The PSA ad in the 70s was "why do you think they call it dope" implying you were an idiot if you used it. The truth could be said with regards to Alcohol or any other legal substance that chemically alters the brain. Xanax anyone?
Living where they idiotically legalized Marijuana I am beginning to wonder if there is not truth to that statement. Actually the people who I know who voted against the bill are young and many users of the substance. I don't have a problem with Marijuana at all and frankly think that having it legal would reduce some of the insane drug enforcement laws that are largely affecting the young people of color.
But this law was badly written on a rolling paper clearly. Some of the problems are how is this regulated and in turn enforced. DUI laws will need to be amended and it will require a test of bodily fluids, meaning urine or blood taken from the suspect. An already contentious issue currently in the Supreme Court regarding why blood is taken in a non urgent situation without a warrant. Yes you can thank MADD for this violation of our civil rights. Your blood can be taken without your consent. Its called "implied consent" by simply having a driver's license it allows the State to do so.
And because Marijuana sits in the blood stream longer than alcohol you need very little residual THC to be found guilty under the .05 restriction. So it includes Medical Marijuana users who may not actually be "under the influence" at the time they are driving. But in our current DUI laws junk science regarding impairment is up there with climate denials.
Then add while one awaits trial for DUI. How is this handled. Do you have a urine lock on the car to prevent you from driving while "high".
And any smoker/toker who says they get high and don't drive to that I say "bitch please." You are not superior in any way over the social drinker and yes you will find yourself subject to the same laws.
When people say we need less Government. No we need intelligent Government and one not beholden to lobbying groups.
The article below discusses the long range problems associated with Marijuana use. And this is where I have to agree. The health issues are like any other associated again with ANY substance that has potential for long term problems. In this case there are chemical additives and how you make sure if you are using for health reasons if its not going to make it worse. As for the IQ issues well we have many many problems that are already contributing to the deterioration of the young's cognitive processing, this is just another.
I have always said that when Willie Nelson passes the next generation will be represented by Snoop Dogg. No one will know what his last hit was but he will be a genial representative of the dope smoking nation and his bus will arrive in town in a cloud of smoke, he will emerge and we will all love him regardless.
However if you attend one of his shows and you choose not to imbibe but you smell of "pot" in the same way law enforcement says you smell of "booze" that is all they need to arrest, prosecute and in turn persecute you for a criminal felony act. We have no way of realizing what this will do to our screwed up overwhelmed jurisprudence system. And add the medical problems that will arise from the poor quality of dope you are ironically taking for health, the residual smoke inhalation, etc. We got a whole lot of problems coming on. Pass the pipe.
Legalizing of Marijuana Raises Health Concerns
By Anthony Bolante/Reuters;
In the 60s, marijuana was a hallmark of the counterculture, along with free love, bell bottoms, long hair and bandannas. But marijuana has had the most staying power.
This month, in a remarkable first, the recreational use of marijuana became legal (depending on your definition) in Colorado and Washington. Over a dozen other states have decriminalized possession of small amounts, and Massachusetts recently became the 18th state to allow its use for medicinal purposes.
Though federal law still bans both the sale and possession of marijuana, President Obama has said the federal government has “bigger fish to fry” and won’t aggressively prosecute tokers in states where its use is legal.
The rise of marijuana as an adult pastime is a victory for those who’ve always felt that its hazards were overblown. Proponents of legalization argue that marijuana is much safer to use than alcohol, pointing out that it is virtually impossible to overdose on marijuana.
While marijuana can be addictive, scientists generally agree that fewer than 10 percent of marijuana smokers become dependent on the drug, compared with 15 percent for alcohol, 23 percent for heroin and 32 percent for tobacco. Marijuana does contain carcinogens, including tar and other toxins similar to those found in tobacco, but people generally do not smoke marijuana in the same amounts as cigarettes.
Still, legalization takes health consumers into murky territory. Even though marijuana is the most commonly used illegal drug in the United States, questions about its health effects remain.
