Actual drug addiction or simply being taken to a clinic??
Pot isn’t addictive.
But but. The hippies and Hollywood and media have all told us since The Sixties . . . .
Try to tell people that MJ causes some form of psychosis whether mild or strong, and they will argue with you ‘till the cows come home. But the fact is, irrational fear is one of the common first immediate effects of smoking MJ.
Neither should be illegal.
If toking some bud turns one psychotic, they were pretty close to the edge already.
Those who end up in psychosis were likely headed there anyway.
10’s of millions have smoked pot and not ended up there. Perhaps 100’s of millions.
If it wasn’t going to be pot, another substance or event would have triggered it. Extreme stress, whiskey, opioids, benzodiazepines, LSD, Ecstacy, crank.
That said, kids today should not do what we adults did as teens. The evidence is in that kids should not smoke pot.
IMHO, I think pot’s like liquor.
These substances bring out the cray-cray that’s already alive and well somewhere down in the mental paw paw patch...!
Someone needs to go and arrest God. How dare him! /s
Watching candles drip...
Think alcohol is harmless? Think again =>
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Fact Sheets - Underage Drinking
Underage Drinking
Alcohol is the most commonly used and abused drug among youth in the United States.1
Excessive drinking is responsible for more than 4,300 deaths among underage youth each year, and cost the U.S. $24 billion in economic costs in 2010.2,3
Although drinking by persons under the age of 21 is illegal, people aged 12 to 20 years drink 11% of all alcohol consumed in the United States.4
More than 90% of this alcohol is consumed in the form of binge drinks.4
On average, underage drinkers consume more drinks per drinking occasion than adult drinkers.5
In 2010, there were approximately 189,000 emergency rooms visits by persons under age 21 for injuries and other conditions linked to alcohol.6
Drinking Levels among Youth
The 2015 Youth Risk Behavior Survey7 found that among high school students, during the past 30 days
33% drank some amount of alcohol.
18% binge drank.
8% drove after drinking alcohol.
20% rode with a driver who had been drinking alcohol.
Other national surveys
In 2015, the National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported that 20% of youth aged 12 to 20 years drink alcohol and 13% reported binge drinking in the past 30 days.8
In 2015, the Monitoring the Future Survey reported that 10% of 8th graders and 35% of 12th graders drank during the past 30 days, and 5% of 8th graders and 17% of 12th graders binge drank during the past 2 weeks.9
Consequences of Underage Drinking
Youth who drink alcohol are more likely to experience:
School problems, such as higher absence and poor or failing grades.
Social problems, such as fighting and lack of participation in youth activities.
Legal problems, such as arrest for driving or physically hurting someone while drunk.
Physical problems, such as hangovers or illnesses.
Unwanted, unplanned, and unprotected sexual activity.
Disruption of normal growth and sexual development.
Physical and sexual assault.
Higher risk for suicide and homicide.
Alcohol-related car crashes and other unintentional injuries, such as burns, falls, and drowning.
Memory problems.
Abuse of other drugs.
Changes in brain development that may have life-long effects.
Death from alcohol poisoning.
https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/fact-sheets/underage-drinking.htm
Not a single twin study on animals or humans has shown any damage or any changes from even the highest concentrations of cannabis.
There are studies that show correlation to mental illness and other negative effects BUT you can show correlations to countless things. For example, tobacco users are 300-400% more likely to be schizophrenics. It does NOT mean tobacco in any way caused their mental illness. These studies only show that people with mental illness are more likely to abuse tobacco and cannabis.
The mentally ill ware simply more likely to be addicts and prone to self medication. Especially when society has no cure for their illness
There is a problem with the debate. THC is only one of the cannabinoids of the 111 currently known in marijuana.
Due to the drug being set as schedule 1 and not schedule 2 or 3 we are prevented from learning more about the other 110 cannabinoids.
I do not nor have I smoked marijuana. However, I have witnessed first hand the positive impact on those suffering from cancer and other diseases due to states allowing treatments with medical marijuana.
I do not advocate for the total removal of marijuana from the CSA scheduling. I do believe that we need to reschedule so that it can be studied in greater detail.
As for recreational usage. The day they come up with a standardized product and test which can determine the impact and impairment on an individual it should only be allowed for medical purposes. This would allow for accurate DUI charges and other criminal charges for endangering others.
At that time would I allow the general sale of the product in similar fashion as alcohol.
Do we want a society where everything that is not proven harmless is prohibited by law?
I used to work drug rehab back in the 1980s. From what I remember pot was probably the easiest drug to get for teens. I don’t know if the the pot is more or less stronger today then back when I worked in the field. I just remember hearing the same complaints.
I would be more worried about gas and glue sniffing which I is far more available and dangerous.
Marijuana slowly (and I think permanently) wipes out that part of the prefrontal cortex that says don’t do stupid or bad stuff. Especially for those under 26 years old while it is still developing.
We are growing some more evil seeds. It was bad enough that we opened the doors on the looney bins and they were allowed to breed and become democrats.
For many people, daily smoking of MJ will make you both paranoid and lazy. Whatever strong emotion you’re feeling before ingesting marijuana that feeling will probably be magnified X number of times after the smoking is done.
Different people have different reactions.
What is their treatment for grass use? Denial of munchies?
A rather spurious statistic.
Of the teens whose drug use is bad enough that they are sent to the drug clinic, 9/10 use marijuana too.
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I’m sorry, but marijuana is not an addictive substance. This article is pointless, and so is their “treatment”. Outside of enriching those people doing the “treating”, that is.