The Narragansett Prevention Partnership has joined forces with other Rhode Island Drug Free Communities grantees to form the Ocean State Prevention Alliance, a statewide coalition of prevention specialists and mental health professionals committed to reducing the negative impact that decriminalization and “medical” marijuana legislation is likely to have on Rhode Island communities, especially among youth.
Evidence from 16 other states clearly identifies a dramatic increase in social, economic, health and safety issues that followed decriminalization or the enactment of “medical” marijuana laws, including a dramatic rise in the number of youth who report using marijuana.
The NPP wants to give the community data-driven information about what we can expect when RI marijuana legislation goes into effect in 2013. Our goal is to encourage Narragansett residents, especially parents, to advocate for policies, additional legislation and prevention programs to reduce the negative impact on our youth that 16 other states have already experienced.
Here are some facts from other states, along with some recent scientific discoveries about marijuana, that suggest what RI can expect – unless we take steps now to address the known risks associated with legalizing or decriminalizing marijuana.
- Teen Use Skyrockets. In 1979, after 11 states legalized marijuana, the United States saw the highest rates, 51%, of marijuana use in history by teenagers. States with “medical” marijuana programs had an increase in marijuana use not seen in other states.
- More Drivers Drive Stoned. Marijuana is the most prevalent illegal drug detected in impaired drivers, fatally injured drivers and motor vehicle crash victims. It has also been reported that after Colorado relaxed their marijuana laws in 2006, drivers who tested positive for marijuana in fatal car crashes doubled between 2006 and 2010.
- Weed Lowers IQs. A recent study found that those who used cannabis heavily in their teens and continued through adulthood showed a permanent drop in IQ of 8 points. A loss of 8 IQ points could drop a person of average intelligence into the lowest third of the intelligence range.
Ted Geisel
3:01 pm on Friday, November 30, 2012
Could you expand on these facts? Where did they come from?
"States with “medical” marijuana programs had an increase in marijuana use not seen in other states." Doesn't that make sense? This doesn't sound surprising.
http://norml.org/marijuana/personal/item/marijuana-decriminalization-talking-points-2 They cited all their facts with studies and a lot of them refute what is being said.
"Colorado relaxed their marijuana laws in 2006, drivers who tested positive for marijuana in fatal car crashes doubled between 2006 and 2010." Could you back this up? I've seen studies (somewhat flawed) that it doubles your chance of being in an accident but never that it doubles your chance of being in a fatal accident.
Nancy Arnold Devaney
4:40 pm on Friday, November 30, 2012
Ted,
I have all the sources for this blog. send your email address to me and I will send you them. ndevaney@narragansettprevention.org
Local Bargain Jerk
8:03 pm on Friday, November 30, 2012
Nancy:
-- I have all the sources for this blog. send your email address to me and I will
-- send you them.
I share Ted's concern/curiosity. Please post your sources here as addenda to your article. The article does seem to gloss over a few points and adding your sources here would complete the picture.
Thanks.
Hunter Brown
4:56 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Nancy, how about you make your sources publicly available instead of making people email you? Is it because the statement " In 1979, after 11 states legalized marijuana.." is a complete lie?
bill
10:58 am on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
this article is full of false information. the country is waking up. people are getting smarter. marijuana will be legal everywhere in the U.S. soon whether you like it or not.
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
11:25 am on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Why not talk about the problems with teens drinking and how that is on a rise? Just because Marijuana has been undeservedly classified a felonious narcotic, does not mean it is in actuality. Recent research has backed up these claims. Do you think everybody in CO or WA are just medically oblivious and said, "lets legalize this even though it ruins our youth and makes everybody who uses it stupider." That is such a shortsighted view, and you should probably look at both sides of the argument before you jump to delusional conclusions.
OldTownie
12:19 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
The only reason we're even talking about this is because society is looking for ways to cut costs and raise revenue. Fewer people in prison for pot possesion save money, and taxes on "legal" pot means revenue. Don't think for a minute that anyone on the pro-pot bandwagon has thought about safety for even a minute. Trying to obfuscate the issue with "teen drinking" makes no sense at all. The only shortsighted view is yours. "Let's legalize it because I used it and I'm fine" is a total failure of an argument. I drank as a teen but don't have a drinking problem so let's lower the drinking age to 10!
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
3:57 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
So you can without a doubt tell me that the well being of children and teens, which legislators and supporters of this legalization very well have, was NEVER even a thought to them? This may be a revenue booster, but can you name me someone has has died directly from marijuana use? If you do, let me know. I'll give you tens of thousands of examples of alcohol killing. Either through overdose or misuse and driving, this is a completely legal substance that seems to be much more dangerous than this pant you grew up being told is so bad for you.
