Drugs


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orald
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Post by orald »

Satan's Candies!!!



Sorry, I kinda like this name for it. :oops:
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Eyes High
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Post by Eyes High »

I'm still not for sure how I feel about the legalization of marijuana.

Most people might be able to handle it, but didn't a lot of the hard core users start off with simple marijuana?

Would legalization escalate the numbers who try marijuana and then begin to move on to the dangerous stuff?
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Schu
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Post by Schu »

Eyes High wrote:I'm still not for sure how I feel about the legalization of marijuana.

Most people might be able to handle it, but didn't a lot of the hard core users start off with simple marijuana?

Would legalization escalate the numbers who try marijuana and then begin to move on to the dangerous stuff?
I don't think so. I don't know whether I accept the "gateway drug" idea as logical, but even if it is, it's not like pot is the only gateway drug. the people that would do harder drugs would do them anyway, whether they try pot first or not.
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Drunken Idaho
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Post by Drunken Idaho »

Eyes High wrote:I'm still not for sure how I feel about the legalization of marijuana.

Most people might be able to handle it, but didn't a lot of the hard core users start off with simple marijuana?

Would legalization escalate the numbers who try marijuana and then begin to move on to the dangerous stuff?
I don't really think legalization would escalate how many people try the stuff in the first place. Pot is already so readily available that I'm sure anyone who really wants to try it could already get a hold of some.
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orald
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Post by orald »

And I don't see any problem whatsoever with legalizing it, especially if it is the gateway drug the authorities claim it to be, and the drugies claim it is not, since I would welcome lots of peopel to try hard drugs, possibly die from it, and rid us from themselves. :)
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Crysknife
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Post by Crysknife »

I'm all for legalization, man! In comparison, alcohol is a much more dangerous drug. Even tobacco is awful stuff compared to it.

It's stupid really. There must be a lot of money floating around to keep it this way.
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orald
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Post by orald »

I only get high on petrol. 8)
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Drunken Idaho
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Post by Drunken Idaho »

Crysknife wrote:I'm all for legalization, man! In comparison, alcohol is a much more dangerous drug. Even tobacco is awful stuff compared to it.

It's stupid really. There must be a lot of money floating around to keep it this way.
Totally agree with you on the alcohol point! When people get drunk, oftentimes they become loud and aggressive. Fights break out, people injured/sick, plus it destroys your liver.

With pot, what's going to happen? You might giggle a lot or "see through the bullshit" and maybe have a snack. Worst case scenario, you'll get really paranoid and keep to yourself for a while.

I heard somewhere that early reports on drug research by the US government were composed by this woman who apparently greatly exaggerated the effects of pot, literally saying in the report that it makes you go insane. It's too bad that inept cunt had so many preconceived notions about the stuff, because now it's a huge battle re-educate the public.
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Eyes High
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Post by Eyes High »

I do agree that there are more uses for hemp that could be explored if the government would admit that hemp could be grown for commercial use with out the narcortic aspect.
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A Thing of Eternity
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Post by A Thing of Eternity »

Eyes High wrote:I'm still not for sure how I feel about the legalization of marijuana.

Most people might be able to handle it, but didn't a lot of the hard core users start off with simple marijuana?

Would legalization escalate the numbers who try marijuana and then begin to move on to the dangerous stuff?
Alcohol is the gateway drug. :wink: Most people do indeed start with pot before harder drugs, but their first drug is almost always alcohol. Also, I think the vast majority of pot smokers never try anything harder, or if they do they only try very small amounts and then stay away.

I do get this concern though, I just think alcohol is the real culprit if anything is, and that certainly isn't getting outlawed again. :)
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Post by Drunken Idaho »

Eyes High wrote:I do agree that there are more uses for hemp that could be explored if the government would admit that hemp could be grown for commercial use with out the narcortic aspect.
I'm pretty sure hemp won't even get you high if you smoke the stuff. Seriously, it's like marijuana's retarded cousin. It must have been to similar in appearance in smell to remain legal in certain areas. I'm pretty sure it's totally legal up here.

