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Why Your State Should NOT Legalize Weed
Barbwire ^ | August 15, 2018 | Larry Tomczak

Posted on 08/15/2018 9:06:53 AM PDT by fwdude

Yesterday I visited our local bookstore and was struck by the abundance of magazine covers promoting marijuana. Later my wife commented that she’s received two ads this week for cannabis products, something she’s never received before! What’s going on?

In case you haven’t noticed or are simply distracted by the busyness of life, propaganda promoting marijuana and its legalization is bombarding us. Should we be concerned about something that is celebrated as a “harmless recreational” indulgence that progressive people should embrace excitedly?

Recently our state newspaper ran a prominent piece by a young woman calling for weed to be legalized. Coincidentally, she works for a statewide cannabis advocacy group. Reading her arguments and questionable statistics made me wonder if we should begin distributing marijuana freely since she opines it is so harmless and beneficial!

What follows is my pushback to the propaganda. Feel free to “borrow” any and all my counterpoints for op-eds you can submit, exposing the seductive logic.

Let’s Get Serious

“There are three kinds of lies: lies, dxxxxd lies and statistics,” said Mark Twain. He was pointing out the use of statistics to bolster weak or fallacious arguments. The dope supporter whose article appeared in our newspaper, typical of many, deserved a five star Pinocchio award for her misleading stats and misguided presentation.

Recently, I had an in-depth conversation with a police officer formerly on paid leave who has since retired. He was rehabilitating from a serious injury sustained when he confronted a young man about to commit a crime who was stoned on marijuana. He subsequently assaulted the officer, tearing his rotator cuff. He now faces numerous felony offenses plus decades behind bars, in addition to the impounding of his car containing marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Olympic gold medalist, Michael Phelps, often appears in the news with his lovely wife and two little boys celebrating his success emerging from rehab and his near-death experience. “Not wanting to be alive anymore” at one point, the champion who smoked marijuana, deceived it would not affect his ability to excel, now swears off any drugs as he encourages youth to emulate his example.

Close to where I live, a 33-year-old woman was sentenced to 30 years in prison for her reckless driving which resulted in the death of a teenager helping change his mother’s flat tire. The THP report showed her high on drugs and impaired in her driving ability as she callously fled the scene of the homicide. She’ll now have many decades to ponder her stupidity, recreational drug usage and the devastation it brought her and a grieving family.

With scores of people killed, maimed, or disabled for life from drunk driving, especially by young people, do we really want to compound the problem by adding marijuana to the mix? Teens can think they are invincible and adding a joint can seem innocuous until the tragedy happens, which it does all too frequently.

Contrary to what drug proponents profess, marijuana and other drugs take a toll—eventually, if not immediately. Drugs don’t deliver as advertised. Why do you think they call it “dope?”

Even pot-smoking, poster boy Willie Nelson, battling emphysema and pneumonia four or five times, admits his lungs have gotten “really screwed up.”

In Willie’s own words, “There’s been a lot of talk about marijuana being harmless, but I think it’s a lot more dangerous to the lungs than most dope smokers realize. Especially the strong marijuana that’s around these days. Each year it seems to get a little stronger … your lungs are not really supposed to breath anything but oxygen—pure, fresh air.”

How about the tragic, premature deaths of both Whitney Houston and Amy Winehouse portrayed in recent documentaries? Both got started on the path to their destruction the exact same way, smoking weed, those “harmless” joints.

Research Studies Should Not Be Ignored As Sergeant Joe Friday used to say on the TV program Dragnet, “Just the facts!” so here they are …

The United States Drug Enforcement Agency states: “U.S. drug overdose kills more people than traffic accidents and gun incidents.” The total number cited was 46,471! If we could ask these victims how many started on marijuana or maintained their marijuana usage along with other drugs, I wonder how many would hang their heads in regret wishing they’d never succumbed to the seduction of the Pied Piper’s enticement onto this pernicious path?

My best friend growing up started experimenting with recreational drugs when he started college with me. What started as a fun escape spiraled into his premature death in his mid-20s. I carry an ache in my heart to this day from this experience.

When marijuana proponents glorify drugs and celebrate its “harmless” even “beneficial effect,” they should take heed to the words of an expert, Dr. Ed Gogek, an addiction psychiatrist. He wrote the following in the uber-liberal New York Times: “I’ve spent 25 years as a doctor treating drug abusers and they are con artists…. Marijuana activists are phony scientists. For years they said marijuana is good for glaucoma when it actually worsens it! They said it is not addictive and this is false! They said it doesn’t increase usage among teenagers and all evidence says the opposite…. It is not harmless! Youth do worse in school and have two times the dropout rate while marijuana permanently lowers their IQ.”

