GaryPinC Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Care to tell us why Salvia is legal to distribute, grow, and smoke, then? Because it has a low addiction potential. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fingon Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Because it has a low addiction potential. What is the addiction potential of alcohol or tobacco? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
McBeane Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Well, I never been stoned and will never willingly get stoned. Been known to get drunk, especially in my 20's but generally I prefer dealing with reality. Getting laid is certainly more challenging because I have two young children and the wife and I both work, but I'll go get right on that. Thanks for your suggestions. Please feel free to escape into your pot-induced stupor since you must be incapable of facing the real world without it. Just cause your wife has tried it and apparently didn't like it (must not have done it right or something ) doesn't mean you know enough about it to make a full judgement on it. It has ZERO addiction capability, what you are considering an "addiction" is people enjoying it and not stopping because they don't have to. I personally have no problem not smoking, but smoke quite regularly, making me not an addict. And heroin is a schedule I drug, you are telling me weed destroys lives like heroin does? I'm just saying that it is completely illogical for weed to be illegal but alcohol and tobacco to be legal. Quick facts for you: Alcohol-related deaths per year is estimated to be 2 million worldwide. Weed-related deaths per year = 0. Somethings just aren't right, and weed being illegal is one of them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spiderweb Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Just cause your wife has tried it and apparently didn't like it (must not have done it right or something ) doesn't mean you know enough about it to make a full judgement on it. It has ZERO addiction capability, what you are considering an "addiction" is people enjoying it and not stopping because they don't have to. I personally have no problem not smoking, but smoke quite regularly, making me not an addict. And heroin is a schedule I drug, you are telling me weed destroys lives like heroin does? I'm just saying that it is completely illogical for weed to be illegal but alcohol and tobacco to be legal. Quick facts for you: Alcohol-related deaths per year is estimated to be 2 million worldwide. Weed-related deaths per year = 0. Somethings just aren't right, and weed being illegal is one of them. Without any doubt, I'd rather share a ride in a car with someone who just had a beer vs. someone who just smoked a joint. I call tell you this, I don't want any on the road who has just smoked a joint any more than I want a drunk. As for zero "weed-related" deaths....humm....tell that one to those that have died in drug wars and also, where did you garner your "facts", Tommy Chong? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bowery4 Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 I smoked a lot of weed for a lot of years. It is addicting in a I wanna joint kind of way, it certainly has a phyoclogical addiction potential which can be pretty strong in some individuals . I think it does have a harmless effect on most people and think the Government is a bad place to get info on it as it always has been. No body ever died from pot? Bob Marley died from emphisema and puffed about 6-10 joints a day, did it kill him? IDHK but he did die from a lung disease. I quit smoking because I was going to a country with a hard line drug policy and I was getting lung infections when ever I caught a cold. It has been 5 years and at times I miss it, will I do it again? maybe I would but I won't be using it as much as I used to. Things like it affects motivation are true, never found the big breasts or sexual fuction to be though. Never made me very crazy or afficted my mental stability much IMO If I could make millions if I didn't do it, I wouldn't have but kids (esply football players) are not known for the brains they bring to being pop culture icons so I am not surprised. BTW it should be legal but never will be in my lifetime and that is a shame but the way it is. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nucci Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Just cause your wife has tried it and apparently didn't like it (must not have done it right or something ) doesn't mean you know enough about it to make a full judgement on it. It has ZERO addiction capability, what you are considering an "addiction" is people enjoying it and not stopping because they don't have to. I personally have no problem not smoking, but smoke quite regularly, making me not an addict. And heroin is a schedule I drug, you are telling me weed destroys lives like heroin does? I'm just saying that it is completely illogical for weed to be illegal but alcohol and tobacco to be legal. Quick facts for you: Alcohol-related deaths per year is estimated to be 2 million worldwide. Weed-related deaths per year = 0. Somethings just aren't right, and weed being illegal is one of them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
