Pretty much no drug out there as bad as alcohol, but we saw one way to make it even worse: criminalize it. Drives the entire trade into the hands of the criminal underworld and gives it a certain “forbidden fruit” glamor.
Repeal Prohibition! Again! For all the same reasons.
legalize it all…in any case the war of drugs hasn’t worked! So if someone wants to buy crack or whatever… let him buy it freely off the shelf. Restrictions aren’t stopping him anyway, are they? No restrictions = No incentive for drug smugglers, No paybacks for crooked cops, No funds for fatuous ‘Save the children’ campaigns….
It suppresses appetite, and for many calms “jittery” nerves.
I know a physician who tried to quit smoking several times, gained 10 pounds each time, and decided it was less unhealthy to stop trying to quit than to risk piling on more pounds.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone say “X has no beneficial effects at any level” and be right.
Wow. It reminds me a little of how bacon and eggs became an American breakfast: marketers for bacon asked Doctors which was a better breakfast, toast, or bacon and eggs. That became a marketing campaign “Doctors recommend bacon and eggs for breakfast.”
Of course, “cereal is part of this nutritious breakfast” isn’t any better (cereal is the worst part of that breakfast).
Marijuana in of itself is not a “Gateway Drug”. The people who deal it have other drugs they wish you to try. Thus the “Gateway” was created by politicians who think Mexicans have always been bad people. http://www.drugpolicy.org/blog/how-did-marijuana-become-illegal-first-place Personally I have always felt that is was strongly aligned with Jim Crow laws. But maybe that’s just my “Reefer Madness”. ;-)
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 7 years ago
Pretty much no drug out there as bad as alcohol, but we saw one way to make it even worse: criminalize it. Drives the entire trade into the hands of the criminal underworld and gives it a certain “forbidden fruit” glamor.
Repeal Prohibition! Again! For all the same reasons.
Rosette about 7 years ago
The moral of the story is: drugs (any drugs) screw you up. Maybe in different ways, but still.
faujidoc1 about 7 years ago
legalize it all…in any case the war of drugs hasn’t worked! So if someone wants to buy crack or whatever… let him buy it freely off the shelf. Restrictions aren’t stopping him anyway, are they? No restrictions = No incentive for drug smugglers, No paybacks for crooked cops, No funds for fatuous ‘Save the children’ campaigns….
Adiraiju about 7 years ago
Anyone else remember that Onion headline: “DRUGS WIN DRUG WAR”…
Gweedo -it's legal here- Murray about 7 years ago
Tobacco and alcohol were my “gateway drugs” !
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member about 7 years ago
Do you believe that keeping marijuana illegal prevents people from becoming drug addicts?
Do you, then, also believe that by making beer illegal we could prevent people from becoming alcoholics?
Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 7 years ago
Marijuana, alcohol, opioids, and caffein, all have certain beneficial effects at the proper levels. Tobacco has no beneficial effects at any level.
jeffiekins about 7 years ago
It suppresses appetite, and for many calms “jittery” nerves.
I know a physician who tried to quit smoking several times, gained 10 pounds each time, and decided it was less unhealthy to stop trying to quit than to risk piling on more pounds.
I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone say “X has no beneficial effects at any level” and be right.
(See what I did there?)
jeffiekins about 7 years ago
Wow. It reminds me a little of how bacon and eggs became an American breakfast: marketers for bacon asked Doctors which was a better breakfast, toast, or bacon and eggs. That became a marketing campaign “Doctors recommend bacon and eggs for breakfast.”
Of course, “cereal is part of this nutritious breakfast” isn’t any better (cereal is the worst part of that breakfast).
ChukLitl Premium Member about 7 years ago
If you think it’s stronger now you didn’t have my connections in the ’70s.
mourdac Premium Member about 7 years ago
When I decided to quit smoking pot many years ago, that was it, no problems staying quit. It took 30 years and many many tries to quit smoking cigs.
nosirrom about 7 years ago
Marijuana in of itself is not a “Gateway Drug”. The people who deal it have other drugs they wish you to try. Thus the “Gateway” was created by politicians who think Mexicans have always been bad people. http://www.drugpolicy.org/blog/how-did-marijuana-become-illegal-first-place Personally I have always felt that is was strongly aligned with Jim Crow laws. But maybe that’s just my “Reefer Madness”. ;-)
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 7 years ago
There was a connexion between malt liquors and cocaine. One lead to another etc. Though each type of drug had different effects.
johnec about 7 years ago
I remember pot from the late 80’s – and it’s another order of magnitude (~10X) stronger NOW than it was THEN!
My “gateway drug” (the first one I ever used) was white sugar. And I’m still an addict!
Dragoncat about 7 years ago
As if I didn’t have enough reasons to prefer hot chocolate…
Dragoncat about 7 years ago
Wow… Butts really blew his stack, didn’t he?