Have any of my fellow Ontarians ever heard the radio ads for Hempola, the family-friendly hemp farm? This place is real, or at least was. You know how you go to a pumpkin farm with your family and there's all kinds of other bullshit like hayrides, and mazes, and souvenirs? Same idea, only instead of pumpkins, it's hemp!
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GamePlayer
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Post by GamePlayer »

People are the gateway drug. Anyone who says differently is selling something :)
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Post by DuneFishUK »

Drunken Idaho wrote:
Eyes High wrote:I do agree that there are more uses for hemp that could be explored if the government would admit that hemp could be grown for commercial use with out the narcortic aspect.
I'm pretty sure hemp won't even get you high if you smoke the stuff. Seriously, it's like marijuana's retarded cousin. It must have been to similar in appearance in smell to remain legal in certain areas. I'm pretty sure it's totally legal up here.

Have any of my fellow Ontarians ever heard the radio ads for Hempola, the family-friendly hemp farm? This place is real, or at least was. You know how you go to a pumpkin farm with your family and there's all kinds of other bullshit like hayrides, and mazes, and souvenirs? Same idea, only instead of pumpkins, it's hemp!
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Post by Freakzilla »

No, you can't get high off industrial hemp. It has been bred to produce more stems which is where we get the fiber.

The flowers are what people smoke and recreational marijuana has been bred to produce more flowers.

I also believe that gateway drug stuff is a load of horse shit. You either have a tendancy towards addiction or you don't.

It is also true that some people can't handle drugs. We have something for them. It's called reality.

The rest of us can't handle reality.

:wink:
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Post by Spicelon »

I'm for 'em.

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Eyes High
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Post by Eyes High »

Yeah, I've heard that hemp has none of the narcortic effects and that it makes good rope and even good cloth for clothing.

Not for sure if it is illegal down here but I know I don't hear too much about it. And a lot of people do labor under the false conclusion that hemp must equal pot.
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Post by Freakzilla »

Eyes High wrote:Yeah, I've heard that hemp has none of the narcortic effects and that it makes good rope and even good cloth for clothing.

Not for sure if it is illegal down here but I know I don't hear too much about it. And a lot of people do labor under the false conclusion that hemp must equal pot.
The parachute ropes that saved president George Bush's life in WWII were made of hemp, so is ship rigging, sails...

The quality of the fiber is first rate, however an invention by Eli Whitney called the Cotton Gin (which seperates the seeds :wink: ) made cotton much easier to produce. If someone had invinted a hemp gin instead, we may have used hemp instead or more heavily.

I'm sure there's a machine that processes hemp now, though.
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Re: Drugs

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Post by Omphalos »

Freakzilla wrote:The parachute ropes that saved president George Bush's life in WWII were made of hemp, so is ship rigging, sails...
So many jokes, so little time.

Think that's when he got his start"

or

I knew hemp should have been outlawed!

No, stop. I could go on!
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Re: Drugs

Post by Freakzilla »

OBAMA ORDERS FEDS NOT TO PROSICUTE MEDICAL MARIJUANA CASES!

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 03638.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
U.S. eases stance on medical marijuana Attorney general says prosecuting such cases 'will not be a priority'

By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. directed federal prosecutors Monday to back away from pursuing cases against medical marijuana patients, signaling a broad policy shift that drug reform advocates interpret as the first step toward legalization of the drug.

The government's top lawyer said that in 14 states with some provisions for medical marijuana use, federal prosecutors should focus only on cases involving higher-level drug traffickers, money launderers or people who use the state laws as a cover.

The Justice Department's action came days after the Senate's second-highest-ranking Democrat introduced a bill that would eradicate a two-decade-old sentencing disparity for people caught with cocaine in rock form instead of powder form. Taken together, experts say, the moves represent an approach favored by President Obama and Vice President Biden to put new emphasis on violent crime and the sale of illicit drugs to children. Legislation that would cover a third administration commitment, to support federal funding of needle exchanges, is moving through the House.

The announcement set off waves of support from advocacy groups that have long sought to relax the enforcement of marijuana laws. But some local police and Republican lawmakers criticized the change, saying it could exacerbate the flow of drug money to Mexican cartels, whose violence has spilled over the Southwestern border.

In a statement, Holder asserted that drug traffickers and people who use firearms will continue to be direct targets of federal prosecutors, but that, on his watch, "it will not be a priority to use federal resources to prosecute patients with serious illnesses or their caregivers who are complying with state laws on medical marijuana."

