![]() |
Quote:
If I like to smoke pot, and it's legal (and even if it is NOT legal), I don't really care what people think my intent is, any more than I care what their intent is when they make their personal decisions. But let's remember - most people DO smoke pot to get high. If it bothers you that people are bothered by that, then I'm sure other unknown thoughts that people have about you might also be bothering you, which isn't healthy - you need to get over it. |
I think we are talking about two different things. You are talking about marijuana in general and I'm talking about medical marijuana which is prescribed by a doctor for medicinal use. Your beer analogy doesn't really have anything to do with the discussion. I am making points as to why some of the publics (and boards) views on medical marijuana users as stoners looking to get high are way off base and totally out of touch with reality. These decisions are voted on by the general public. If the general public is misinformed they make misinformed decisions that effect people like me who are informed.
I don't have to get over anything. I don't see how being bothered by people stereotyping me means I'm the one with the problem. Or that I have some unhealthy obsession. |
Quote:
I will give you one additional small piece of advice, which seems logical based on your response to my post: if you don't give a shit about my opinion, you shouldn't give a shit about why people think you are smoking pot. |
It's not about me though. Or smoking pot. It's about people like me who depend on medicinal marijuana and are routinely looked at as being some kind of low-life stoner, which inherently negates and minimalizes any type of physical or emotional pain I'm experiencing, rather than seeing me as a person in need of medication. People think medicinal marijuana is a joke rather than a life altering medication that enables millions of people with a variety of physical, emotional, and behavioral ailments to lead regular, healthy lives. That is the perception I want to change.
There are always going to be people who take advantage. But that is true with anything. |
marijuana should be legal the war on drugs is a joke and the prohibition was started on grounds of racism and bye big business because they felt there was a threat to the paper industry. I believe marijuana should be sold as such goods like alcohol and tobacco making stipulations on it such as you have to be 21 and not driving impared and tax the shit out of it the goverment would make a killing. marijuana is a plant our ancestors have been using for centurys and its only been these last hundred years where they made it wrong to use a plant that grows naturally. let me just say i dont smoke weed but if it was legal i might break out the the 6 footer lol
|
Agree Medical marijuana has definite place in medicine. Just had some one on it for Pancreatic CA. Poor guy's life improved with use of it.
Being a child/teen of the 70's, in my Miami neighborhood of potheads, Van Halen, peace, personally would rather not see it go legal. Just a personal opinion. Only based on experience and what I saw it do. (Yeah, I deal with the horrendous results of legal Etoh and tobacco daily, and the disease and morbidity and death, at my office). Doesn't change my mind. We are in a Democratic society, and the vote will give a result in the end. Agree with references to the bible and nothing should be used in excess including this for recreational use. Odd topic for our forum. |
Don't believe this has been covered yet, but here are some of the key provisions to the marijuana law in Washington state:
1) Anyone over 21 can possess up to an ounce. In addition, there will be no charges for use of drug paraphernalia. 2) Marijuana cannot be displayed or used in public, and producers, processors, distributors, or advertisements cannot be located within 1,000 feet of public locations where children might be present. 3) Licenses would be required to sell, process or grow marijuana. Licenses would cost $250 with an annual $1,000 renewal fee. 4) By Dec. 1, 2013, the state LCB must establish procedures regulating the sale of marijuana in the sate, and will be a business regulating authority 5) A 25% tax will apply to each level of production and distribution. State and local sales taxes will also apply to retail sales. 6) A fixed amount of money raised from taxes will go to administration of the measure, youth substance abuse surveying, cost-benefit analysis of the measure and public health materials about marijuana use. 7) Of the remaining money, 50% will go to the state basic health plan, 15% to subsatnce abuse reduction and prevention programs, 10% for marijuana specific public health info, 5% for other health services, 1% for research into effects of marijuana use, .75% to program to prevent high school dropouts, The remaining 18.25% will go to the state general fund. Hope this helps! |
Quote:
I guess there are many gentlemen who are more conservative due to the era and perhaps area they grew up in. I see how other groups could consider it taboo. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Legalize it. I don't partake--not something I enjoy--but I have no issue with those who want to. Prohibition has just driven it underground, taking the tax revenues with it. It has been de facto legal in CA for a while and there hasn't been any [extra] collapse of law and order. If anything it has made it safer for average potheads to score.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Best Regards, Wazoo |
If it becomes legal, what will all the Lawyers, Fat Police, Prison Guards and Judges do?
