Steve Grenier Steve Grenier

Your thoughts on Marijuana

Your thoughts on Marijuana

Hey,

I have tried having this conversion on other forums but it always gets out of hand with people flaming eachother. I just want to have a conversation about the subject and hear peoples thoughts on it and maybe clear some rumors about it up. There are many people who think it's bad and that it's very bad for your lungs. Me being from Canada I smoke it regularly so I don't have a problem with it. The only factor I can see is that it is bad for the lungs as is any smoke to inhale. I was thinking for medical reasons, if they extracted the THC from inside the plant and simply put it in canisters and distrubute it to patients much like anesthesia. That way there is no lung damage from inhaling the smoke and the patients can be given certian dosages to scale rather than having to smoke up.

Say what you have to say. All opinions welcome.
68,623 views 181 replies
Reply #176 Top
You are, in essence, retarding your growth in many ways.


If you are contending that marijuana retards ones mental capacity, your sadly mistaken.

Your going to have to come up with a bit more than words to convince me and many others of this one.

Not to say that it is not dangerous to grown adults, just that the younger you start, the more likely a problem(s) will develop


How so?
Reply #177 Top
I would estimate that over 50% of chronic male smokers over the age of 40 have a testosterone deficiency.


Are you so certain that this happens whether or not one smokes pot?

Please show me where this claim comes from.
Reply #178 Top
Well, the doctors says that Marijuana is bad for the brain.


Do they really? Show me.

Because I can tell you right no that many doctors in the State of California are referring their patients to the leagal right to smoke medicinal marijuana.
Reply #179 Top
I look at our society before pot was banned in 1937 and after. I can't seem to find any real benefit that was gained by the ban. Maybe there hasn't been much benefit because the ban has almost universally failed. Pot is every bit as prevalent and easy to get as it was back in the 20s. Most U.S. cities have decriminalized it to the point that just using it rarely leads to an arrest.

The whole "medical marijuana" movement has been hijacked by the "legalization" crowd though. This has given the anti marijuana crowd ammunition in fighting against medical use. I mean, when you see people with no medical need, openly toking at a medical use demonstration, you quickly see that medical need is furthest from some of the activist's minds.

But the fact remains, it is still illegal. If the activists want it legalized, it is on them to show why the ban is wrong. Simply saying, "because it's not as dangerous as..." isn't a legitimage argument. While it's true that pot isn't as dangerous as tobacco or alcohol, in smoking it, you are still inhaling the smoke of a carbon based substance... meaning you are still sucking down all sorts of poisonous gasses (including carbon monoxide).

Another point that undermines medicinal marijuana is how strongly the activists fight against synthetic THC or (as you suggest) THC in another form). If it helps the people as well as smoking pot does (and helping releive pain is the point), then why do they fight against it so hard?

The pro marijuana groups are targeting the wrong departments though. Instead of working in each state, fighting a battle that won't stand up in federal coursts, they should be lobbying the FDA directly. The ONLY thing that has to happen to clear the way for medicinal marijuana would be for the FDA to change it's status from a Schedule V drug (no medicinal value but high instance of abuse) to a Schedule IV drug (high instance of abuse, but having medicinal value). That would allow states to keep it illegal for recreational use, but allow doctors to prescribe it (basically putting in with Morphine).
Reply #181 Top
It kills you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


No matter what you do, every breath you take brings you one step closer to death.

I'll rob a quote from Jim Morrison: The future is always certain that the end is always near.