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NFL Willing to Work with Players on MJ for Pain Management


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So, we just keep redrawing the line under the guise of medicine and tax dollars? I have no issue with true medical mj. But, that needs to be taken in a medicinal form with medicinal strains. The fact that the recreational movement needs to conceal their true motives behind the legitimacy of medical mj is extremely bothersome to me.

 

 

Its has recreational and medicinal benefits.. It doesn't matter what the game is its not something that needs to be illegal for any reason.

 

and the medicinal values are not limited to just certain strains for certain ailments. The medicinal properties of MJ are beneficial even using recreational forms.

 

Motives wouldn't be necessary if the majority of people took their heads out of their asses to begin with. There were WAY MORE Motives by the industries and people who fought against it than their are by those legalizing it. So do keep in mind it was those who fought to make it illegal that started this "Motives" game

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If it wasn't for the lobby dollars of big pharma and the alcohol companies I think it would have been legalized a long time ago. I would include tobacco but I think that they own some sort of patent for it when it becomes legal everywhere. I might be wrong though.

I get the argument that their motives aren't 100% medicinal driven. Who cares? It does neither side any good to have guys out for pot. It makes them both look bad. Other leagues have taken that stance much more proactively than the NFL (shocking). They will use the medicinal reason to sell it to the skeptics even if that's only a part of the motivaton.

I actually think that's part of the reason why it stays illegal. It's a plant/weed that can grow wild pretty much anywhere and I don't think it can be patented by these big pharmaceutical companies. That's why you see synthetic MJ pills legal (like Marinol) and MJ itself not.

But I do think you're right that the big tobacco companies are primed to cash in when it becomes legal. I believe that they already have massive farms ready to go/grow, or at least that's what I read somewhere IIRC.

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Also, this entire thread reminds me of that one roommate I had in college that would come home from the bars at 3am, stumble into the room and call us 'pothead losers' for being high and playing Mortal Kombat on Genesis. He'd then nuke a hot pocket and forget about it, pass out and then puke all over his bed in his sleep.

 

 

Good stuff.

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For anyone has indulged on the medical side, has a MJ doctor ever "prescribed" a dosage to you?

From folks I've talked to, that's nothing that they have ever brought up.

Every medical prescription I've ever had was followed with precise requirements on time, duration, dosage amounts and limits. I could see that be a major hurdle if that is they really want this to be cleared for medical use.

I've only indulged on the retail side and have clueless on how the medical process works.

I don't indulge on the medical side myself, but I used to live out in cali and knew many who did. It really depends on the person, and the doctor they go to. Some doctors are just there to give recreational users their medical card. That's their entire business (like pill-mill doctors who are only there to prescribe pain pills), and then some doctors only recommend MJ when they feel a patient truly needs it. The doctors who only recommend it when necesssary tend to be the ones who give guildlines on how to use it and in what dose. But recreational users who just want a medical card to be able to go to a dispensary to buy it, don't really want guidelines.

 

Really, the big problem is the way MJ is classified. It is still somehow classified as a Schedule 1 drug (like the hardest and most dangerous of drugs like meth and heroin) - which means they see it as having no legitimate use to mankind. Where as drugs like cocaine are Schedule 2 and seen as having some legitimate use (go figure). Until it is re-scheduled, they can not perform any testing to find out what the true legitimate medical uses are, and there definitely are some. I've met parents out there who had kids that were having 100's of seizures every single day and were on dozens and dozens of very strong prescription medications that had terrible effects, yet they still had 100's of seizures a day. Then they tried CBD (which from what I understand has no intoxicating or psychoactive properties) and their kids went from 100's of seizures per day to maybe 1 seizure every week or two.

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Marijuana use is so woven into the fabric of the NFL culture, I think the league has decided to just let it go.

But they can't say they are just letting it go, so they are selling it as pain treatment.


 

 

Its has recreational and medicinal benefits.. It doesn't matter what the game is its not something that needs to be illegal for any reason.

 

and the medicinal values are not limited to just certain strains for certain ailments. The medicinal properties of MJ are beneficial even using recreational forms.

