Aunt Mavis
I have met the enemy and he is us. Pogo
Agreed 100 percent.I my recollection probably all those who started using pot started with alcohol.
Agreed 100 percent.I my recollection probably all those who started using pot started with alcohol.
probably all those who started using pot started with alcohol.
I feel reasonably certain that chemicals are being added.Are the distributors adding chemicals or is it just the plant itself evolving?
One of the advantages of living in Canada where it’s legal. No more meeting people in back alleys or bars. There‘re are rules and product strengths are defined. It does mean the product costs more. There’re still some who buy on the black market.Plus there's myriad pot hybrids that some people just can't handle. Pot isn't just pot anymore, you gotta grow your own if you want pure, or at least know who your buying it from really well so you know if it's been treated.
Exactly! It's going to get worse and worse now that it's legal.I suspect that as MJ is made legal, in more States, it will become a "gateway" drug to more hazardous drugs....cocaine, heroin, etc.
Yes and that is sad. Look at the ever increasing homeless drug addicts all over the streets now in every state. It's crazy.I have a cousin that's a hospice chaplain. He averages 3 funerals a week from young people overdosing on drugs.
Exactly! I agree. People underestimate MJ and think it's harmless. Every kind of drug will have a negative effect on the mind. Once people get used to their miund being altered, they crave more and from ore sources, meaning harder drugs.(I'll try to keep this brief, as I'm REALLY fed up with snide remarks and 'lols' when I express 'unpopular' viewpoints)
@DonM : Isn't that the way the 'gateway' theory was approached decades ago?
If so, I honestly don't have an opinion, as I have nothing to base it on.
Reason: individuals I knew when I was a young adult who were regularly using as you call it MJ AND no other drugs didn't last long enough TO 'transition,' they committed suicide- 2 by gunshot, 1 by hanging, all were in their mid-twenties. Much later, a local girl also rigged a gun up to a door and shot herself- she was 13 years old.
However- one approach that unfortunately is valid is young people getting the message- sometimes from their own parents- that marijuana is natural, safe, and acceptable.. so as they don't want to be like older generations they choose harder drugs instead.
As some use the term mind-altering substances- the human mind is not meant to be 'altered.' A few years ago, I had a psychology book that showed brain scans that prove the brains of addicts are different.
True, just because it doesn't make them mean doesn't mean it's harmless. It's all bad.MJ is now legal in Canada. I don't partake.
Okay, maybe a drunk is meaner than a person who's high, and many respectable and successful people smoke every day.
But I have observed that marijuana CAN affect people's behavior and personality in negative ways.
Probably trying to make it more addictive to keep them coming back for more.I feel reasonably certain that chemicals are being added.
Dealers, and drug lords don't care one bit about the mental/physical health of the users. They are only interested in making ever more money.
Agreed 100 percent.
To clarify, I have seen little evidence to suggest moderate use of marijuana is harmful to the majority of those who partake.In my experience, my clients started with alcohol.
I don't know, we have on pretty good authority.That gateway nonsense was dispatched over 40 years ago.
I don't think the gateway idea was ever saying it was the first thing (alcohol or sugar smacks) anyone ever took, but that when a teen buys his first bag of weed he has crossed into an area he might have feared before. He has met a drug dealer, done something illegal and the police didn't drive up, his parents didn't find out, so now he's less afraid to try other illegal drugs.
I don't think whether or not it's a gateway drug matters as much as what might happen to a growing brain with regular marijuana use. Not only is it associated with an increase risk of schizophrenia, it can also cause a decrease in motivation, taking an active, good student with a future and turning him into a low-achiever who never leaves his parent's basement.
Heroin leads to LSD? I never heard that before. What I've heard, heroin leads to heroin. But I suppose a case can be made (assuming that no claims need any verification) that everything leads to something.I don't know, we have on pretty good authority.
That drug dealer is almost always his/her good friend. Drug dealers generally have great personalities, after all, they are salespeople trying to satisfy customers, a great skill in the 'real' world.He has met a drug dealer, done something illegal and the police didn't drive up, his parents didn't find out, so now he's less afraid to try other illegal drugs.
I hope you know what you're doing.
Yes and finding out his friend is dealing is just another door opening into the world of drugs.That drug dealer is almost always his/her good friend. Drug dealers generally have great personalities, after all, they are salespeople trying to satisfy customers, a great skill in the 'real' world.
Even I did.It seems to me that teenagers experiment with many things that can be dangerous. Sex is a big one, smoking Tabaco, driving crazy, and even some sports have ruined the teenagers life by severe injury. Who here on this forum never broke a law OR disobeyed their parents to experiment in some way?
Even I did.
Seriously tho, I just wasn't interested in drugs and alcohol when I was a kid. I didn't drink or smoke til I was well into my 20s. Come to think of it, I got into a little trouble, but I never broken any laws.
But I gotta mention, it's also a myth that kids "experiment" with drugs or alcohol. Kids don't experiment, they know exactly what to expect. Naturally, someone experiments at some point, but I'd bet you it's almost always an adult, primarily to keep interest in their product and increase sales, probably, but some experiment for the experience. And those experiences are canonized in oral history, art, film, poetry and songs; none of it's a mystery to kids. (Except the potential for addiction and ruin. That, they don't seem able to grasp.)
Isn't it often laced with a more dangerous drug?A San Diego ER is seeing about 37 pot related cases of psychosis a day. One doctor is averaging 1-2 pot patients a shift. Never saw these numbers decades ago.
https://nypost.com/2022/10/22/san-diego-er-seeing-up-to-37-marijuana-cases-a-day/
Part of the issue is the higher or stronger thc content. Also prolonged or regular use not helping
Isn't it often laced with a more dangerous drug?