Marijuana chocolate bar packs a punch

mellow

New Member
Award winning New York Times mature-age columnist Maureen Dowd decided it was time to try some legal marijuana so she went to Denver but her experience wasn't what she expected. After reading about it, I would be scared stiff to try it and the point of her article was to point out that there is still a long way to go before the problems of legal marijuana get ironed out. This is part of her article.

The caramel-chocolate flavored candy bar looked so innocent, like the Sky Bars I used to love as a child. Sitting in my hotel room in Denver, I nibbled off the end and then, when nothing happened, nibbled some more. I figured if I was reporting on the social revolution rocking Colorado in January, the giddy culmination of pot Prohibition, I should try a taste of legal, edible pot from a local shop. What could go wrong with a bite or two? Everything, as it turned out.

Not at first. For an hour, I felt nothing. I figured I’d order dinner from room service and return to my more mundane drugs of choice, chardonnay and mediocre-movies-on-demand.
But then I felt a scary shudder go through my body and brain. I barely made it from the desk to the bed, where I lay curled up in a hallucinatory state for the next eight hours. I was thirsty but couldn’t move to get water. Or even turn off the lights. I was panting and paranoid, sure that when the room-service waiter knocked and I didn’t answer, he’d call the police and have me arrested for being unable to handle my candy.

I strained to remember where I was or even what I was wearing, touching my green corduroy jeans and staring at the exposed-brick wall. As my paranoia deepened, I became convinced that I had died and no one was telling me.

It took all night before it began to wear off, distressingly slowly. The next day, a medical consultant at an edibles plant where I was conducting an interview mentioned that candy bars like that are supposed to be cut into 16 pieces for novices; but that recommendation hadn’t been on the label.

I reckoned that the fact that I was not a regular marijuana smoker made me more vulnerable, and that I should have known better. But it turns out, five months in, that some kinks need to be ironed out with the intoxicating open bar at the Mile High Club.
 

Just one of the many oversights when this pot law passed in Colorado; the legislature will spend the next 5 years or so patching the law. In this case the labeling requirements will be strengthened and they are trying to make it illegal for consumable pot products to look like standard treats like chocolates, jellies and brownies. It's what happens when we forget the power of large numbers of stupid voters.
 

I've seen young kids being fed marijuana in cakes, consequently they are 'bombed' all day. That's one way of getting peace, I guess.:rolleyes:
 
I agree that there needs to be labeling, as many of these edible products should not be eaten as regular snacks. Anyone with common sense would be careful in using something like this, especially for the first time. Just as in prescription drugs, you don't pop 6 pain killers instead of one, with alcohol, downing a pint of whiskey is not very wise when one shot is recommended. The serving size needs to be clear on the labeling, along with the strength. I think this whole thing is over-dramatized by the writer. Kinks need to be ironed out to be sure, the voters aren't stupid, the people like this woman are, IMO.
 
Colorado is becoming the tourist haven of choice for pot-heads, just what we need on our roads. Colorado is making history for the number of ER visit for pot ODs for all ages of people. Colorado license plates are becoming the targets of choice by police as far as two states away looking for an easy pot bust. Because Colorado is in violation of Federal law the banks cannot deal with the pot dealers through the normal credit mechanism so there are all these pot shops sitting around loaded with cash, can't think of better targets for criminals. Colorado has become the distribution center of choice for all the Mexican drug cartels. Colorado unleashed all this pot mania barely any control or regulatory mechanism in place, doesn't even have a recognized legitimate test for pot intoxication during traffic stops.

Yeah, nothing stupid about those voters!
 
I think the decision to make marijuana legal is a mistake, and although there were many logical arguments to support it, like how the world is losing the drug war, time will show that Colorado has opened Pandora's box.
 
I didn't know that NY had legalized marijuana, only Colorado and Washington. The whole 'war on drugs' was/is bogus, IMO. Nobody in power seemed to really stop the big drug smuggling across the border, and the drug cartels seemed to be thriving. Marijuana, medical or recreational should have been legal since 1980, IMO. The state gets money from these cannabis stores, the people who want to indulge, or need to medically, get a more pure and higher quality product. Best thing is they don't have to buy it illegally in an alley somewhere, and take a chance of being either ripped off or arrested.
 
