Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, saw this firsthand with my brother. He was likely predisposed because he'd suffered from depression and anxiety from his early teens, but the weed triggered full blown psychosis and a schizoaffective disorder diagnosis. He was living with me at the time and it was one of the most stressful experiences of my life. I can only imagine how it was for him. It just sucks - definitely derailed him.
This sounds like my brother too.
Mine as well. 😞
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s very simple. Marijuana (or more particularly, THC) should be controlled under the exact same laws and regulations as alcohol.
THC is not a danger free drug and neither is alcohol. Tens of thousands a year die directly from alcohol use - a great many of those are innocents who died because someone used alcohol and disobeyed the law.
But, THC is no more dangerous than alcohol.
So - regulate it and treat it exactly as you treat alcohol. Want to ban THC? Okay. Ban alcohol too. But, we have been down that road before.
+1
I am pro-legalizationn (or at least decriminalization) but that doesn't mean I am in favor of the lack of regulation that is going on now. We don't have to go back to the days of locking people up, taking away their right to vote, making it almost impossible for them to get a job, etc. to tackle the problems we have with pot.
Considering the epidemic of teens ruining their brains today compared to the past, apparently we do need to go back to criminalizing marijuana.
It was better the way it was in the past.
Plus, I don’t use marijuana so I don’t care if they ban it.
Anonymous wrote:At a minimum, I wish the schools would start cracking down on drug use at school. My kids say it’s rampant and they complain about the smell. It horrifies me that my teen could be getting weed from someone at school, smoking it there and no one from the school would even call me because the schools take zero action.
They should hire a shit ton of security officers. Make a broad announcement that this won’t be tolerated. Then take every kid found using weed at school and give them a choice between drug tests and locker/bag searches or the virtual academy.
I’m a liberal progressive Dem but it’s just become utterly ridiculous. I guess it was predictable but it’s like we told these teens that we trusted them to make the right choices and we weren’t going to penalize them for bad ones, and they decided that they can collectively walk all over us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s very simple. Marijuana (or more particularly, THC) should be controlled under the exact same laws and regulations as alcohol.
THC is not a danger free drug and neither is alcohol. Tens of thousands a year die directly from alcohol use - a great many of those are innocents who died because someone used alcohol and disobeyed the law.
But, THC is no more dangerous than alcohol.
So - regulate it and treat it exactly as you treat alcohol. Want to ban THC? Okay. Ban alcohol too. But, we have been down that road before.
+1
I am pro-legalizationn (or at least decriminalization) but that doesn't mean I am in favor of the lack of regulation that is going on now. We don't have to go back to the days of locking people up, taking away their right to vote, making it almost impossible for them to get a job, etc. to tackle the problems we have with pot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Locking people up wasn’t producing good outcomes.
for whom?
For people locked up for years for possessing an ounce.
Were you born in 2000?
I couldn't care less for them.
Because if you were white, you didn’t get locked up. Let me guess what color you are
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Locking people up wasn’t producing good outcomes.
for whom?
For people locked up for years for possessing an ounce.
Were you born in 2000?
I couldn't care less for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Locking people up wasn’t producing good outcomes.
for whom?
For people locked up for years for possessing an ounce.
Were you born in 2000?
I couldn't care less for them.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Locking people up wasn’t producing good outcomes.
for whom?
For people locked up for years for possessing an ounce.
Were you born in 2000?
Anonymous wrote:This is about access for teens, because it’s uniquely bad for them.
Anonymous wrote:I saw this story on the WSJ's Facebook page, and was alarmed by the comments.
The overall message was: Too bad ... teens/young adults are facing a sick society and an impossible economy, so we're just going to keep smoking weed.
Such a victim mentality ... I think people are really convincing themselves weed is the way to go. Is it just we middle-aged parents who see these horrible effects on kids and think this is all wrong?
Anonymous wrote:This is about access for teens, because it’s uniquely bad for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s very simple. Marijuana (or more particularly, THC) should be controlled under the exact same laws and regulations as alcohol.
THC is not a danger free drug and neither is alcohol. Tens of thousands a year die directly from alcohol use - a great many of those are innocents who died because someone used alcohol and disobeyed the law.
But, THC is no more dangerous than alcohol.
So - regulate it and treat it exactly as you treat alcohol. Want to ban THC? Okay. Ban alcohol too. But, we have been down that road before.
+1
I am pro-legalizationn (or at least decriminalization) but that doesn't mean I am in favor of the lack of regulation that is going on now. We don't have to go back to the days of locking people up, taking away their right to vote, making it almost impossible for them to get a job, etc. to tackle the problems we have with pot.