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To: Argus

It must be addictive in some way, I know many people that have been unable to give it up although it was illegal, people who have broken drug laws for 45 years, people who have lost their military careers because they needed it and could not stop.

A lot of the people here who are on the surface, law-abiding conservatives, who need clean records to live, will admit that they continue to use, decade after decade, close call, after close call, risk, after risk.
They are not ‘addicted’, yet they can’t stop, no matter the cost or what things that they must do outside of the law to stay supplied, even when traveling, and the horrors of the beheading, fish hook hanging in national parks, drug lords that they support does not overcome that need.


13 posted on 09/08/2012 1:32:23 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Aug. 27, 2012-Mitt Romney said his views on abortion are more lenient than the Republican Platform)
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To: ansel12
It must be addictive in some way, I know many people that have been unable to give it up although it was illegal, people who have broken drug laws for 45 years, people who have lost their military careers because they needed it and could not stop.

Addiction is a weird thing. I know a guy who couldn't give up running. He had to have his "fix" every day, rain or shine. He kept at it even after his doctor told him he was destroying his knees, until he finally did.

15 posted on 09/08/2012 1:36:57 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: ansel12
A lot of the people here who are on the surface, law-abiding conservatives, who need clean records to live, will admit that they continue to use, decade after decade, close call, after close call, risk, after risk.

And then there are those like me who can take it or leave it (and do for years at a time), have never had any "close calls" and have taken no discernible risks.

17 posted on 09/08/2012 1:42:38 PM PDT by TigersEye (dishonorabledisclosure.com - OPSEC (give them support))
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To: ansel12
the horrors of the beheading, fish hook hanging in national parks, drug lords that they and the War On Drugs support

There, I completed it.

65 posted on 09/08/2012 3:05:03 PM PDT by JustSayNoToNannies (A free society's default policy: it's none of government's business.)
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To: ansel12

“It must be addictive in some way, I know many people that have been unable to give it up although it was illegal, people who have broken drug laws for 45 years, people who have lost their military careers because they needed it and could not stop.

A lot of the people here who are on the surface, law-abiding conservatives, who need clean records to live, will admit that they continue to use, decade after decade, close call, after close call, risk, after risk.
They are not ‘addicted’, yet they can’t stop, no matter the cost or what things that they must do outside of the law to stay supplied, even when traveling, and the horrors of the beheading, fish hook hanging in national parks, drug lords that they support does not overcome that need.”

The article is about legitimate medical research, specific use a chemical substance to treat a cancer.

The article does NOT suggest preventative medicine, ie self-prescribed smoking MJ like a chimney for decades, to guard against cancer.

Doctors prescribe addictive pain medicine when pain is involved. Ask them, and they will say immediate pain is the thing needing treatment; if addiction occurs they can treat that later.

Consider a family member with life threatening cancer. The doctor says it can treated with MJ; high success rate, possible side effect addiction, which they can also treat.

Finally prohibition worked wonderfully, as does the war on drugs now.

Treatments for cancer and addictions are two SEPARATE subjects, in medicine.


67 posted on 09/08/2012 3:07:45 PM PDT by truth_seeker
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To: ansel12

People just like to smoke it and get high more than they like feeling normal. If they don’t interfere with me, I don’t care. But if they do interfere with me, there’s a problem.


110 posted on 09/08/2012 4:48:35 PM PDT by Argus
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To: ansel12
It must be addictive in some way, I know many people that have been unable to give it up although it was illegal, people who have broken drug laws for 45 years, people who have lost their military careers because they needed it and could not stop.

More mental/emotional addiction than physical. As an ex pot smoker, and recovered alky, I know the difference - booze nearly ruined me and pot was gone when businesses started testing for it.

167 posted on 09/09/2012 1:55:15 AM PDT by trebb ("If a man will not work, he should not eat" From 2 Thes 3)
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