Is there another teet they can suck on until early retirement? I guess the Supreme Court could overturn the 2003 Lawerence v. Texas Sodomy decision and use those helicopters to fly around looking in your backytard and windows and make sure you are not corrupting your wife. I'm guessing the 62 clowns who answered no on this poll are also in favor of eliminating the 14th ammendment to the US Constitution........? please chime in. Definition of LIBERTY 1 : the quality or state of being free: a: the power to do as one pleases b: freedom from physical restraint c: freedom from arbitrary or despotic control d: the positive enjoyment of various social, political, or economic rights and privileges e: the power of choice |
Quote:
How are we clowns for voting NO!!! |
Although I agree with most points made by murcerfan, just as you stated... People have the right to do as they please. If someone is against legalization we can't hold it against them. They have just as much right to be against it as we do for it. That being said, the times are changing and many things are much more open than they used to (I was raised incredibly conservatively).
|
I don't care if they legalize it.
I believe that the states need to have laws on the books prior to the legalization of pot that regulate the sale of it and also laws that provide stiff penalties to those that are caught driving while under the influence. The last thing I want is for some stoned idiot to kill me, my family or friends. I believe that the laws for being under the influence (while driving) should be stiffer than those for alcohol. While on that topic, I think the laws for driving under the influence of alcohol should be stiffer than they are now. If the laws are known well in advance of the legalization of pot then anybody caught driving stoned will know of the penalties well in advance of the legalization of pot. |
Quote:
I guess freedom only extends to people you agree with. That attitude is so typical here in Ma. That it really bugs the * out of me. Steve B |
Update Colorado Nov 19th!
Afternoon,
Representative Dianna DeGette D-Co, is introducing a Bill in Congress that so far has Bi-partisan and Pro and Con legalization support to pass a statute that would make it a Non Starter (Exemption to the Federal Controlled Substance Act) for the Feds to be able to take any action against any States who have passed any laws or measures legalizing any substances that are currently deemed by the Feds to be a Schedule 1 Narcotic. Although she and some of her colleges do not believe that this action should have been taken (Legalization), they do believe that the People of Colorado have spoken !!!! And the Feds should mind their own business!! YeeHah :D Neil |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/oreill.../3824256251001 |
I say round them all up and throw them in jail for not doing anything to anybody. That joint, young man, will lead to you being homeless for totally unsubstantiated reasons according to cherry picked statistics. Did you know, young lady, that smoking just one joint can lead to pregnancy? And don't forget about crime. Just being around marijuana smoke can make you a violent offender. I knew a guy who smelled pot smoke and kicked his dog.
|
Quote:
-Steppenwolf, Don't step on the grass, Sam |
Just the other day I read that three young men HEARD someone mention pot and pushed an old lady down that they had previously been helping cross the street.
It is a scourge on society which knows no limits. Please banish it before we've all gone crazed with reefer madness. Millions of people who have never smoked pot in their life are suddenly just deciding to get addicted because it became legal. I, myself, found out it's perfectly legal to spit on people's lawns. There's no law against it and you won't get arrested. So last week I spit on two thousand lawns around Denver. Because there's no law against it. I suddenly became some crazed person because I found out something I've never had any interest in doing wasn't illegal. Help! |
Pot
First of all,I believe there are more carcinogens in pot than regular tobacco?
I live in Florida where they want a tobacco free state,but are faced with the people voting to leagalizie pot.(medicinal,then of course all pot) I have known a few people who have taken pot for chemo sickness,but it was in capsule form,from the hospital pharmacy. We have people in Florida asking college students to vote yes on legalization? I guess they might need it 40 years later? When I drive my car,I could be facing a drunk driver,or texter.Now they want to add another large group of drivers under the influence,and not worry? I never realized that thousands and thousands of people need medicinal pot? |
America had a good run.
|
That's probably because you're not in a position that you need it. And you should be thankful for that because if you were on chemo and watching your body melt away you'd probably hope there was medication that could alleviate your symptoms and promote eating / nutritional gain.