Joseph Califano, head of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, declares without qualification that “pot smoking adversely affects motor skills and does serious damage to the brain over the long term.” It is a fact that objective studies repeatedly show that regular users find their IQ dropping and all cognitive functions hindered. Finally, a recent study from Northwestern University established clearly that teen “potheads” had brain abnormalities related to poor short-term memory performance. Healthy individuals who did not use marijuana scored 37 times better on average than users—not just addicts—who had smoked pot in the past. The National Institute of Health makes it clear: “One in six youth who try marijuana before age 18 will either abuse it or will become addicted.” Those are dangerous odds, parents. Is this what we want for our children and grandchildren? What’s Happening in Massachusetts? The state of Massachusetts jumped on the bandwagon to legalize marijuana. After a number of months, a study was done to discover the impact on young people. The results are sobering and startling: currently 1/2 of youth ages 18–25 have smoked marijuana in the past month!

In the classic film The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy finally pulled back the curtain and exposed the deceiving mastermind behind the façade. May we do likewise amid celebrities and other pot promoters who glamorize toking up, some under the ruse of the “medical marijuana” argument (which can have some medicinal benefits but it’s not the only alternative).

A little while ago, in the mall where I daily exercise, a middle-aged mother darted from the coffee shop and stammered these words amidst her tears, “They just found my daughter dead!” She proceeded to tell me about her 27-year-old daughter who met a young fellow who influenced her to start smoking dope. Prior to this encounter, “she had never been involved with any drugs” but this was the gateway to her death and her mother’s devastation.

Here’s the deal: Scripture says, “Although they claimed to be wise, they became fools…” (Romans 1:22). People will accuse us of being “fear mongers,” but we must not back down. Let’s winsomely and confidently communicate the truth about this massive deception permeating America today.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: cannabis; freedom; marijuana; medical; medicine; miraclecure
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To: fwdude

Generally speaking , MJ smoking causes young people to become more than inclined to go along with a Liberal progressive pattern of voting .It breeds Democraps . I will guarantee you that virtually every single Bernie Sanders wingnut smokes pot . From the youngest to the oldest . I will bet that the great majority of Anti-Fa types all smoke MJ . It probably loosens them up to then go out and run amok committing acts of anarchy and mayhem . Every single one ....


181 posted on 08/15/2018 12:36:48 PM PDT by LeoWindhorse
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To: LeoWindhorse

I don’t think that is exactly what the case is.

I think the smoking of MJ makes one more inclined to go along with whatever ideas are being presented at the time.

I used to get high and listen to Rush Limbaugh, and guess what, he convinced me.

Unfortunately, almost all signals in this world are broadcasting leftism, so the chances of someone getting high actually hearing someone like Limbaugh are pretty darned slim, thus the disparity exists.

The problem is that we conservatives do not really actively seek out to convince as many people as possible to agree with us.

The Left, on the other hand, is rather cultish about it.


182 posted on 08/15/2018 12:45:17 PM PDT by chris37 ("I am everybody." -Mark Robinson)
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To: fwdude
Do you really want to be on the same side with the most radical of the left?

I am rarely, if ever, persuaded by pejorative sophistry.

183 posted on 08/15/2018 12:45:32 PM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: fwdude

This topic always brings out the jack-booted authoritarian types. Do you really want your foot on the necks of people who just want to mind their own GD business?


184 posted on 08/15/2018 12:50:17 PM PDT by Augie
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To: chris37
Physical addiction to a substance is totally different.

Whether you are physically addicted, or mentally addicted, isn't the end result the same - Continued use?

185 posted on 08/15/2018 12:54:10 PM PDT by Go Gordon (I gave my dog Grady a last name - Trump - because he loves tweets.)
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To: TigersEye
I am rarely, if ever, persuaded by pejorative sophistry.

My statement was absolutely true. Prove what I said was false.

186 posted on 08/15/2018 12:54:59 PM PDT by fwdude (History has no 'sides;' you're thinking of geometry.)
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To: chris37

There is a chapter to the Agnostic in the big book *the AA book*.

I know a devout atheist who is in AA. His higher power is nature (God as you understand him), so it does work for him.

Apparently there are NA’s in the local AA, since there are no NA groups in the immediate area. They are welcomed in to the group even though focus is on alcohol. And alcohol is considered a gateway in some circles.


187 posted on 08/15/2018 12:55:16 PM PDT by waterhill (I Shall Remain, in spite of __________.)
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To: TigersEye
Smiley face

Your side.

188 posted on 08/15/2018 12:58:40 PM PDT by fwdude (History has no 'sides;' you're thinking of geometry.)
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To: fwdude

That’s not worth even considering. Sophistry is the garbage “argument” of a liberal.