Just by your name, I can see you are just another old time thinker. I dont blame you, you grew up in an age that wanted you to smoke cigarettes because they would make you feel better and hell, you be cooler then John Wayne. People have lobbied against Marijuana for decades, you just happen to be a product of that society. Get with the times, look at the similarities between prohibition of alcohol and this new age prohibition. You might learn something.
If you think I am shortsighted for using and then proclaiming the positives of marijuana, you should look around. People all around you every day use it. People driving past you in your car, the person scanning your groceries at the supermarket, the people making and serving your food when you go to a restaurant, and even our politicians, all have used marijuana. Maybe they do not smoke anymore but they dont seem to be any worse off then they would have been if they never smoked.
OldTownie
5:27 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Directly? You want to play that game? Marijuana related deaths have been are are still reported as "accidental". your argument of "directly" is nothing more than a word game being played by the pro-legal lobby.
Let me ask you, If I get drunk, and crash my car into a jersey barrier and die. What is the cause of the accident? Alcohol? The jersey barrier? Oh, I know, the car is at fault.
Want to compare smoking cigarettes with pot? Really? 118 carcinogens in smoked marijuana compared to 55 in tobacco.
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
5:38 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
OldTownie, lets see your sources.
And I challenge you to a contest. You drink alcohol. and drink. and drink. and drink. and keep drinking till you want to vomit. and keep drinking. blackout. keep drinking. You. Will. Die.
Ill smoke. and smoke and smoke and smoke, and the worst thing that will happen to me as I sit glued to my chair is I'm going to want to eat a whole supermarket of food and go to sleep. You are so hilariously out of your league in this argument its laughable.
I understand that if I smoke and wrap my car around a tree ill die. That's how life works. I'd love to argue this point in person so I could see the face of the ignorant sheep spouting drivel at my informed, science and common sense based opinion.
Local Bargain Jerk
7:18 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Dear "I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain":
-- I'd love to argue this point in person so I could see the face of the ignorant sheep
-- spouting drivel at my informed, science and common sense based opinion.
You seem pretty angry for a pothead. Are you sure that last blunt you fired up wasn't laced with PCP?
Mellow out, dude.
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
7:27 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Hey hey LBJ, I'm a norml (see what I did there), relaxed dude, I just happen to get a rise out of ignorance. I do not condone any PCP use, but if thats your cup of tea, do ya thang.
OldTownie
2:34 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Directly.
http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/113/4/e365.full.pdf+html
Govstench
5:01 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Legailizing "loco weed" goes back many decades. I can remember my father talking about this stuff when he was working at a Stokley's in Indiana. This weed gives you a buzz which may be different than getting a booze high. Either way, you are under the influence and will impair your ability to function. The government's desire to legalize it so they can tax it runs contrary with law enforcement desire to keep impaired people off the road. Where is the justice department, state police or the feds when these bills come before state panels for comment? What signal is being sent to the general public - it's ok now to get high if you pay the tax on it? I doubt the feds buy into that one with their "war on drugs still going on." For some people, not all, this permissiveness may lead people to more stronger drugs once the high wears off. This is where the great debate may restart. I guess we may be putting our youth at higher risk because the government can no longer afford to keep people locked up on drug charges!
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
5:30 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
"This weed gives you a buzz which may be different than getting a booze high." This quote is perfect for this discussion. Why is this plant, which grows from the ground, classified with heroin, cocaine, ecstasy and other felonious narcotics? A high effect, similar to being drunk, minus much of the aggressive, bar fight inducing behavior.
Although the youth of America is potentially at risk, the only way to make a difference is to regulate the product strictly (as with alcohol) and to educate minors on the dangers that are inherent with using a mind altering substance (see: ALCOHOL).
OldTownie
5:38 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
15% of US teens meet the criteria for alcohol abuse. So, we should should legalize pot. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. We did such a great job curtailing teen alcohol abuse, that we should throw another gallon of gasoline on the fire.
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
5:47 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
OldTownie. Once again, I implore you for your sources. Teens will drink. You admitted to as much in a previous post, BUT say you are "just fine" HA. Obviously, you have no more cards to play in this conversation.
But hey, while were at it, lets legalize hookers, crack, and all Mexicans are immediately citizens.
I have more useful info to write about if I had an equal to converse with, but I can see that resorting to your level of arguing is much, much more effective.
OldTownie
9:13 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
But smoked,
You said I am "so hilariously out of your league", you must know where I'm getting my information from. Someone as "smart" as you doesn't need my help finding information.
Grow up , Junior. Your pot use is showing.
Concerned Mother
2:00 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
LOOKS LIKE OLD MAN WINTER PUT YOU IN YOUR PLACE JUNIOR.
A Taxpayer
6:06 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Pot Dependence in Adolescence is Linked to a Long-Term Drop in IQ
http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/80beats/2012/08/29/pot-dependence-in-adolescence-is-linked-to-a-long-term-drop-in-iq/#.ULqMMmewWcU
"The most frequent users experienced the most damage. And cutting down on marijuana after adolescence did nothing to alleviate the decline."
