Posted on 05/02/2014 2:09:46 AM PDT by markomalley
A study recently came out analyzing the damage to the brain caused by pot smoking. Unfortunately, it came out during the week of the Triduum, and a Catholic blog like this had another focus at that time. But its time to circle back and have a look.
I wrote some time ago of my anecdotal observation that the pot smokers I knew all developed serious problems with motivation, and that the effects of being high lingered long after toking a joint and went on to become semi-permanent. It involved a glazed look, a shuffling gait, and a lethargic attitude largely exemplified by the phrase: Hey man I aint gotta do what the man says; I aint gotta go to the mans class When some of the kids I grew up with started using pot, there was a very noticeable change in their personalities. Again, I have written more on that here: The Problem of Pot
Now comes a more scientific study from Harvard that affirms what experience has taught. Below are some pertinent excerpts (in bold) along with my brief commentary (in red). The full article is here: Harvard Study links Pot and Brain Damage
According to a new study published in the Journal of Neuroscience, researchers from Harvard and Northwestern studied the brains of 18- to 25-year-olds, half of whom smoked pot recreationally and half of whom didnt. What they found was rather shocking: even those who only smoked few times a week had significant brain abnormalities in the areas that control emotion and motivation.
Exactly. But I wonder why the author of the article used the word shocking? As I have said, and many of you have commented, getting stoned makes you groggy, unmotivated, and induces a sort of personality change. I think it would have been shocking not to find any brain abnormalities. The phenomenon of becoming unmotivated is very observable.
Note too the phrase significant brain abnormalities.
Similar studies have found a correlation between heavy pot use and brain abnormalities, but this is the first study that has found the same link with recreational users.
The study described recreational users as those who smoked pot between one and four times a week.
Using three different neuroimaging techniques, researchers then looked at areas [of the brain] responsible for gauging the benefit or loss of doing certain things, and providing feelings of reward for pleasurable activities such as food, sex, and social interactions. This is a part of the brain that you absolutely never ever want to touch, said [Hans] Breiter, co-author of the study .These are fundamental in terms of what people find pleasurable in the world and assessing that against the bad things.
Pay attention! Pot affects judgment. The study seems to make clear that not only are pot smokers damaging their motivation, they are also affecting their ability to make sound judgments about what is good vs. bad, helpful vs. harmful.
This may go a long way to affirm another connection I have made anecdotally between drug use and the cultural revolution. How else can we describe the cultural and sexual revolutions of the 1960s and 1970s other than as a long stream of bad decisions, poor judgment, the abandonment of common sense, and just plain stupid and foolish thinking? In other words, an awful lot of the leaders, drivers, and participants in this these revolutions were stoned and their brains were damaged.
And even today, when there is so much evidence of the social harm caused by these revolutions, many still cant make the connections; they want more of the same; they want to drive us deeper into revolution. Are their brains damaged? I dont know. You decide.
But the widespread lack of common sense in our culture, especially among the Baby Boomers, has a kind of surreal quality to it. Its a little like a bad dream that youd expect people to eventually wake up frombut many dont. Perhaps their brains are too damaged to wake up or to think clearly. I dont know. You decide.
Shockingly, every single person in the marijuana group, including those who only smoked once a week, had noticeable abnormalities.
OK, so at least according to this study, even moderate use causes harm. Studies will continue, but honestly, the data have been pretty clear to me for a long time just from my personal experience with pot smokers. It aint cool or pretty. They just look glazed, stoned, unmotivated, and dulled out. Their whole sad demeanor shouts to me: Dont do drugs!
I am not going to address here the issue of how drug use should be dealt with by the legal system. I am not certain that putting users in jail is the answer. But the legalization push that is rampaging through this country is yet another example of bad judgment. Lets slow down the train and at least adopt the same attitude toward pot that we have toward cigarettes.
Pot should barely be tolerated within fifty miles of where anyone lives. And if it is legal it ought to be pushed to the margins of our society with no less scorn than tobacco has recently been given. When I see a tobacco smoker I think, How sad. How foolish given all we now know. There is no less reason to consider pot smokers in this same manner. They are not cool, hip, or glamorous. Smoking pot is sad and foolish behavior.
To address the Yeah, but what about alcohol? objection, I will make a few quick observations:
Msgr Pope ping
Sounds like me when I am rolling off of Midnight Shift.
Try vitamin B12.
Rookies
Sounds more like a Democrat.
So why would you want to get that way as recreation?
Good article. What I don’t understand is why the powers that be have used every effort to condemn and criminalize tobacco smoking, supposedly because of its health effects, and yet are enthusiastically pushing pot smoking.
I also don’t understand why entire agencies and police units spend their time trying to catch vendors selling alcohol to people under 21...while a couple of weeks ago, Colorado permitted pot smokers of any and all ages to lie around all over a main square and puff away.
The government must benefit in a big way from people smoking dope. Could it be the word “dope”...hmmm, makes you easier to control, less demanding, less energetic, dumber...
The stone has been cast.
A little birdie is whispering in my ear that we would disqualify 5.7% of the Republicans, and 42.8% of the democrats. Just made up numbers for discussion ....
The number I have seen in print over the years is that 85% of the homeless are substance abusers (and most of the remainder have some other identifiable psychiatric problem). A similar percentage of those arrested for street crimes have drugs in their systems. I very much suspect that if we tested the long-term welfare population, we would find the same tendency, possibly at lower, but still significant, levels. And while the definitional issues are trickier, I suspect that the political correlates would be substantial.
Are there people who use pot regularly and manage their lives competently? Of course. I am acquainted with a couple of them: recreational users from their college days 40 years ago who are otherwise perfectly constructive human beings, except for being democrats. But we're talking averages here. If you had to be drug and alcohol free to vote, the electorate would look very different. And if we prohibited vote harvesting among the dysfunctional elements of society, there wouldn't be much of a democratic party left in places like DC. Take drugs out of the picture, and a lot of want we used to call the counterculture would change.
I'll circle back to welfare because it is the great enabler. Drugs of abuse, first and foremost alcohol, have always been available. But serious abusers were socially ostracized, became unemployable, and tended not to live long unless long-suffering families supported them. Not so today.
Well, actually he is certain but won't admit his own damn bad judgment. Jailing dopers has been an abject failure as a social policy.
Why do you think Democrats “think” the way they do?
Their brains are addled by drugs!
Try a bar at 1AM.
I’ve been bringing up the brain damage and carcinogenicity of marijuana every time the subject comes up. Unfortunately, there is a lot of urban legend about the safety of pot. A lot of people who really believe those legends tend to dismiss any kind of bad information about pot as some sort of conspiracy.
So many states are “legalizing” pot. This is a guaranteed way to put the public into a stupor and take its mind off the way the government is ruining their lives.
Ping!
I like that; I presume that it is a variation on "the die has been cast."
Everything is bad in excess. I wonder if any comparative studies have been done on the brains of Islamists versus more relaxed types. I’d suspect abnormalities in the portions of the limbic system involved with rage.
Andy: "His own damn bad judgment"? This is a remarkably offensive way to mischaracterize a man who agrees with you that jailing is a dubious way to deal with dopers. Why the hostility?
I remember the rhetoric condemning alcohol and extolling pot. NOTHING wrong with pot. Those morons didn't convince me because I saw the effects pot had on folks.
It turned them into morons, albeit fairly happy morons.
Were you around in the 60's? The entire health industry spoke about the bad effects of pot. Those doctors were called "uptight"--the final BAD remark about anyone.
Lol. Boy, am I dating myself.
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