 

Motives wouldn't be necessary if the majority of people took their heads out of their asses to begin with. There were WAY MORE Motives by the industries and people who fought against it than their are by those legalizing it. So do keep in mind it was those who fought to make it illegal that started this "Motives" game

Things move slowly in our culture.

 

In due course pot will be legal everywhere.

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Also, this entire thread reminds me of that one roommate I had in college that would come home from the bars at 3am, stumble into the room and call us 'pothead losers' for being high and playing Mortal Kombat on Genesis. He'd then nuke a hot pocket and forget about it, pass out and then puke all over his bed in his sleep.

 

 

Good stuff.

There's one thing that I keep thinking about when reading this thread: a client of mine (unfortunately) who went to college and studied physics. He was brilliant in high school and smoked pot. Great parents. While at college he continued to smoke weed but began to dabble in other things (smoking weed, then crack cocaine, then the heroin). Next thing I know, he crashes into a few cars one night because he is unconscious. The cops revive him and he goes to inpatient where he graduates and is discharged. I get a great deal for him all ready to go to court and I get a call that he crashed into another person's garage because he collapsed behind the wheel on heroin again (not two weeks after being discharged).

 

Another client of mine smoked a lot of weed since high school...same idea. Arranged for a great deal for him on a reckless driving charge and took the plea. He moved out of state and just heard that he was arrested on a felony charge for distribution in NC.

 

I guess I see the bad side of marijuana use more and more as opposed to the cool, chill, relaxed college kids enjoying it (which, again, I really don't mind and didn't mind when I was that age). The more cases I see, the more I'm convinced it is a gateway type drug that drives the user to find a better/more dramatic "high" (leading to heroin, crack, pills, etc). I understand not all recreational users will follow that gateway into bad drugs, but some do.

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Ah, yes. Those of us on the other side of the debate are {insert insult here}. I love it. I get it. You are more enlightened, more intelligent, more open minded. Congratulations?

 

Well then try to convince us why we are wrong. I'm open for a good debate. Right now I see your opposition based mainly in your negative opinion of what MJ is and the people who use it. Am I wrong here?

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Ah, yes. Those of us on the other side of the debate are {insert insult here}. I love it. I get it. You are more enlightened, more intelligent, more open minded. Congratulations?

I don't think that it's an attack but it feels a little like fighting climate change to me. There is so much information to support it. People just aren't accepting the reasoning for it being a schedule 1 drug anymore. That's why it's becoming legal all over. The people are challenging the reason that it's still illegal and there aren't strong reasons for it.
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There's one thing that I keep thinking about when reading this thread: a client of mine (unfortunately) who went to college and studied physics. He was brilliant in high school and smoked pot. Great parents. While at college he continued to smoke weed but began to dabble in other things (smoking weed, then crack cocaine, then the heroin). Next thing I know, he crashes into a few cars one night because he is unconscious. The cops revive him and he goes to inpatient where he graduates and is discharged. I get a great deal for him all ready to go to court and I get a call that he crashed into another person's garage because he collapsed behind the wheel on heroin again (not two weeks after being discharged).

 

Another client of mine smoked a lot of weed since high school...same idea. Arranged for a great deal for him on a reckless driving charge and took the plea. He moved out of state and just heard that he was arrested on a felony charge for distribution in NC.

 

I guess I see the bad side of marijuana use more and more as opposed to the cool, chill, relaxed college kids enjoying it (which, again, I really don't mind and didn't mind when I was that age). The more cases I see, the more I'm convinced it is a gateway type drug that drives the user to find a better/more dramatic "high" (leading to heroin, crack, pills, etc). I understand not all recreational users will follow that gateway into bad drugs, but some do.

If there is a "gateway" effect, it was created by prohibition.

 

When kids are subjected to the DARE program, marijuana is lumped together with all the other, more dangerous drugs. When they experiment with marijuana, and find out that it doesn't turn your brain into a fried egg, they wonder what else they've been lied to about...

 

Is alcohol not a gateway drug?