Breeding a nation of idiots... quite literally.
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
6:45 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Does a alcohol user have long term effects from use? Or what about cigarette users?
Chris St Peter
7:30 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Poop
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
7:34 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
I second that poop.
Anon
10:18 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
poop x3
Nancy Arnold Devaney
7:48 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
For those of you looking for the sources for some of the assertions in this blog:
Teen Use Skyrockets. In 1979, after 11 states legalized marijuana, the United States saw the highest rates, 51%, of marijuana use in history by teenagers. States with medical marijuana programs had an increase in marijuana use not seen in other states. Source: US DOJ, DEA, “Speaking out against legalization,” p47, May 2003 and Foulkes, Imogen, “Ten years on from Needle Park,” February 4, 2002, see: www.swissinfo.ch.
More Drivers Drive Stoned. Marijuana is the most prevalent illegal drug detected in impaired drivers, fatally injured drivers, and motor vehicle crash victims. It has also been reported that after Colorado relaxed their marijuana laws in 2006, drivers who tested positive for marijuana in fatal car crashes doubled between 2006 and 2010. Source: http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/drugged-driving
Weed Lowers IQs. A recent study found that those who used cannabis heavily in their teens and continued through adulthood showed a permanent drop in IQ of 8 points. A loss of 8 IQ points could drop a person of average intelligence into the lowest third of the intelligence range. Source: M.H. Meier, Avshalom Caspi, et al. 2012. “Persistent cannabis users show neuropsychological decline from childhood to midlife.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
8:00 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
-In 1979, after 11 states legalized marijuana, the United States saw the highest rates, 51%, of marijuana use in history by teenagers. States with medical marijuana programs had an increase in marijuana use not seen in other states.
Unless I'm just high, pretty sure its still illegal and always has been.
Chris St Peter
8:00 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Imagine How Smart I Would Have Been If I Had Never Inhaled.
Local Bargain Jerk
8:29 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Ms. Devaney:
With all due respect, are you kidding?
It's a simple matter to follow any of the links you provided above and the two that are widely available have NONE of the information cited in your article.
You said that "In 1979, after 11 states legalized marijuana, the United States saw the highest rates, 51%, of marijuana use in history by teenagers." To support this, you cited the article "Speaking out against legalization,” p47, May 2003 and Foulkes, Imogen, “Ten years on from Needle Park." For those wishing to follow up, the correct link isn't "www.swissinfo.ch" (as noted above), it is: http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/Home/Archive/Ten_years_on_from_Needle_Park.html?cid=2517882 .
The problem is, if you read the article, you'll quickly discover that it's not an article about 11 states legalizing marijuana, it's an article about "the ten years since the world’s most infamous haunt for addicts closed in Zurich", Switzerland. Did you think that none of us would check? Did YOU even check?
To support your claim that "after Colorado relaxed their marijuana laws in 2006, drivers who tested positive for marijuana in fatal car crashes doubled between 2006 and 2010", you provided this link: http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/drugged-driving .
Again, if you follow the link and search on "Colorado", "2006", and "crash", you come up with nothing. Nada. Bupkes. Why are you insulting everyone this way?
Continued in Part 2....
Local Bargain Jerk
8:30 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
....Continued from Part 1.
I tried to Google the article you cited for the last study, but I couldn't find a copy that didn't require me to take out "a subscription to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences." Given your track record, I didn't feel like signing up for another disappointment.
And it gets worse.
Earlier today, I tried to learn more about Ms. Devaney's group and points of view, so I took a look at the FAQ page at www.narragansettprevention.org. I noted a few problems with the "facts" presented there as well. For starters, any male who has ever has been to a Red Sox game and consumed 3.75 beers over the course of the game is a "binge drinker" by Ms. Devaney's group's definition. Would everyone here agree with that? I sure as shootin' don't.
I am sure that the 20 individuals who meet once a month in Narragansett to discuss these issues mean well. However, I have to think they don't necessarily concern themselves with facts or science.
The claims made in a Patch article like this might convince the converted but, the problem is, these aren't the people who need to be convinced. Worse, without presenting well-supported facts (or even facts supported by ANYTHING), an article like this simply emboldens those who might disagree.
In fact, I can hear Mr. "I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain" licking his chops already...
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
8:35 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Damn LBJ, I am sorry I may have misjudged you at first post (tips hat)
I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain
8:37 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
And as a follow up LBJ, I have brought this post/article/buttvomit up with the local SSDP chapter. They have drafted a post and submitted it to this esteemed news source, and I hope they will, in unbiased fashion, post it for all to read.
Dave F.
3:54 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Nice summary by LBJ. Well done......
Tired of NK antics
8:01 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
You can find similar studies outlining detrimental long-term effects of alcohol abuse, yet alcohol is legal.
Regardless of the vise, there will be certain personalities with a propensity to over-indulge or abuse.
