yeah life's good that way. high like a kite!
roll another blunt...
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Wait a minute.... I got soooo high that I forgot I smoked weed. I retract my last statement.Comment
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tomorrow
knock knock (at the door)
- oh hello mr police officer.
what's that piece of paper?
a warrent?
how'd you get that?
GFY?
oh shit.
just don't put me in the cell beside the big horny guy.This dog, is dog, a dog, good dog, way dog, to dog, keep dog, an dog, idiot dog, busy dog, for dog, 20 dog, seconds dog!
Now read without the word dog.Comment
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Marijuana has not been proven to kill braincells, Alcohol has.Originally posted by Ganjasaurus
Smoking marijuana kills braincells!
Speak what you know beyotchFadedFools.com Over 300 OG Kush Pictures with Reviews. SFV Medical Marijuana.Comment
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Actually I think he was being sarcastic...after all, he's got Ganja in his name...Originally posted by saltricter
Marijuana has not been proven to kill braincells, Alcohol has.
Speak what you know beyotchmmm my sig was too big... no more cool animation
but hey still! need php? ICQ: 94586959Comment
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Some facts:
You cannot overdose on marijuana by smoking it. You would die from smoke inhalation before you got close to that point.
Why was marijuana made illegal in the 1930's?
`Chemical pulping' paper was invented at
about this time by Dupont Chemicals, as part of a
multi-million dollar deal with a timber holding company and
newspaper chain owned by William Randolph Hearst. This deal
would provide the Hearst with a source of very cheap paper,
and he would go on to be known as the tycoon of `yellow
journalism' (so named because the new paper would turn
yellow very quickly as it got older.) Hearst knew that he
could drive other papers out of competition with this new
advantage. Hemp paper threatened to ruin this whole plan.
It had to be stopped, and the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 was
the way they did it. As a drug law, the Tax Act really was
not a very big step -- it did not really accomplish much at
all and many historians have caught themselves wondering why the bill was even written. Big business interests took
advantage of the political climate of racism and anti-drug
rhetoric to close the free market to hemp products, and
that, my friend, is how hemp became illegal.
The American Medical Association found out about the bill only two days before the hearings, and sent a representative to object to the banning of cannabis medicines. A hemp bird seed salesman also showed up and complained. However, the bill was
passed, partially due to the testimony of Harry J.
Anslinger.
Doesn't Marijuana cause brain damage?
The short answer: No.
The long answer: The reason why you ask this is because you
probably heard or read somewhere that marijuana damages
brain cells, or makes you stupid. These claims are untrue.
The first one -- marijuana kills brain cells -- is based on
research done during the second Reefer Madness Movement. A
study attempted to show that marijuana smoking damaged brain
structures in monkeys. However, the study was poorly
performed and it was severely criticized by a medical review
board. Studies done afterwards failed to show any brain
damage, in fact a very recent study on Rhesus monkeys used
technology so sensitive that scientists could actually see
the effect of learning on brain cells, and it found no
damage.
But this was Reefer Madness II, and the prohibitionists were
looking around for anything they could find to keep the
marijuana legalization movement in check, so this study was
widely used in anti-marijuana propaganda. It was recanted
later.
(To this day, the radical anti-drug groups, like P.R.I.D.E.
and Dr. Gabriel Nahas, still use it -- In fact, America's
most popular drug education program, Drug Abuse Resistance
Education, claims that marijuana ``can impair memory
perception & judgement by destroying brain cells.'' When
police and teachers read this and believe it, our job gets
really tough, since it takes a long time to explain to
children how Ms. Jones and Officer Bob were wrong.)
The truth is, no study has ever demonstrated cellular
damage, stupidity, mental impairment, or insanity brought on
specifically by marijuana use -- even heavy marijuana use.
This is not to say that it cannot be abused, however.Comment
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Marijuana is so safe that it would be almost impossible to
overdose on it. Doctors determine how safe a drug is by
measuring how much it takes to kill a person (they call this
the LD50) and comparing it to the amount of the drug which
is usually taken (ED50). This makes marijuana hundreds of
times safer than alcohol, tobacco, or caffiene. According
to a DEA Judge ``marijuana is the safest therapeutically
active substance known to mankind.''Comment
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I forgot, does marijuana cause short-term memory impairment?
The effect of marijuana on memory is its most dramatic
and the easiest to notice. Many inexperienced marijuana
users find that they have very strange, sudden and
unexpected memory lapses. These usually take the form of
completely forgetting what you were talking about when you
were right in the middle of saying something important.
However, these symptoms only occur while a person is `high'.
They do not carry over or become permanent, and examinations
of extremely heavy users has not shown any memory or
thinking problems. More experienced marijuana users seem to
be able to remember about as well as they do when they are
not `high.'Comment
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Isn't marijuana a gateway drug?
Doesn't it lead to use of harder drugs?
This is totally untrue. In fact, researchers are looking
into using marijuana to help crack addicts to quit. There
are 40 million people in this country (U.S.) who have smoked
marijuana for a period of their lives -- why aren't there
tens of millions of heroin users, then? In Amsterdam, both
marijuana use and heroin use went *down* after marijuana was
decriminalized -- even though there was a short rise in
cannabis use right after decriminalization. Unlike
addictive drugs, marijuana causes almost no tolerance. Some
people even report a reverse tolerance. That is, the longer
they have used the less marijuana they need to get `high.'
So users of marijuana do not usually get bored and `look for
something more powerful'. If anything, marijuana keeps
people from doing harder drugs.Comment
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The only thing marijuana has led me to in construction.."I can make a bong out of that"Originally posted by detoxed
Isn't marijuana a gateway drug?
Doesn't it lead to use of harder drugs?
This is totally untrue. In fact, researchers are looking
into using marijuana to help crack addicts to quit. There
are 40 million people in this country (U.S.) who have smoked
marijuana for a period of their lives -- why aren't there
tens of millions of heroin users, then? In Amsterdam, both
marijuana use and heroin use went *down* after marijuana was
decriminalized -- even though there was a short rise in
cannabis use right after decriminalization. Unlike
addictive drugs, marijuana causes almost no tolerance. Some
people even report a reverse tolerance. That is, the longer
they have used the less marijuana they need to get `high.'
So users of marijuana do not usually get bored and `look for
something more powerful'. If anything, marijuana keeps
people from doing harder drugs.FadedFools.com Over 300 OG Kush Pictures with Reviews. SFV Medical Marijuana.Comment
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There are those who think that marijuana is a major problem
on the streets, because of a newspaper article or news story
which they have seen which said a large number of people who
were killed in driving accidents tested postive for
marijuana use. For various reasons, these studies are not
reliable:
o Some studies use drug tests which can only tell
whether a person has used marijuana in the last
month.
o Some studies were done near colleges or other areas
where drinking, marijuana use, and accidents are all
very high, and they did not correct for age or
alcohol use.
o In many of the studies there were more stoned drivers
killed -- but it was not their fault, and when the
police ``culpability scores'' were factored in
marijuana was not to blame for the accidentsComment
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So you learned how to use the Copie Paste?
Comment
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In the 1980's, the Bush administration went to great lengths
to promote drug testing. In fact, George Bush estimated the
cost of drug use at over 60 billion dollars a year, based on
a study which supposedly showed that persons who had used
marijuana at some time during their life were less
successful. The very same study could be used to show that
current, heavy users of marijuana and other illegal drugs
were actually more successful. Something is a bit fishy
here, and when you add to that the fact that several former
heads of the DEA and former Drug Czars now own or work in
the urinalysis industry, this whole scene begins to smell a
bit funny.Comment
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