Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
NP, and this is completely untrue. Secondary smoke exposure causes cancer.
Smoke from cooking causes cancer too. They could be growing it and you would still smell it and complain. No smoke necessary. Just admit that you hate people who smoke cannabis and stop trying to rationalize it. Car exhaust also causes cancer yet there is a conspicuous lack of DCUM threads bemoaning the health effects of your neighborhood school bus that picks up children twice a day. OMG the smell and cancer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
Educate yourself and take some tort law classes. It can be considered a noxious fume and a neighbor very well may have a case against a pot smoker whose fumes are coming into their apartment/townhouse/home. It’s already a commercial property concern being litigated in California. Residential is probably already being litigated somewhere. Just wait.
Yeah my sister and BIL were able to get out of their lease over a pot-smoking neighbor. it was a small building, 3-4 units maybe, and was supposed to be non-smoking but one of the other tenants who moved in at the same time was a prolific pot smoker and the smell was infiltrating into their unit. Sis was pregnant at the time and they threatened to go take legal action to get out of the lease so the landlord let them out of the lease. Apparently the pit smoker was the landlord’s family friend so they got deference but gotta think this will come up more and more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
I think you're the same person posting most, if not all, of the pro-weed "It's legal, deal with it" nonsense answers on this thread. You know, or you should know if the weed hasn't baked your brain to the point you cannot comprehend it, that smell is not the only issue and not the truly dangerous issue. As someone already posted, burning any substance creates particulate matter that is then breathed in. But enough explaining for you, because you only return to troll here with your supposed arguments in favor of smoking whenever, wherever. We're having an actual discussion; you're having a troll party.
Ok cool so when you promise to stop driving your car that smells bad, and also causes cancer let alone climate change then I will take you seriously. Otherwise you are just another hypocrite that wants to bash people who you don’t like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
NP, and this is completely untrue. Secondary smoke exposure causes cancer.
Smoke from cooking causes cancer too. They could be growing it and you would still smell it and complain. No smoke necessary. Just admit that you hate people who smoke cannabis and stop trying to rationalize it. Car exhaust also causes cancer yet there is a conspicuous lack of DCUM threads bemoaning the health effects of your neighborhood school bus that picks up children twice a day. OMG the smell and cancer!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
I think you're the same person posting most, if not all, of the pro-weed "It's legal, deal with it" nonsense answers on this thread. You know, or you should know if the weed hasn't baked your brain to the point you cannot comprehend it, that smell is not the only issue and not the truly dangerous issue. As someone already posted, burning any substance creates particulate matter that is then breathed in. But enough explaining for you, because you only return to troll here with your supposed arguments in favor of smoking whenever, wherever. We're having an actual discussion; you're having a troll party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
NP, and this is completely untrue. Secondary smoke exposure causes cancer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread belongs on the Grandmother forum.
Granny here. Made it this far without needing drugs to make it through the day. Sorry you can’t cope and need to smoke and belittle people to make yourself feel better. So sad and pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
Bullshit.
Weed smoke is psychoactive and carcinogenic.
Back when they tried to ban cigarettes, they used the argument that everyone has a fundamental human right to breathe clean air free from cigarette smoke. That same reasoning should apply to weed. Stop exposing everyone to psychoactive plumes of smoke that are also carcinogenic.
But they didn’t ban cigarettes.
Anonymous wrote:This thread belongs on the Grandmother forum.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s disgusting. The fact that my young kids, elementary age, even know what weed smells like is absurd.
Also, the prevalence of alcohol culture is such a red herring. Outside of actual alcoholics, I’ve never seen anyone in DC walking down the sidewalk at 10am swigging from an open container, yet I’ve now seen dozens and dozens of people smoking a joint or vaping at that hour. “It’s not addictive.” Then why are people getting high at all hours every day? And most people are not drinking when driving either, yet hotboxed cars are everywhere, again, all day long.
+1
Thank you for pointing this out. The supposed argument that weed smokers try to make -- "But, but, but alcoholllll is legal!" is such nonsense.
If my neighbor is drinking in his home, I can't see, hear or smell it. It has zero effect on me inside my home. But if my neighbor is toking, especially frequently, it absolutely affects me. Same would be true with tobacco, frankly, though weed seems worse than tobacco for permeating everything.
No the smell s not harming you anymore than a neighbor cooking spicy food. Smells are to be expected in multi family housing. Deal with it.
Educate yourself and take some tort law classes. It can be considered a noxious fume and a neighbor very well may have a case against a pot smoker whose fumes are coming into their apartment/townhouse/home. It’s already a commercial property concern being litigated in California. Residential is probably already being litigated somewhere. Just wait.