Legalize it, regulate it and tax it. By doing so will reduce pot-related crime perpetrated by hoods and street-thugs.
Gunslinger
9:06 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
I think her source is from a movie called Reefer Madness.
Fed Up with Sheeple
9:21 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
If there was a LIKE button I would so like that post!
Fed Up with Sheeple
9:07 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
SWISSINFO??? Lady are YOU high? You are giving facts that are inaccurate. Allow me to educate you...Cannabis was prohibited in 1937 Pharmacies fought to keep this wonderdrug and did't stop until 1942 when t was removed from the Pharmacopeia . In 1970 The Controlled Substances Act created a system to classify controlled substances. In In 1971 Nixon declared war on drugs ( which has been continued by several stupid presidents one of the most unsuccessful wastes of money to date) In 1978 a HANDFUL of patients were given the ok to use cannabis medically. A HANDFUL OF PEOPLE not states.
The first state go go against Federal law was in California 1996, although it was legalized in San Francisco in 91. Several studies have been done on the subject of the medical aspects of marijuana and synthetic cannabis has been used to help treat cancer since the 70s. The American Lung Association were not allowed to publish their findings when the US government asked them to do a 20 year study on the negative effects of cannabis use. Their findings showed more good than bad.
The silly lower IQ theory is as laughable as the marijuana kills brain cells propaganda Listed below are some of the slack jawed potheads with lowered IQs
Stephen King-author
Ted Turner-Billionare media mogal
Michael Phelps-Olympic Gold medalist
Steve Jobs_co creator of Apple
Dr Francis Crick-NOBEL PRIZE WINNER
Oliver Stone-director
Robert Lewis Carol-Author
Fed Up with Sheeple
9:19 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
How about political cannabis users...
YOUR CURRENT PRESIDENT Obama
G dub Bush
Bill Clinton
Micheal Bloomburg
Arnold Shwartzenagger
Pierre Elliot Trudeau, Former Prime Minister of Canada
Newt Gingrich
Senator John Kerry
Jesse Ventura
Emperor Shen-Nung
Emperor Liu Chi-nu
I could keep this list going all day long with artists like Picaso and playwrites like Sondhime physicists and other scientists so on and so on and so on.
DON'T Be a SHEEPOLE, educate yourselves.
frmr resident
9:13 am on Sunday, April 7, 2013
Yes,,, people who have real world experience.
“[The APHA] encourages research of the therapeutic properties of various cannabinoids and combinations of cannabinoids, and...urges the Administration and Congress to move expeditiously to make cannabis available as a legal medicine.”
American Public Health AssociationOldest and Most Diverse Organization of Public Health Professionals in the World
http://marijuanamajority.com/?id=424
Local Bargain Jerk
9:17 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Dear I Smoked Weed And Didnt Lose My Brain:
-- Damn LBJ, I am sorry I may have misjudged you at first post
The lesson would be that you shouldn't judge people. Having looked at the "SSDP" website, I can assure you that I am trying to follow my own advice.
Naome Lixes
3:32 pm on Sunday, December 2, 2012
FYI - there are certainly some aspects of human behavior that even a confiremed reprobate such as Hitchens considered criminal. Those, typically, involved forcible coercion of minors. Libertine as he was, he did not condone crimes against another person...
http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=library&page=hitchens_22_3
JoBobDing
12:39 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
No one belongs in jail for smoking pot. It's ridiculous. No one should have their future destroyed because they had a youthful indiscretion. Cops today will not hesitate to ruin the future of a teen for any minor infraction. Long gone are the days when a kid would get in trouble and cops would drive the kid to his parent’s house for some stern punishment vice booking them in jail and giving them a permanent criminal record for life. If you think your kid is immune to smoking pot or getting a permanent criminal record in their file, you are living in fantasy land. Yes, I smoked pot when I was a teen. Today, I am a very successful business man. Not because of pot, but in spite of pot. Legalize it and tax it.
Yvette M Ayotte
6:49 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
I'm with you, JoBobDing!!
Concerned Mother
1:57 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
My son turned gay after smoking weed! Please include this in your fact sheet!
RIRider
7:14 pm on Sunday, December 9, 2012
LOL!!!! Is that what he told you?
Please tell me you're joking!!!
TenRodTownie
4:40 pm on Thursday, December 13, 2012
If smoking weed makes teenage boys gay, then this would help reduce teen pregnancy...lol
Denise
6:45 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
The 60's 70's were the decades of Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll, so it only stands to reason that there would eb an increase of teenagers smoking pot! Heck, there was an increase in adults using drugs!
Medical marijuana should be available to people that want to smoke it. It's OK for big Pharma to push their pills, many of which have much more serious side effects than smoking a joint. Teens are raiding their parents medicine bottles and driving impaired now. Maybe if they started testing every driver involved in a serious accident for ALL drugs, you would be shocked at what they would find. But that's OK just let big Pharma keep pushing their pills, after all they are legal!