I really have no idea why people who are against legalization can't grasp this simple fact. Legalizing marijuana does not promote or negate use. You are already smoking marijuana if you're smoking it. You are not smoking it if you don't smoke. So you aren't protecting anything. Think about yourself. Alcohol and tobacco are legal substances. Do you drink and drive? Do you drink at all? Do you get drunk and run around town causing chaos? Do you smoke cigarettes? If the answer is no, then that's because you're an informed adult making your own decisions when faced with choices. If you said yes, the same applies. If you do or don't smoke cigarettes or drink alcohol, how much does whether or not they're legal impact your decision? |
I'm hoping legalization will bring down the prices a bit. I mean this is ridiculous:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1911-T212-Ob...item5b050cd353 |
I favor legalization for all the reasons stated above.
As an aside, one of my best friends and neighbors is Keith Stroup, who founded the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) in 1970 and who has since been and remains at the forefront of the legalization movement. In the course of his efforts, Keith has developed friendships with a fascinating cast of characters, to include the late Hunter Thompson, Willie Nelson and Hugh Hefner. For those interested in the history of the legalization movement, and accompanying entertaining stories of individuals involved, you might wish to pick up Keith's book, It's NORML to Smoke Pot. |
Pot tourists
Quote:
The state of Colorado still says that the savings in incarceration costs is greater then the extra costs associated with the extra homeless. |
Live in Colorado. In general, everything is just fine. The world kept turning.
|
Unemployment increased 153% within the last two years.
Enough said. |
It is worth noting that both Cannabis and Hops, arguably the most important ingredient in beer, are both from the Cannabaceae Family....just saying.
|
for more information...
I don't really have much of an opinion on this O/T subject, but for any of you who want to learn more about the medical/recreational marijuana industry you should check out:
www.growthindustryseminars.com (and if you're interested in attending the coupon code: AJR gets you a discount) Just an FYI. "too much of anything makes you an addict." - Nice & Smooth Sometimes I Rhyme Slow I think I may be a t206 addict. |
Quote:
http://www.deptofnumbers.com/unemployment/colorado/ Packs - I really could not have said it much better. I would never wish someone to watch someone they love suffer, but you better believe it gives some perspective...medical marijuana is an absolute no brainer once the details get hashed out, its regulated and available in a multitude of mediums. Legalization? Again, Packs nailed it...the incarceration numbers are astonishing. Using and driving is obviously not ok and we have laws in place already to handle that. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Hmmm....5.1% unemployment rate in Colorado..curious where you got your factoid. Just asking. http://www.denverpost.com/business/c...mployment-rate |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I don't drink. To me, most people that use alcohol or drugs do so because their lives are so pathetic that they have to use that kind of stuff to excape the reality of it...at least for a little while. David Edited to add: Maybe it's just me, but I never understood why people would want to alter their state of mind. Life is good. I want to be sober and enjoy every minute of it. |
David - I generally enjoy your posts here but you are way off base on this.
Again, you must be one luck guy, you have never watched someone you love suffer...must be livin right. Well the perspective IT can give you is that you become willing to do anything to help them, to relieve it. You realize that chemo is poison and is legal, as well as experimental treatments that shred your body apart as well as the narcotics that are used to "help". Who the fuck are you to tell anyone what helps them? Freedom is having the ability to choose without infringing on the rights of the others. How is someone using it, in their home, infringe on anyone's rights? It is no worse that current cultural standards. How does this affect you? What impact will this have on you? S Suck.ow |
Quote:
|
Quote:
How does it affect me? How about when they’re driving stoned and sharing the same road that I am? |
Quote:
Tom C |
If you are worried about people driving while stoned, where is your crusade against alcohol? The same people who drink and drive will smoke and drive. The same people who drink and walk home or take a cab will smoke and walk home or take a cab.
Get some perspective. Not everyone lives your life and not everyone is out to put other people in danger just because someone did on the news. |
Quote:
David, your answer was deflective and I am guessing you have no real evidence to prove how legalization would infringe on your rights in any way and are simply stuck in your thinking as you have already alluded to a lack of understanding. But again I ask, how does this affects you? |
On the bright side, for those who are in favor of legalization, difference of opinion on the matter is largely what we in the social sciences call a cohort effect. People born prior to about 1950 are mostly opposed. People born later than about 1950 are mostly in favor, and individuals' opinions don't change with age very much - so public opinion inevitably becomes more favorable as, well, as old people die. Same deal with gay marriage.
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:01 AM. |