The turnaround could pave the way for Rhode Island, New Mexico and Michigan to put together marijuana-distribution systems for residents of those states, according to Graham Boyd, director of the Drug Law Reform Project at the American Civil Liberties Union. Advocates say marijuana use can help alleviate pain and stimulate appetite in patients suffering from cancer, HIV-AIDS and other ailments. But the American Medical Association since 2001 has held firm to a policy opposing marijuana for medical purposes.

Under the Controlled Substances Act, which is more than three decades old, marijuana remains within the category of drugs most tightly restricted by the government. Donna Lambert, who is awaiting criminal trial in San Diego County Superior Court for allegedly providing medical marijuana to another patient, injected a note of skepticism into Holder's announcement. In an interview, Lambert noted that senior administration officials had made public comments this year in line with the Justice Department policy, only to have law enforcement agents, including the Drug Enforcement Administration, take part in raids soon afterward.

Ethan Nadelmann, executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, said he and other advocates will watch closely whether federal agents refuse to participate in raids or send other signals to district attorneys in the states that allow some medical use of marijuana.

Americans for Safe Access, which supports medical marijuana programs nationwide, estimated that during the Bush administration federal authorities conducted 200 raids in California alone. A 2005 U.S. Supreme Court case made clear that the federal government has the discretion to enforce federal drug laws even in states that had approved some relaxation of marijuana statutes for sick patients.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, at a daily briefing in Washington, declined to address "what states should do" in response to the Justice Department guidance. But Gibbs said that the president since January had outlined his medical marijuana policy and that the Justice Department memo, signed by Deputy Attorney General David W. Ogden, helped to fill in the details.

The administration stopped far short Monday of endorsing wholesale marijuana legalization, frustrating some activists. At the libertarian Cato Institute, official Tim Lynch described the war on drugs as a "grand failure." He exhorted the White House to take "much bolder steps to stop the criminalization of drug use more generally."

In the three-page memo, Ogden made clear that the department is not creating a new legal defense for people who may have violated the Controlled Substances Act. Instead, the memo is intended to guide prosecutors on where to train their scarce investigative resources.

The International Association of Chiefs of Police "strongly believes that the federal government must continue to play a central role in the investigation and prosecution of . . . traffickers, dispensary operators, and growers," said Meredith Mays, a spokeswoman for the group.

Rep. Lamar Smith (Tex.), the top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, said the Justice Department guidelines "fly in the face of Supreme Court precedent and undermine federal laws that prohibit the distribution and use of marijuana."

He added: "We cannot hope to eradicate the drug trade if we do not first address the cash cow for most drug-trafficking organizations -- marijuana."

The cocaine bill is still pending in the Senate, although advocates say its prospects are stronger now than over the past decade. The sponsor, Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), said in an interview last week that he was working to enlist GOP co-sponsors to ease the bill's passage.
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A Thing of Eternity
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Re: Drugs

Post by A Thing of Eternity »

I figured he'd eventually get around to lessening the illigality of weed, considering he is from Hawaii, which I hear is pretty much the same as BC, or at least the rest of Canada. Didn't think he'd get to it so soon though.

Hey Freak - if he and Canada work together and legalize weed he'll have enough money to pay for his healthcare system. Then it's a win/win/win (two of those wins are for you)!
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Re: Drugs

Post by Freakzilla »

This is certainly a baby step towards de-criminalization and it's about time.

Maybe in a few years I won't have to move to Canada when I chuck it all and become a pot farmer.

:D
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Schu
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Re: Drugs

Post by Schu »

"We cannot hope to eradicate the drug trade if we do not first address the cash cow for most drug-trafficking organizations -- marijuana."

If that is actually even remotely true, I will be very surprised. I always figured meth, extacy, heroin etc were the cash cows.

Meanwhile, people are being retarded in the UK, someone got fired for investigating the dangers of marijuana for the government and saying that they are less than legal drugs like tobacco and alcohol.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009 ... tone-drugs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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Re: Drugs

Post by lotek »

David Nutt's sacking provokes mass revolt against Alan Johnson
david nuts sacking?
:lol: :lol:
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Re: Drugs

Post by SandChigger »

Oh lotek, for heaven's sakes, get your mind out of the gutter! :roll:





At least long enough to let some of the rest of us splash about a bit, too! :P
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