Yvette M Ayotte
6:48 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
Really? I smoked pot as a teen and now I haven't used it in years, don't even want to. I don't feel that this is a gateway to drugs at all. In fact, the narcotics that sick people take for pain, vicodin, etc., are all drugs that we can get addicted to. I feel first and formost that pot should be legalized for the very ill, they should have access to what is best for THEM. Secondly, no teenager should be smoking it!!! Let's put restrictions on the stuff like we do alcohol. This stuff is no more addictive than the drugs out there now and alcohol. Legalize this stuff and let the potheads out of jail, imagine the money we could save and the room left for the hardened crimanals! We sure could use this stuff to make paper, rope, clothes, etc. We could put a lot of people to work and imagine the money it would generate!! Too many close-minded people out there and no brainers to come up with ideas to make it all work.
Joe Sousa.
7:39 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
The problem with Illegal drugs is the Black Market that deals them. Organized crime profits from it then the Taxpayers pick up the bill for law enforcement and incarceration. It has become clear it is a loosing battle since many desire the drugs.
Maybe it's time we look in other directions .
By Brian Vastag
5 Years After: Portugal's Drug Decriminalization Policy Shows Positive Results
Street drug–related deaths from overdoses drop and the rate of HIV cases crashes
Lily
1:17 pm on Sunday, December 2, 2012
Absolutely. The situation in Mexico is dire and it is creeping over our border. Google narcoterrorism. We can either continue sending the money over the border to murderous gangs or we can tax it and allow our own citizens to grow it safely and regulate it. Marijuana is everywhere, just like alcohol- even moreso, as I never saw booze in school but knew several kids who would sell weed in the hallways. As a parent you have to know where your child is and set up the expectations for behavior. Alcohol is a much more dangerous substance by any measure and none of us are lobbying to make it illegal. One other question about the car accidents- was there an actual increase in car accidents themselves, or just the amount of drivers with marijuana in their system? Correlation doesn't equal causation. I'm sure after the popularity of prescriptions for ADD and depression there was an increase of drivers with Ritalin and Prozac in their bloodstream but this is not proof that those substances were the cause of more frequent accidents. I'm not saying I believe marijuana is a healthy, great thing for kids to do. I'm saying the benefits of legalizing it vastly outweigh the risks.
Joe Sousa.
7:44 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
Drug Decriminalization in Portugal: Lessons for ... - Cato Institute
www.cato.org/pubs/wtpapers/greenwald_whitepaper.pdf
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View
by IN PORTUGAL - Cited by 49 - Related articles
usage “decriminalized.” In Spain, for instance,. “a drug consumer will still be judged by a crim- inal court, although he or she will never be sent to prison for drug ...
b kcaj
7:48 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
Joe-You seem to have a keen knowledge of crime and the criminal justice system. Did you attain this knowledge when you attended law school or did you attain it when living in Cranston?
Inquiring minds want to know.
Nard Glimrod
8:03 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
b kcaj:
Was this really necessary?
I'm often among the first to call out Joe Sousa. when he makes some tenuous claim or other. In this case, however, he made a thoughtful post supported by good data. Why attack him as you did? This kind of post should be encouraged, for Joe and everyone else on Patch.
Thanks for the links Joe Sousa. I'll be checking them out.
Naome Lixes
7:55 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
How I hate it when I agree with Joe Sousa.
The originating poster has ginned up bogus support for her Calvinist position on what amounts to a recreational drug. The ONLY reason to keep marijuana a banned substance is if prisons need filling.
Like any other psychotropic - operating heavy equipment under the influence is
punishable by prison time, but for reasons of public safety alone.
This reeks of an unspoken jealousy for the harmless fun someone else has,
it's time to open the windows and order a pizza (or twelve).
“Nothing optional—from homosexuality to adultery—is ever made punishable unless those who do the prohibiting (and exact the fierce punishments) have a repressed desire to participate. As Shakespeare put it in King Lear, the policeman who lashes the whore has a hot need to use her for the very offense for which he plies the lash.”
― Christopher Hitchens, God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
Nard Glimrod
9:42 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
This is a side issue, but due to my own personal failings, I can't let it rest....
“Nothing optional—from homosexuality to adultery—is ever made punishable unless those who do the prohibiting (and exact the fierce punishments) have a repressed desire to participate."
Hitchens skillfully masked his argument's weak premise with a bit of Shakespeare, but the words "nothing" and "ever" aren't supportable, i.e., how does Hitchens (or anyone) know this with any degree of certainty? To skip ahead to the next line in Lear, I'd have to say that Hitchens is a bit of a cozener himself.