I didn't know that NY had legalized marijuana, only Colorado and Washington. The whole 'war on drugs' was/is bogus, IMO. Nobody in power seemed to really stop the big drug smuggling across the border, and the drug cartels seemed to be thriving. Marijuana, medical or recreational should have been legal since 1980, IMO. The state gets money from these cannabis stores, the people who want to indulge, or need to medically, get a more pure and higher quality product. Best thing is they don't have to buy it illegally in an alley somewhere, and take a chance of being either ripped off or arrested.
You are right SeaBreeze, it's not legal in NY, only Colorado and ready to go in Washington. Just been reading about that, it seems there are heaps of problems.http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/12/u...n-washington-state-says-not-so-fast.html?_r=0
 
Does it bother anyone that fifth grade students were caught bringing pot, presumably their parent's, to school and distributing the stuff, they were caught smoking pot in the restroom. We don't fully understand the medical aftermath of pot smoking yet and here we have parents smoking it at home subjecting their kids to the smoke. As for the illegal stuff, well it appears they are selling to the legal shops at a cheaper rate than the highly restricted locally grown stuff.

Only two states have legalized recreational pot but several states have legalized "medical" pot; very minor difference between the two, more a smoke and mirrors game.

The war on drugs is a sham, hopelessly mired in corruption and billions of dollars of annual waste I agree but this snake Colorado let loose is not the answer; its medical and societal ramifications are far from understood and maybe worst of all, now that the snake is loose it can never be put back in the bag. This is here to stay and there is no doubt it will be legalized nationally in a very short time, we can't live with the contradiction of it being illegal nationally but legal in a few states, that is too great a concession to states rights for imperial Washington to swallow.
 
Kids have been smoking illegal pot and bringing it to school since the 60s. I realize that those against legalization of marijuana feel strongly, and they have the right to their own opinions. I don't ever try to change anyone's minds, just give my views. I live in Colorado, I'm not using marijuana, medical or otherwise, and honestly I've seen no changes whatsoever in the area where I live. Marijuana, IMO, is much better to use recreationally than alcohol, and is safer to use for pain than prescription pain medications which are very addicting and have harmful side effects.
 
Same here, SeaBreeze. I live in Denver...and NO there are NOT any visible changes... the only times this happened was the day the new law went into effect.
"Stupid voters" eh? Evidently, Marinaio, you have quite a substantial amount of more belief
in the 'voters' (and the entire election process) than I do.:) The war on drugs (like the war on anything else) has never worked... and there are NO statistics to bear out the fact that marijuana use has increased in Colorado compared to before.... Basically, drugs just like liquor, will ALWAYS come down to a personal choice... in fact, the more it is 'illegalized' the more allure it has especially to young people. When pot was illegal, it was not more difficult to obtain than now.
Since several deaths have occurred over pot in candy, etc... sales have DROPPED considerably. The greatest number of fatalities between drugs and liquor still gets chalked up to liquor... actually, the drug that causes the MOST deaths is the VERY legal 'blood pressure medication.'... more deaths from RX occur than ALL street drugs put together. Its all individual and 'choice.' One cannot place the blame on laws, government, etc ... Its like that annoying old TV ad which showed teenagers stealing a car, blaming the car owner for leaving his keys in the car.
Don't make a criminal out of these kids.... Sheesh.
Responsibility will ALWAYS rest on the person whose reflection you see in the mirror....even with 'yeah, but, you are making it easier, blah, blah, blah'...
 
We will see how attitudes change as the inevitable problems grow. Perhaps as more or our precious little children and grandchildren become ensnared by this pernicious new evil we might suffer a few pangs of self doubt. I think this was a stupid action on the part of the voters and those politicians who signed it into law, I think society is going to pay a terrible price down the road and I feel sorry because there is no way to undo the mistake. If I'm a prude or just don't get it, too bad, some of us have to take a stand against the tragedy unfolding all around us because of the reckless attitude the pervades our society. I fully expect pot to surpass tobacco as the most condemned "legal" substance we have.
 


Back
Top