For starters, this is not your parents’ pot. Today’s marijuana is much more potent: The mean concentration of THC, the psychoactive ingredient, in confiscated cannabis more than doubled between 1993 and 2008.
Increased potency may be having unforeseen consequences. The human brain’s cannabinoid receptors are typically activated by naturally occurring chemicals in the body called endocannabinoids, which are similar to THC. There is a high density of cannabinoid receptors in parts of the brain that affect pleasure, memory and concentration. Some research suggests that these areas continue to be affected by marijuana use even after the “high” dissipates.
“It’s much more potent marijuana, which may explain why we’ve seen a pretty dramatic increase in admission to emergency rooms and treatment programs for marijuana,” said Dr. Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. “When we hear, ‘Well, I smoked and nothing happened to me,’ we need to think about the context of when these people started to take it, how frequently they used and how active the marijuana was.”
Those in favor of legalizing marijuana say the increase in potency has been exaggerated, and that when users have more powerful pot, they adjust their consumption and actually smoke less.
Teenagers may be more vulnerable to addiction, however, and those who start smoking pot at a younger age are at higher risk. Approximately one in six will become addicted, Dr. Volkow said. Young adults who start smoking marijuana at earlier ages also tend to smoke much more, and more often, than those who start in their later teens, researchers say.
In users who develop a dependence or addiction, quitting can cause intense withdrawal symptoms, like anxiety, trouble sleeping, lack of appetite, mood swings, irritability and depression, experts say.
Both Colorado and Washington restricted marijuana use to adults age 21 and over when they legalized recreational use in November. But experts worry that the perception of marijuana is changing because its stigma as an outlawed drug has eroded.
“When people can go to a ‘clinic’ or ‘cafe’ and buy pot, that creates the perception that it’s safe,” said Dr. A. Eden Evins, director of the Center for Addiction Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. “Before we unleash the powers of the marketplace to woo people to use this addictive substance, we need to better understand who is at risk.”
“Once moneyed interests are involved, this trend will be difficult to reverse,” she added.
The most disturbing new studies about early teenage use of marijuana showed that young adults who started smoking pot regularly before they were 16 performed significantly worse on cognitive tests of brain function than those who had started smoking later in adolescence. They performed particularly poorly on tests assessing executive function, which is responsible for planning and abstract thinking, as well as understanding rules and inhibiting inappropriate responses.
Imaging scans also found detectable differences in how their brains worked, said Staci Gruber, the lead author of these studies and director of the cognitive and clinical neuroimaging core at the imaging center at McLean Hospital in Boston. Imaging scans found alterations in the frontal cortex white matter tracts of the brain in the early-starters, she said, that are associated with impulsiveness.
“The frontal cortex is the last part of the brain to come online, and the most important,” Dr. Gruber said. “Early exposure perhaps changes the trajectory of brain development, such that ability to perform complex executive function tasks is compromised.”
A recent study showing a drop in IQ scores among teenagers who are regular pot smokers is especially troubling, Dr. Evins said. A more recent study found that people who started smoking marijuana as teenagers and used it heavily for decades lost IQ points over time, while those who started smoking as adults did not, though some critics have said these differences may not be meaningful. Older survey studies had indicated that regular pot smokers were less likely to graduate from high school or pursue higher education, but it was never clear which came first, difficulty in school or the drug use.
“If parents who are spending thousands of dollars on SAT prep courses knew about the cognitive effects marijuana has on their kids’ brains, they would be up in arms,” Dr. Evins said. Other health concerns about marijuana are less well documented but may turn out to be significant. States that legalized marijuana prohibit driving under its influence, and studies have found marijuana smoking increases weaving between lanes and slows reaction times. And although marijuana is not as damaging to the lungs as tobacco, in part because people do not smoke a pack of joints a day, a regular habit can eventually take a toll on the lungs.
At the very least, the new studies suggest parents who recall their own pot parties may want to suggest greater moderation to their children. And teenagers who insist on trying marijuana are better off waiting until they’re older.
“It’s the same message as with alcohol,” Dr. Gruber said. “Just hold on, it’s worth it to wait.”

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