There's another Hitchens quote which applies equally to Nancy Devaney's article, Hitchens' words above, and about 70% of the posts on Patch: “That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
Naome Lixes
1:11 pm on Sunday, December 2, 2012
Far be it for me to claim that Hitchen's was thorough, I felt he could be inaccurate and cover lapses with erudition - yet the central notion remains; the most violent protestations seem to come from people that are no fun at parties.
These tend to be the same people snared in scandals, at a later date.
Puritanism: the haunting fear that somehow, somewhere, someone is happy.
--H. L. Menken
NK Parent
11:00 am on Sunday, December 2, 2012
After reading through this whole discussion I'm not surprised we haven't heard from Nancy Arnold Devaney again. :)
I agree with all the others who have voiced their support for cannabis legalization. I smoked a bit of it 20-25 years ago and it's as harmless (or harmful) as perfectly legal alcohol. I have no problem with the government regulating it, limiting age use, taxing it, punishing people who drive while intoxicated by it, etc. but complete prohibition in this day is ridiculous and a HUGE waste of money and resources.
Naome Lixes
1:12 pm on Sunday, December 2, 2012
That's the crux of it, Reverend - the amount of money spent on incarceration.
In a country looking to cut expenditures, this is a cheap place to start.
Archieyo
6:19 pm on Sunday, December 2, 2012
No sweat. You can just go to the gas station and get synthetic weed or bath salts. Legal, FYI. I would much rather people be smoking weed.
Get the Facts
7:32 am on Monday, December 3, 2012
Marijuana is listed as a Schedule Class I drug (no medically proven efficacy and highly addictive). Cocaine is listed as a Schedule Class II drug as is Demerol, Fentanyl, Oxycodone and Percocet. (medically proven efficacy and highly addictive). You mean to tell me that Marijuana is more addictive than these drugs? Really? The only reason that Marijuana is a Schedule I drug is that big pharma doesn't have any control over it-except for Marinol which was shown to have more effects than Marijuana. (http://www.opposingviews.com/arguments/marijuana-s-classification-as-a-schedule-1-drug-has-no-basis-in-fact). Any drug has the potential for abuse but let's get our facts straight on what Marijuana actually does. You mean to tell me that Medical Marijuana has not helped thousands of cancer, chronic pain and chronic illness patients yet these patients are left to buy on the street? The above article has no basis in fact and is just more rhetoric. Sad. http://nationalsubstanceabuseindex.org/drugclass.htm
http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/schedules/index.html
RIRider
7:21 pm on Sunday, December 9, 2012
I had wayyyyy more trouble giving up cigarettes than I did giving up marijuana AND alcohol.....combined!
Nancy Arnold Devaney
4:38 pm on Monday, December 3, 2012
For all of you who are so diligently doing your homework I appreciate it and I realized that I pulled an incorrect reference. The quote that was incorrectly cited was taken directly from a Department of Justice publication called "Speaking Out Against Drug Legalization" on page 47. The quote is: "By 1979, after 11 states decriminalized marijuana and the Carter administration had considered federal decriminalization, marijuana use shot up among teenagers. That year,
almost 51 percent of 12th graders reported they used marijuana in the last 12 months. By 1992, with tougher laws and increased attention to the risks of drug abuse, that figure had been reduced to 22 percent, a 57-percent decline." The reference from the publication (where I copied and pasted the incorrect source!) is Johnston, L.D., Bachman, J.G., and O’Malley, P.M., “Monitoring the Future: Questionnaire Responses from the Nation’s High School Seniors,” Institute for Social Research, 1992, page 327.
Hope that this helps.
Ted Geisel
9:03 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
But 1978 was when marijuana daily use peaked, right? So since we are ignoring pesky things like the difference between correlation and causation, wouldn't I be correct in saying that in 1979 after 11 states decriminalized marijuana that daily use with 12th graders actually went down? http://healthland.time.com/2010/12/14/federal-study-finds-teen-marijuana-use-up-binge-drinking-smoking-rates-down/ Daily use is the important number after all, according to you. So you seem to be making a very good case for decriminalization. I'm confused...
This is still a mystery: "Colorado relaxed their marijuana laws in 2006, drivers who tested positive for marijuana in fatal car crashes doubled between 2006 and 2010." You gave this source: http://www.drugabuse.gov/publications/drugfacts/drugged-driving No where on that page is Colorado even mentioned. Press Ctrl-F and do a search, Colorado isn't on the page.
So in 92 yearly use was 22%. By 97 it was back up to 38.5%. What happened in those 5 years? http://www.briancbennett.com/charts/mtf/12th/marijuana.htm
You're not really helping your cause coming on here and making things up and then making more things up as references.
Honestly I'm a little disappointed the Patch let this article on here. There should at least be a disclaimer to let people know you are writing a fictional work.
standarddeviation
5:52 pm on Monday, December 3, 2012
one more example of a lay person misinterpreting statistics and citing junk science/research. Weak correlation, poor quality exposure data, unaccounted for confounding risk factors, unclear biologic mechanisms...........