189 posted on 08/15/2018 12:59:03 PM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: fwdude

More sophistic propaganda. LOL


190 posted on 08/15/2018 12:59:54 PM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: Vermont Lt
...possession of pot for personal use...

According to whom? How does one prove possession just for personal use?

191 posted on 08/15/2018 1:14:45 PM PDT by fwdude (History has no 'sides;' you're thinking of geometry.)
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To: Alberta's Child
Even Hickenlooper in CO expressed dismay and some level of regret in signing the rec pot use bill into law. A democrat.
192 posted on 08/15/2018 1:16:48 PM PDT by fwdude (History has no 'sides;' you're thinking of geometry.)
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To: fwdude
This reads like the guy has watched "Reefer Madness" too many times. There is a huge difference between someone who smokes an occasional joint and someone who is doing hard drugs. You cannot overdose on marijuana.

I do not smoke it but do use cannibis topicals for pain. They are non-psychoactive meaning there is no high in using them.

My state, Colorado, has legal weed and our deaths from opioid overdoses are lower than other states b/c of marijuana. When I go into my dispensary (medical), I am amazed by the number of elderly people who have their medical license and use cannibis products for pain. If I had a loved one with cancer who was in severe pain, I would totally endorse giving him or her marijuana instead of opioids. If you want to talk about addiction, let's discuss prescription pain killers.

193 posted on 08/15/2018 1:22:36 PM PDT by luv2ski
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To: luv2ski
This reads like the guy has watched "Reefer Madness" too many times.

The author, Larry Tomczak, is a down-in-the-streets evangelist. He knows of what he speaks by personal experience, not by any Hollyweird concoction. He's not an ivory tower Christian by any means. He goes to the most raunchy "gay pride" parades to witness. He's no dummy or coward.

I'd feel confident deferring to his opinion on observations over his long life dealing with these pot-affected people.

194 posted on 08/15/2018 1:28:00 PM PDT by fwdude (History has no 'sides;' you're thinking of geometry.)
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To: Go Gordon

Mmm, I’d say yes and no.

The result of a physical addiction is that quitting is far more difficult in terms of suffering and presents you with the risk of death in some cases.

The result of “mental addiction” is nothing, you just like to do something, so you continue to choose to do that thing.

Continued use in either case is simply a choice.

The person who is physically addicted has a far harder choice to make, but it is still a choice.

I look at it like this.

if at any time in your life you choose to get high, and you wander into Hell (because addiction is Hell), it is up to you to turn around and walk back out, and if you don’t, you will certainly remain in Hell.

And you had best make that walk sober, lest you become lost again, and let me tell you, walking out of Hell sober hurts. A lot. Hell is a bad place.

I personally think that it does not benefit people who are not addicted to tell them that they are addicted.

Many people who use drugs are simply making bad decisions, and making them believe it’s hard to quit because they are addicted, when they are not addicted, seems silly.

The marijuana smoker may well wish real hard he still had some MJ to smoke, but is it gonna kill him to not smoke? Is it going to cause seizure, trembling headache, feinting, 3 months of no sleep, forgetting how to speak and write? Nah.


195 posted on 08/15/2018 1:33:37 PM PDT by chris37 ("I am everybody." -Mark Robinson)
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To: mowowie

“It is NOT addictive beyond the few days that you are bummed out that you ran out.”

https://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/research-reports/marijuana/marijuana-addictive


196 posted on 08/15/2018 1:37:23 PM PDT by riverdawg
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To: fwdude

Should we be concerned about something that is celebrated as a “harmless recreational” indulgence that progressive people should embrace excitedly?


Well, duh.

There: Hope I ‘triggered’ some 420s here.

I’m not debating potheads (a word - debating - which is an oxymoron in conjunction with any 420s).


197 posted on 08/15/2018 2:06:58 PM PDT by logi_cal869 (-cynicus-)
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To: fwdude

Well, in America we do not have to prove intent to do anything else.

I am amused how all of the rights in the Constitution get tossed out the window when you don’t agree with a position. You are aware that amounts for “distribution” are spelled out clearly in the law. Or should we just jail all the potheads?


198 posted on 08/15/2018 2:10:09 PM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: chris37
"God, give me the strength to get away from this sh!t." -- Gregg Allman
199 posted on 08/15/2018 2:11:10 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("The Russians escaped while we weren't watching them ... like Russians will.")
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To: fwdude

” Finally, a recent study from Northwestern University established clearly that teen “potheads” had brain abnormalities related to poor short-term memory performance. Healthy individuals who did not use marijuana scored 37 times better on average than users—not just addicts—who had smoked pot in the past. “

What does “... 37 times better...” mean?
What is 37 times better?


200 posted on 08/15/2018 2:25:50 PM PDT by Reynoldo
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