silvermike Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 What's really lingering out here for the NFL is that there's absolutely no doubt that football is a heck of a lot more dangerous than marijuana. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeviF Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Without any doubt, I'd rather share a ride in a car with someone who just had a beer vs. someone who just smoked a joint. I call tell you this, I don't want any on the road who has just smoked a joint any more than I want a drunk. As for zero "weed-related" deaths....humm....tell that one to those that have died in drug wars and also, where did you garner your "facts", Tommy Chong? Just to comment on the drug wars point, legalizing marijuana would put a lot of drug cartels out of business or force them to move to harder drugs. I know I'd purchase weed grown by growers who have to follow government regulations before I'd purchase it from some drug dealer who might have laced it with god-knows-what. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr. WEO Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 "Driving while under the influence of weed?" LOL! Desperation much, doc? The cops stated that the "sight and smell of pot" is what led them to search his car, not the felonious missing plates. And even after finding the gun, there wasn't even a hint of charging him with DWUIW. Hell they didn't even charge him for possessing pot, which makes the allegation (and that's purely what it was) only pertinent to gullible people like you ("he plum just woudn't admit it was his, Roscoe!"). So you see, if pot is legal, there's no need to search his car. But they used a BS excuse, found a gun, and he got punished by the law. That's where it should have ended. One time is possibly an accident, twice is a trend, doc. Although I'm sure that Big Ben (who I like, believe it or not) is just being unfairly targeted, compared to every other QB, not to mention player, in the NFL, most of whom haven't even been charged ONCE with sexual misconduct. And as the "sit down" with Lynch proved, Sir Roger doesn't need a real charge to have that talk and explain that a player is responsible for his actions and/or putting himself in bad situations. Hell if Big Ben were a Bill, you'd have been screaming for his head. Alcohol is legal, but not while operating a car, so the point you pretend to be missing is that the smoking of weed in the vehicle is enough to arouse the righteous suspicion of the cops, just as if they saw this suspicious vehicle full of 40-guzzling citizens. California, like most states has an open container law. Same law also applies to having weed in the car, let alone smoking it. There will never be a law legalizing smoking weed in a car, sport. Gullible?--you are the only person who believes the weed wasn't in the car. Neither Lynch nor his lawyer disputed or challenged this report, despite it being grounds for tossing the search if it was "made up by the cops". They didn't charge him or anyone else likely because a) they couldn't establish possession and, b) most likely the amount was less than an ounce and not worth a charge and c) once they struck paydirt in the trunk, the couple of doobs on the floor were rendered inconsequential. We've been over all of these undisputed bits in the past, yet you pretend not to understand a very straightforward case---going so far as to suggest that some law leagalizing pot would, tortuously, tangentially, have validated your ill conceived support of Lynch in a case that even his team through in the towel on. As for BR, Goodell did not sit down with Lynch until after he hit a woman with his car after a night visiting bars and then refused to cooperate with a police investigation for a month ("just a few simple questions, Mr. Lynch. You've got nothing to worry about, right?") until the cops were showing up at an NFL team office handing out grand jury subpoenas to representatives of the Bills and the NFL itself. Look, the Commish is going to sit down with BR----with no charges pending or found against him. It's unprecedented and against what his often stated policy has been. What, exactly, is your problem now? Big Ben has, to this point, only been guilty of indiscretion. If he assualted this girl in Georgia we will all know soon enough and he's finished. You know the other allegation is false, yet you keep bringing it up. Lynch played you. Get over it. You're sounding like one of those women who marry prisoners thinking you can turn them around. It's...unbecoming. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jdorn Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 "Bob Marley died from emphisema and puffed about 6-10 joints a day, did it kill him? IDHK but he did die from a lung disease." Just wanted to clarify as there is enough speculation and misinformation on both sides on this topic. Robert Nesta Marley Died 5/11/1981 cause melanoma. The cancer originated in his big toe. The way of the Rastafarian does not accept amputation and the cancer spread from his toe to his liver, lungs and finally his brain. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr. WEO Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 "Bob Marley died from emphisema and puffed about 6-10 joints a day, did it kill him? IDHK but he did die from a lung disease." Just wanted to clarify as there is enough speculation and misinformation on both sides on this topic. Robert Nesta Marley Died 5/11/1981 cause melanoma. The cancer originated in his big toe. The way of the Rastafarian does not accept amputation and the cancer spread from his toe to his liver, lungs and finally his brain. Like Mr. Marley's belief that medical doctors were con men who convinced the weak that they had powerful witchcraft. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peevo Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Most laws are regulatory behavior legislation. Murder is illegal, yet people do it everyday. Does this mean the law doesn't work and that it's ineffective? Laws aren't solely meant to prevent behaviors. You missed my point. Of course murder is illegal. It's the conscious taking of one's life. Who am I to say that I can determine when someone else's life ends? That's why its wrong. Any legislation that governs INDIVIDUAL behavior, and certainly vices, serves no public benefit and simply drains tax revenue and resources. Like I said, how many people on this board bet on football games every week, or bet in their college basketball pools? This is illegal in New York State. People do it everyday. People illicit prostitution, hard drugs, gambling, smoking, any of these pleasure giving acts, REGARDLESS of legality, still happen daily. Prohibition failed, did it not? The 18th amendment is the only amendment to have been negated by another amendment. Think about that. The temperance movement "succeeded" when prohibition became the law of the land. People still drank, and major organized crime networks developed to supply that demand. If anything, illicit trades are governed by pure market economics. Black markets, but markets nonetheless. As I said, and you obviously didn't read it, NO ONE should have the authority to tell you what do you with your body, good or bad. If I go and eat lunch at McDonald's, because fast food is unhealthy does that mean I need a lecture on what I'm doing to my body? NO! The nutrition facts are RIGHT ON THE BAG. Any reasonable adult can decide for themselves what to put, or not to put, in their own bodies. It's called libertarianism. Any true conservative should agree with the policy. If I buy cigarettes, same thing. I paid the excise taxes, and furthermore, it says RIGHT ON THE BOX that they're bad for you. I don't need to be patronized for my decisions that negatively affect no one but myself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bufcomments Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Come on man, seriously? I know someone said it before, but you are taking a .gov for the tell-all about weed? Do you have any idea why it was first made illegal? Do some research other than what our lovely government will tell you, and you will see the truth about weed. Go look up a man named Harry Anslinger and tell me that's what weed really does to you. I'm sure you are just loving this healthcare bill, and are glad we are finally getting this much needed "Change" I looked up this guy Anslinger and the Weed laws a couple of months ago. The Gov just plain lied to get these laws on the books. They knew they could not stop people from drinking, so they made Weed the go after drug so to speak. The law was based on lies, you can compare it to the Weapons of mass Destruction claim that Bush/ Channey that got us in Iraq. If you don't believe me look it up. As a matter of fact, during Washington's and Jefferson's time as Prez if you were a farmer it was illegal NOT to grow hemp , as it was called back then. I would be more concerned with some players who are heavy drinkers than weed smokers any day of the week. To me this will have little effect on the draft. People need to wake up to the fact that Teams these day have more to worry about than some weed in somebody's system. would you rather have a guy who smokes weed during the offseason or have a Big Ben case staring at you?? Smoke em if you got em and God Bless you if ya do Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jdorn Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 I didnt say I agreed with his belief system and that stubbornness may just have cost him his life. That doesnt change the fact that his cause of death was melanoma not emphysema. This was the only point I was trying to make Weo I have no desire to argue points that you assume people are making vs what is actually said. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Doc Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Alcohol is legal, but not while operating a car, so the point you pretend to be missing is that the smoking of weed in the vehicle is enough to arouse the righteous suspicion of the cops, just as if they saw this suspicious vehicle full of 40-guzzling citizens. California, like most states has an open container law. Same law also applies to having weed in the car, let alone smoking it. There will never be a law legalizing smoking weed in a car, sport. Gullible?--you are the only person who believes the weed wasn't in the car. Neither Lynch nor his lawyer disputed or challenged this report, despite it being grounds for tossing the search if it was "made up by the cops". They didn't charge him or anyone else likely because a) they couldn't establish possession and, b) most likely the amount was less than an ounce and not worth a charge and c) once they struck paydirt in the trunk, the couple of doobs on the floor were rendered inconsequential. We've been over all of these undisputed bits in the past, yet you pretend not to understand a very straightforward case---going so far as to suggest that some law leagalizing pot would, tortuously, tangentially, have validated your ill conceived support of Lynch in a case that even his team through in the towel on. As for BR, Goodell did not sit down with Lynch until after he hit a woman with his car after a night visiting bars and then refused to cooperate with a police investigation for a month ("just a few simple questions, Mr. Lynch. You've got nothing to worry about, right?") until the cops were showing up at an NFL team office handing out grand jury subpoenas to representatives of the Bills