Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer to anyone paying attention. This is another reason why legalization is so detrimental to our communities’ safety and wellbeing.
Legalization makes it easier to keep out of the hands of teenagers. Yes, there will always be "shoulder tapping," fake IDs and and other ways for underage users to get it, but it's still a far cry from having it freely available from street dealers.
No, it doesn’t. The legal supply just becomes an additional source of weed for illegal dealers (especially students). Illegal/black market marijuana dealing is not dying or disappearing as a result of legalization. I hate to break it to you.
Especially since illegal dealers don’t have to bear the costs of overhead and taxes that legal dealers do, so they can always offer themselves up as the cheaper alternative to the legal stuff, which is very appealing to kids who have limited funds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer to anyone paying attention. This is another reason why legalization is so detrimental to our communities’ safety and wellbeing.
Legalization makes it easier to keep out of the hands of teenagers. Yes, there will always be "shoulder tapping," fake IDs and and other ways for underage users to get it, but it's still a far cry from having it freely available from street dealers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer to anyone paying attention. This is another reason why legalization is so detrimental to our communities’ safety and wellbeing.
Legalization makes it easier to keep out of the hands of teenagers. Yes, there will always be "shoulder tapping," fake IDs and and other ways for underage users to get it, but it's still a far cry from having it freely available from street dealers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer to anyone paying attention. This is another reason why legalization is so detrimental to our communities’ safety and wellbeing.
Legalization makes it easier to keep out of the hands of teenagers. Yes, there will always be "shoulder tapping," fake IDs and and other ways for underage users to get it, but it's still a far cry from having it freely available from street dealers.
Anonymous wrote:Marijuana is more potent today. You shouldn’t compare it to when you were young.
Anonymous wrote:This is a no-brainer to anyone paying attention. This is another reason why legalization is so detrimental to our communities’ safety and wellbeing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This only happens to people who have psychotic features already present.
Nope. My son had none of those features. I found him sitting behind the front door with a baseball bat be night. He was completely paranoid that someone was trying to break in. He’d be up all night staring at the cameras he insisted we have installed. It took a few months of an antipsychotic medication to make this behavior go away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how the pro-marijuana sleeps at night hearing story after story like this.
This is why it's not legal for teenagers. I know people from 30 years ago who ruined their future by smoking too much weed even then.
There's little to no serious enforcement behind it being illegal for teens though.
Even alcohol, which is hardly perfect, has way more infrastructure and consequence behind selling to minors. But marijuana is a free-for-all and it's flooding our schools and communities.
The kids are paying a serious price.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how the pro-marijuana sleeps at night hearing story after story like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how the pro-marijuana sleeps at night hearing story after story like this.
This is why it's not legal for teenagers. I know people from 30 years ago who ruined their future by smoking too much weed even then.
Anonymous wrote:Someone gift the article?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obama seems fine and he smoked plenty
He does not seem fine at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This only happens to people who have psychotic features already present.
My sister had schizophrenia and out of the countless medications she took marijuana was the only medication that allowed her to sleep. Just the opposite.
My friend smoked weed every morning and various other times since she was 14 years old. 35 years later she’s still smoking it. She was a petite teen and as a grownup never gained a pound. Same teen body and no health concerns.
I do think psychosis would be triggered only if you were predisposed to it. But not everyone knows their family history or who might be predisposed.
Those are anecdotes.
The linked article builds on the body of evidence demonstrating marijuana is
harmful to the developing teen brain.
I know they are anecdotes but if you ask anyone about weed quite a few would have stories about the teens who smoked every day. Not too many stories about ending up in the hospital.