Politics Sheriff of NK
1:13 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
This explains it all...
http://youtu.be/_Twre6ItGEI
Anon
10:25 am on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Relax. The sky isn't falling. Amsterdam does pretty OK, so I think we'll survive, too.
OldTownie
2:00 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
New UCLA study says that recreational marijuana use doubles a mans chances at getting some forms of testicular cancer.
Naome Lixes
2:10 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Unofficial surveys say that use of marijuana doubles a man's chance at getting
some recreational use of his testicles.
Put that in your pipe, and smoke it.
Naome Lixes
2:11 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
My survey is uncited, and fictitious, too.
Cite your source, or it's more vaporware.
OldTownie
2:58 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Naome,
You can't find UCLA's study? Come on, Oh Queen of the Internet. that's an easy one.
Since when is it my job to do your research? Try this funny little thing called Google. Type in UCLA, and marijuana research and see what comes up.
Leave RI
4:52 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
That may be from some form of Pagan bong abuse....eeww
Naome Lixes
5:52 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Not only lazy, but out of touch.
Don't have the stones for it, since your younger days?
What was the hot Ford that year? Edsel? The Flintstone coupe'?
OldTownie
6:24 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Naome,
So you resort to insulting my work ethic and my age? Wow, you really know how to win an argument, don't you? The only vaporware I see around here is your pseudo intellectualism. Did your Mommy and Daddy tell you that you were the smartest person in the room? They lied.
Naome Lixes
7:11 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
This is the second incredible, unverifiable, citation-free SWAG you've posted as if
it were common knowledge. If you make an outrageous claim, shifting the burden of proof to your opposition is a logical fallacy. (Your claim is made with weak sauce.)
If you can't defend it, it's not convincing now - is it.
I meant no offense to my elders; I meant only to illustrate that it is difficult when a crank is lecturing on "today's kids" to sort out nostalgia from dementia. It's an honest mistake, made by those of us not drooling on our bibs in a corner.
(We can't hear the voices telling you Obama is an alien, either.)
Here's a thought - I'll stop poking fun at your idiocy and incompetence when you stop insulting our intelligence. M'kay?
OldTownie
9:29 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Naome,
It would be hard to insult your intelligence as I see no evidence of it in the first place.
You now state that a UCLA Medical Center study is an "outrageous" claim? Really? Never once did I signup to be your pet "fact checker". Nor do I see any value to myself of providing links to said study. If you don't want to look it up, don't.
Your constant attempt at belittling people with your lacking intellect, only shows just how far your delusions of grandeur go. Sorry, but you are not the smartest person in the room. Not even close.
Naome Lixes
6:37 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
"Nor do I see any value to myself of providing links to said study. If you don't want to look it up, don't. " You are certainly free to post trash, just as I am free to point out the inaccuracies, vagaries, misrepresentations and fabrications posted as fact.
If you're too lazy or inept to make citations, your shifting the burden of proof
to those that challenge baseless assertions as gleaned from email chain letters
and conspiracy sites. It's a common tactic of the most Conservative voices;
make an outrageous claim that covers lots of unspecified ground in an attempt
to force rational people to refute what amounts to a hot mess.
That sort of thing lead to the 2010 election debacle and a country in crisis.
Note that the words "may" and sample size are important distinctions between
definitive causes and extrapolations. Note also that the number of deaths from Testicular cancer in the US - roughly 360 men in America (out of 154M males)
odds of 4 million to 1. Not exactly an epidemic of risky behavior.
Lead, follow or get out of the way Gramps.
Leave RI
6:06 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Oh no in only 60 + comments it's succumbed to Cheech and Chong-wins theory.
Smartgirl
6:58 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Let's just all get high. Seriously then everyone would relax. Smoke weed. It's just a plant it's not an actual "drug". Get it right. Maybe all of you who don't smoke weed, should. In that case the world would actually be a better place because people wouldn't be nutcases.
Nate
8:45 pm on Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Yikes... the article itself was just basically made up from someone's opinion (being nice). It's really sad to me though that I think the intent may have been good but making up your mind then making up things to support your cause completely discredits you and other's who may share the same point of view (and maybe even done their homework)
All in all, we're wasting so much money, BILLIONS, to 'fight the war on drugs' which if governed properly could be a source of revenue for a struggling economy.
I just don't see the value of spending that kind of money on programs which have had little to no effect (anyone remember D.A.R.E?).
Tom
1:10 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
How come my comments keep getting deleted by Patch? I dont even insult people here.
Robert E
1:48 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Tom are your comments being deleted by Patch or by someone else? If three or more people flag a comment as inappropriate it is automaticly deleted. If you post a comment for or against an issue the other side can censor your comments by having 3 people on their side flag your comment.
Stephen Greenwell
3:23 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Hi Tom - I actually have no idea why your comments aren't showing up on the site. When I go through via my admin account, I can see them all, and they don't seem to be flagged. I'll send in a ticket to our helpdesk.
