Fife wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 9:56 am This thread is harshing my high. And I haven't smoked any weed since 1992.
:beardymcredeyes:
Somebody get this man the chronic.
Fife wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 9:56 am This thread is harshing my high. And I haven't smoked any weed since 1992.
:beardymcredeyes:
Not really. I'm pretty interested in the logic.
Apologies - I misread your post. You aren't wrong, but it may have been the only way. People who used to be adamantly against it are now strong supporters, because they got to see first hand the relief it gave to their loved ones.doc_loliday wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 1:51 pm
I'm not sure if you're talking about me, but the last thing I want is to control your life. I don't care what you ingest.
It wont be classed with Alcohol or tobacco, more like guns or CIIsKath wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 3:58 pmApologies - I misread your post. You aren't wrong, but it may have been the only way. People who used to be adamantly against it are now strong supporters, because they got to see first hand the relief it gave to their loved ones.doc_loliday wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 1:51 pm
I'm not sure if you're talking about me, but the last thing I want is to control your life. I don't care what you ingest.
We recently had a friend die of stage 4 ovarian cancer. She was diagnosed before the Florida legislature relaxed the medical laws, so she still didn't qualify for a card. (There were very few conditions on the list, at first.)
Our community went all black market for her, to get her edibles and vapables, etc. I am not sure she would have lasted until October '18 if she hadn't gotten the relief. She wasn't eating, at all, until we hooked her up with goodies.
I've read all the accounts of these stories, and I know first hand that it helps out in certain situations, so I wasn't exactly surprised, but, it was a moving experience to see it work on a suffering chemo patient, first hand. I imagine it is even more powerful if you go into that experience believing pot is the danger REEFER MADNESS told them it was.
It was only after people started seeing it not cause people to jump from windows (exaggeration intentional,) that it started gaining popular support.
Yeah, Daddy G will control the bleep out of it one day in the not-too-distant future. Sigh. Better to be classed with alcohol and cigarettes than schedule I.
I don't know what a CII is, but, it is less dangerous than Alcohol & tobacco. What would the logic be, there?clubgop wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 11:28 pm
It wont be classed with Alcohol or tobacco, more like guns or CIIs
Then why are you cheering the creation of a narco state? You were better off when everything was illegal.
Logic like this?Kath wrote: Fri Jan 25, 2019 3:35 pm Not really. I'm pretty interested in the logic.
Marijuana, mostly harmless, can't OD, no demonstrable proof it is a leading cause of any disease, no physically additive properties, has medicinal benefits. Schedule I
No addictive properties according to Kath, yet the experts say at least 9% become addicted, another 20% develop a use disorder. There's your logic.According to NIDA, approximately 30 percent of marijuana users may have some sort of marijuana use disorder. It’s estimated that between 10 and 30 percent of individuals who smoke weed will develop dependency, with only 9 percent actually developing addiction. However, exact statistics are unknown.
... yet one grows naturally and abundantly and the other is lab created, sold at massive markup, and is a link in the pharmaceutical-insurance extortion chain that drives our healthcare costs skyward.Speaker to Animals wrote: Sat Jan 26, 2019 12:25 pm Have you guys ever heard the pothead line about how they do not need to take dangerous anti-depression meds because of their weed habit? LOL
It does the same thing. It boosts dopamine and suppresses serotonin reuptake.