I disagree. The predominant argument for legalization (in the USA) is the incredibly bad unintended consequences of the war on drugs.
What I meant was that the distinguishing element that has brought mj legalization lightyears ahead of heroin legalization is that it is regarded as essentially safe.
The busybodies are more concerned with moral superiority than with the health of someone who chooses to work in a saloon.
Wow. Judgmental much? Maybe you could identify some of these morally superior "busybodies".Exactly. Some anti-smoking advocates need to examine their motives more honestly.
It probably is (though heroin can be extremely safe), but I can only guess that it's regarded as safe by disregarding the fact that herbal mj is dry plant material that's burned and inhaled, and that (often) it's cut with tobacco for smoking.
By the standards applied to straight tobacco it is inherently dangerous for the same reasons tobacco is considered inherently dangerous.
Although I don't smoke anymore, Japan seems to be either one of the last holdouts of liberty, or a backward pre-modern smoke-pit, as here people can smoke in bars, restaurants and on (some) train platforms, on most roads, in cars, at the gym, in football stadiums, in parks and in schools. Also, cigarettes are prominently on display in shops and in ubiquitous vending machines on the streets which also often have ashtrays beside them so that you can smoke by the roadside. There are warnings on the packet, but instead of people with rotten teeth falling out, no hair, holes in their necks, fingers and toes falling off and post-mortem lungs, they tend to warn that smoking may not be entirely beneficial to one's health and it may be a good idea if you did not smoke too many if at all possible.
I don't know about Osaka, but it is increasingly restricted here in the Tokyo/Yokohama area. Pretty much all train platforms no longer allow it, lots of restaurants have gone smoke-free (but not all). Lots of public spaces such as sidewalks are smoke-free with fines for violators. The cigarette vending machines now require a Taspo RFID card to use. They won't work without the card, which is supposed to verify the age. It's a pain in the butt to get one. And the tax rates on them are a fair bit higher than 10 years ago, although still not up to the levels seen in the US or Europe.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoking_in_Japan
According to a graph here, smoking rates are down about 12% since 1995, from roughly 37% to 25%. Almost a third less smokers.
It probably is (though heroin can be extremely safe), but I can only guess that it's regarded as safe by disregarding the fact that herbal mj is dry plant material that's burned and inhaled, and that (often) it's cut with tobacco for smoking.
By the standards applied to straight tobacco it is inherently dangerous for the same reasons tobacco is considered inherently dangerous.
Spliffs are heavier? Not arguing with you here, just wondering what you mean.
eta: meanwhile some (most?) joints include tobacco. Don't get me started about how my pristine 22-year old lungs ended up preverted by the demon nicotine![]()
Yes. It's the smoke that's the hazard so what is being smoked isn't that important.Out of interest, would most people agree with the same rules applying to smoking marijuana as well?
It's generally far worse than tobacco, stink wise.How stinky is weed ?
I'd apply the same rules to eating fried food in a confined space too. Many workplaces ban the consumption of hot food at desks because the smell may be offensive.
There's a restaurant in Dublin that has their extractor fans positioned to stink up the car park opposite and the street between them. Legal action is ongoing.I lived for a time in a flat where the prevailing wind wafted in the fumes from the extractor system of a Chinese takeaway that also did fish & chips etc. Even never opening a window didn't solve the problem of pervasive stinkiness. And heaven knows how much formaldehyde I was breathing in.
Pretty much. Though given that cannabis is psychoactive I also support legislation (similar to alcohol) restricting it's use by drivers, machinery operators et cetera.Why not? Are not many of the health hazards the same?
Agreed.I assume that the same restrictions will apply because a lit spliff could also be a fire hazard, and because discarded roaches are also litter, and of course because people will passively smoke intoxicating fumes.
You could have exterior smoking areas, with appropriate dissipation measures, and no human service.I think the specialized shops/cafes and bars will have to be a no-go as the point about banning smoking indoors was to protect people who will work on the premises.
There are field tests using saliva. However due to the lipid soluble nature of most cannabinoids can be detected for far longer than alcohol.Yes, so presumably the restrictions will have to be stricter. Aside from blood and urine tests, can the police test for marijuana in any way similar to breathalizer tests?
It's common for cigarette smokers to smoke 2-3 packs a day. ....
...
It's common for cigarette smokers to smoke 2-3 packs a day. I don't know anyone that smokes 40-60 joints in a day, let alone on a daily basis.
As has Manopolus mentioned, that's not at all true in the US. Mixing marijuana and tobacco is a weird European thing.![]()
As far as I know, while they may be annoying, intestinal gas and perfumes probably don't have a carcinogenic effect in the amount people would be exposed to. (There may be issues with some that have hypersensitive allergic reactions to perfumes, but those people probably already have to be cautions about just about everything.)Fair point. However, people are made to breathe many foul exhausts: cars, intestinal gas, perfumes etc. Vehicle exhaust is a necessity, but what if someone is out for a joyride? My answer is... I don't care, I'm not enough of a busybody to manufacture the "proper" righteous indignation.
Wow. Judgmental much? Maybe you could identify some of these morally superior "busybodies".
Someone else already addressed that issue in an earlier post...Filling your car with gas gives you a decent blast of benzene-rich fumes.
A pump-jockey might do that 50 times per shift, and also gets a goodly dose of exhaust fumes for much of the shift.
Has anyone ever done any sort of analysis to measure toxins from cars on a typical restaurant patio vs. those produced by smoking?Back when I was a smoker, I did a bit of a back of the napkin calculation. I sat on a patio (that still allowed smoking) and counted the cars that passed a busy intersection maybe 15m away. I haven't got any of the hard numbers but I basically multiplied the number of cars passing in all directions during the time it takes me to smoke a cigarette by a short distance comprised of the intersection, something like 50m, then compared it to the average fuel economy in Canadian cars at the time, somewhere around 8l/100km. My argument was, sitting at a patio near a busy intersection, what is worse, me smoking or the 6 or 7 litres of gas being burned a short distance away?
Given that there is no such thing as a catalytic converter or wind![]()
Someone else already addressed that issue in an earlier post...
Just like coal miners and others doing "dangerous" jobs, exposure to risk is a necessity for the job. (i.e. there's no real substitute for the pump-jockey's exposure to Benzene-rich fumes, because filling a gas tank with a more harmless substance will not allow the car to function.)
It's common for cigarette smokers to smoke 2-3 packs a day. I don't know anyone that smokes 40-60 joints in a day, let alone on a daily basis.
Really?
Back in the 60's & 70's ( I was a smoker then .... ) when smoking was much more acceptable socially , a pack a day was considered a heavy smoker,..
I would really be surprised if there are a lot of 3 pack a day smokers in New York, where the cost can be $15+ a pack..