 

Lastly, just because a troubled person uses marijuana, it doesn't mean that marijuana is the cause of the troubles. People with addictive personalities will always find something. Yes, Pot can be addictive. Just like shopping, gambling, or sex.

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But if it were legal, would those same smokers be put in contact with those people who sell hard drugs? It could be argued that because it is illegal, it sometimes forces users into contact with people selling the harder drugs, therefore makes it easier (and maybe more likely) for that person to try them.

Or it could just be that someone willing to smoke MJ is also a person who is more willing to try other drugs too. I don't know.

 

But there is nothing about MJ specifically that makes it a gateway drug, from what I understand.

Yep. Also, the guy on the corner doesn't check ID's

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Well then try to convince us why we are wrong. I'm open for a good debate. Right now I see your opposition based mainly in your negative opinion of what MJ is and the people who use it. Am I wrong here?

I'm opposed to people getting high "because they can" and then effing up innocent people's lives. Eff up your own life, I don't care. I get tired of seeing the poor decisions of others destroy innocent people.

 

Strengthen DUI laws, streamline testing procedures. ..you will have me on board. None of that is being advocated for by legalization proponents. They just want to get high, and damn everything else. It's a very a irresponsible perspective. Hiding behind medical mj just exacerbates the issue, to me.

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There's one thing that I keep thinking about when reading this thread: a client of mine (unfortunately) who went to college and studied physics. He was brilliant in high school and smoked pot. Great parents. While at college he continued to smoke weed but began to dabble in other things (smoking weed, then crack cocaine, then the heroin). Next thing I know, he crashes into a few cars one night because he is unconscious. The cops revive him and he goes to inpatient where he graduates and is discharged. I get a great deal for him all ready to go to court and I get a call that he crashed into another person's garage because he collapsed behind the wheel on heroin again (not two weeks after being discharged).

 

Another client of mine smoked a lot of weed since high school...same idea. Arranged for a great deal for him on a reckless driving charge and took the plea. He moved out of state and just heard that he was arrested on a felony charge for distribution in NC.

 

I guess I see the bad side of marijuana use more and more as opposed to the cool, chill, relaxed college kids enjoying it (which, again, I really don't mind and didn't mind when I was that age). The more cases I see, the more I'm convinced it is a gateway type drug that drives the user to find a better/more dramatic "high" (leading to heroin, crack, pills, etc). I understand not all recreational users will follow that gateway into bad drugs, but some do.

although leading to other drugs can certainly happen, i have always seen it as a minority. i know a ton of people who were heavy smokers through out highschool, college, grad school, and continue to do in their professional lives. i think it has to do with addictive traits. some have them, some don't. i have a feeling that the ones who do have the trait would have trouble whether or not they every tried pot.

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There's one thing that I keep thinking about when reading this thread: a client of mine (unfortunately) who went to college and studied physics. He was brilliant in high school and smoked pot. Great parents. While at college he continued to smoke weed but began to dabble in other things (smoking weed, then crack cocaine, then the heroin). Next thing I know, he crashes into a few cars one night because he is unconscious. The cops revive him and he goes to inpatient where he graduates and is discharged. I get a great deal for him all ready to go to court and I get a call that he crashed into another person's garage because he collapsed behind the wheel on heroin again (not two weeks after being discharged).

 

Another client of mine smoked a lot of weed since high school...same idea. Arranged for a great deal for him on a reckless driving charge and took the plea. He moved out of state and just heard that he was arrested on a felony charge for distribution in NC.

 

I guess I see the bad side of marijuana use more and more as opposed to the cool, chill, relaxed college kids enjoying it (which, again, I really don't mind and didn't mind when I was that age). The more cases I see, the more I'm convinced it is a gateway type drug that drives the user to find a better/more dramatic "high" (leading to heroin, crack, pills, etc). I understand not all recreational users will follow that gateway into bad drugs, but some do.

I'm not sure the percentage of people that try marijuana and then escalate is any greater than the percentage of people that pop a perscription drug and then escalate. In fact, I'd venture that the opposite is true. The percentage of people that experiment with OXY or Vicodin and then get into heroin is likely greater than the percentage of people that go from weed to heroin.
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