and the NFL itself. Look, the Commish is going to sit down with BR----with no charges pending or found against him. It's unprecedented and against what his often stated policy has been. What, exactly, is your problem now? Big Ben has, to this point, only been guilty of indiscretion. If he assualted this girl in Georgia we will all know soon enough and he's finished. You know the other allegation is false, yet you keep bringing it up. Lynch played you. Get over it. You're sounding like one of those women who marry prisoners thinking you can turn them around. It's...unbecoming. LOL! How do you figure he "played" me? Because of those laughable reports about how he was shot at or the bogus sexual assault claim by "a crazy woman" when he was in college? Because, you see, his "hit and run" actually turned out to be an accident (still waiting for something, ANYTHING, to prove otherwise, doc). And believing the "we saw and smelled pot but didn't charge him because he didn't admit it was his" is the kind of gullibility that kids have in believing in the existence of the tooth fairy. But since he didn't talk and didn't fight the pot NON-charge (nothing was going to get him off the gun charge, obviously) it made him guilty of those? No, you haven't been played; you're just played out, doc. No doubt you have some explanation for the video tape/DVD of BR from that night that mysteriously got erased. No doubt it would have exonerated him (like it actually did with Lynch during that "hit and run"). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thebug Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 LOL! How do you figure he "played" me? Because of those laughable reports about how he was shot at or the bogus sexual assault claim by "a crazy woman" when he was in college? Because, you see, his "hit and run" actually turned out to be an accident (still waiting for something, ANYTHING, to prove otherwise, doc). And believing the "we saw and smelled pot but didn't charge him because he didn't admit it was his" is the kind of gullibility that kids have in believing in the existence of the tooth fairy. But since he didn't talk and didn't fight the pot NON-charge (nothing was going to get him off the gun charge, obviously) it made him guilty of those? No, you haven't been played; you're just played out, doc. No doubt you have some explanation for the video tape/DVD of BR from that night that mysteriously got erased. No doubt it would have exonerated him (like it actually did with Lynch during that "hit and run"). I commend your love for Mr. Lynch. Would you feel the same way if he was a Pat*? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fingon Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 Without any doubt, I'd rather share a ride in a car with someone who just had a beer vs. someone who just smoked a joint. I call tell you this, I don't want any on the road who has just smoked a joint any more than I want a drunk. As for zero "weed-related" deaths....humm....tell that one to those that have died in drug wars and also, where did you garner your "facts", Tommy Chong? Weed didn't kill those people. Drug cartels and the government making it illegal did. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Doc Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 I commend your love for Mr. Lynch. Would you feel the same way if he was a Pat*? If I didn't know the facts and was going mostly on emotion, I'd probably feel the same way as some do about Lynch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr. WEO Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 LOL! How do you figure he "played" me? Because of those laughable reports about how he was shot at or the bogus sexual assault claim by "a crazy woman" when he was in college? Because, you see, his "hit and run" actually turned out to be an accident (still waiting for something, ANYTHING, to prove otherwise, doc). And believing the "we saw and smelled pot but didn't charge him because he didn't admit it was his" is the kind of gullibility that kids have in believing in the existence of the tooth fairy. But since he didn't talk and didn't fight the pot NON-charge (nothing was going to get him off the gun charge, obviously) it made him guilty of those? No, you haven't been played; you're just played out, doc. No doubt you have some explanation for the video tape/DVD of BR from that night that mysteriously got erased. No doubt it would have exonerated him (like it actually did with Lynch during that "hit and run"). Again, no one but you is claiming the cops lied about the pot. Without it even you say there would be no grounds for search. Yet you claim that the gun search/charge was inevitable. You make no sense. Or pretend not to--just can't understand why. You understood my explanation of why they didn't bother with a weed charge. It was pretty straightforward. A small amount of weed means nothing to the cops---they just used it as their way into the trunk where their suspicions were confirmed. That's what their looking for buddy. I don't know about any women's bathroom QB rape video being erased. But as time goes by, any evidence in this case may go the way of that in the ML hit and run case. You've fallen into the same hole again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thebug Posted March 26, 2010 Share Posted March 26, 2010 If I didn't know the facts and was going mostly on emotion, I'd probably feel the same way as some do about Lynch. So you were there on multiple occasions? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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