So far there is not one country where cannabis is fully legal, although there are several where it is decriminalized or the laws aren't sufficiently enforced. Most of these, however, are developing or Third World nations like Afghanistan. The only place it's even remotely close to legal is The Netherlands; and even there it is still technically illegal, there is simply a government policy of non-enforcement of possession (although trafficking can still be prosecuted).
Nope. So far there is not one country where cannabis is fully legal, although there are several where it is decriminalized or the laws aren't sufficiently enforced. Most of these, however, are developing or Third World nations like Afghanistan. The only place it's even remotely close to legal is The Netherlands; and even there it is still technically illegal, there is simply a government policy of non-enforcement of possession (although trafficking can still be prosecuted).
On a personal level, there are a couple of activities in my life where being high definitely improves my performance, so I'm willing to allow that driving while high may not be as bad as it seems. I'd like to see some evidence either way.
Depends how it performs against other drugs. For example there are real benefits to medical Heroin. Doesn't mean it is lightly prescribed.
Nope.
The medical one is also mildly insulting. Are you seriosly suggesting that we can't isolate the active ingredients and thus provide far better dosage control?
I have no idea why but the ingested high and the smoked high (and the vape high) are all different. If someone could make you a pill that work make you "smoking high" I would be impressed.
This is already done. I've given thousands of doses of marijuana extract in my career. The trade name is Marinol, and it's available by prescription, usually for control of nausea and discomfort in nasty end stage cancers. It's a gel cap filled with hash oil, basically. I used to work at an oncology ward where we kept them in the fridge to make absolutely sure none of that volatile goodness evaporated.
By the way, this shows the lie inherent in medical marijuana legalization. It's been available for a long time, just not in a formulation designed to hit you all at once (inhaled vapors hit almost as fast as IV injections), and the faster it hits, the more it'll produce a high, and the faster it'll be gone. Cancer patients who wanted to use the natural weed ate it in brownies. Gives a nice slow onset, and a long duration, which is what you need if you're ACTUALLY in pain, and not trying to get high.
A
New study: Marijuana useful for treating pain
Like we really needed a study to confirm this ...![]()
Who cares if people want to get high? I don't really understand where you get your moral indignation here.
Also why is it up to you to condemn patients as lying when they say that they get relief from smoked by not eaten mj? Maybe they need to be high to get the effect they are looking for? Smoking vs eating both get you high, one is just more easily controllable and frankly more effective than the other.
I find your black and white attitude here to be pretty disturbing actually. Are you mad because medical marijuana is being used a back door to legalization? Why would someone be against legalization to begin with?
Hey I have an idea, let's throw people in jail for getting high. What a genius idea.
The biggest is money. There is trillions of dollars worth of the economy tied up in cannabis prohibition. So many organizations benefit it can be hard to keep track. Here's just a few of the major benefactors...
-Law enforcemnent from the DEA to local cops and everything in between. 700,000 marijuana related arrests annually in the US.
-Private prison industry and prison guards. 1 in 32 US adults is in the justice system with the 'war on drugs' being a major contributor.
-Drug treatment industry. Drug courts send thousands to 'treatment' programs even though cannabis arguably has a lower potential for addiction than caffeine.
-Alcohol and beer makers. Many view medical cannabis as a stepping stone to out and out legalization and the alcohol industry put a fair amount of money behind keeping cannabis restricted.
The list goes on and on and on.
Who cares if people want to get high? I don't really understand where you get your moral indignation here.
Because the question at hand is the use of marijuana to relieve pain, not get high.