Naome Lixes
7:45 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
The best submissions are kept for private reading by the Mods.
:>
Joe Sousa.
6:29 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Opinions on this subject do seem to break down by age and experience. I have seen first hand how smoking weed causes work place injuries . I work in construction and hold a Class A drivers License . I take drug tests randomly and feel they impose on my civil rights . Then I see a guy who I know smokes at work cut his leg with a saw after smoking his lunch . I think to my self do I want a ten ton truck operated buy some one under the influence. I understand peoples concerns about this subject . I also know people use it every day and there are millions of them. I think drug treatment and education would have a larger effect than jail time . This problem really should be put on the front burner and addressed.
Naome Lixes
7:42 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
OUI is already on the books.
Drug testing for heavy equipment operators is a sensible precaution -
particularly those plying public roads. It's not a private issue, when there
are other people involved.
Gerald Fundy
7:06 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
requiredMessage:
We can’t make pot legal. Middletown cops will have nothing to do. I do have to laugh; I read an article recently where the DEA says there's a "Nexus" between drugs and terrorism. So I guess that means the American people support terrorists. In other words, the DEA thinks the American people are the enemy. Imagine that, our own government thinks we are the enemy. I never would have guessed that joint I smoked many years ago would lead up to 9-11. Now I know. I think I hear a drone flying over my house.
Naome Lixes
7:40 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
" In other words, the DEA thinks the American people are the enemy. Imagine that, our own government thinks we are the enemy."
That's a fallacy, affirming the consequent.
This kind of grand, inattentive, sweeping generalization is not logic.
It's the opposite; you're parsing data for support rather than illumination.
It's like saying the ATF knows that gun runners are selling weapons across the border. Registered firearms are being sold to gun runners. These weapons
are used to kill by Mexican gangs.
Therefore, licensed gun owners are supporting Mexican gang wars.
It's just plain lazy.
PS - If you hear a "drone" are you anywhere near the municipal airport?
There must be another yacht race in Newport...
Bill
11:47 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
For what it's worth, there is a direct link from poppy-based drugs (heroin) to terrorists. Afghanistan is one of the leading growers of opium-poppies in the world. There are also indirect links to pretty much every other illegal drug. Most of those links are due to the fact that criminals need to interact with other criminals. Specifically, distribution, manufacture, money laundering, etc. are shared between terrorists and South/Central American producers.
Tom
12:16 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Bill, this is a self-fulfilling prophecy. The DEA has to justify their existence despite their dismal performance. They do this by creating a boogeyman called the terrorist. While illegal drug profits may be used to fund terrorists, the only reason illegal drugs are profitable in the first place is because the government has made them illegal. You don’t see many terrorists buying rifles with the sale of baby aspirin. I actually saw an add that proclaims pirated movies and pirated music support terrorists. Hell, we might as well label banks as terrorist supporters because they pay interest on all the terrorist’s cash deposits. The DEA will NEVER win the war on drugs yet we continue to spend billions every year to fund them fighting a ruse. Decrimalize Pot and Tax it. It’s long overdue.
Bill
9:01 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Tom,
I don't disagre. If, worldwide, all drugs were legal, there would be no need to have an armed militia-style DEA and terrorists wouldn't likely be linked to drugs. I was merely pointing out that there are, in fact, direct and indirect links from drugs to terrorists.
Chris Heaton
8:51 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
This was a timely posting on a blog I follow:
"Tonight sees the London premiere of groundbreaking new documentary ‘Breaking The Taboo’. (Available on youtube on Dec. 7th)
Narrated by Oscar winning actor Morgan Freeman, the film produced by Sam Branson follows The Global Commission on Drug Policy and their mission to break the political taboo over the US led War on Drugs."
There's more information, brief summary of statistics and a trailer here: http://www.virgin.com/people-and-planet/blog/breaking-premiers-london-tonight
Anon
9:43 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Personally, I think that most people who want to keep marijuana illegal are less concerned about safety and more concerned about maintaining a society that focuses on retributive justice - so they can feel good about themselves as they sit atop their moral pedistals.
As one person commented above, jail is not an effective means of maintaining public safety (except, perhaps in some extreme cases - like serial killers). It's not even an effective means of prevention, according to some studies I've read on the theory of punishment (which I'm not going to cite - look them up yourself if you wish). Education would work much better than retribution to produce both safety and prevention.
OldTownie
12:25 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
So you would remove personal responsibility from the argument. Let's not send offenders to jail, let's re-educate them. Hmmmm. Ok. Like they do with Domestic abuse, send them to class so they learn the error of their ways. Except the recidivism rate for domestic violence hovers around 60%. So, I'm thinking education doesn't work. Let's just remove all the consequences, then everyone can be happy.
Naome Lixes
6:34 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
"Except the recidivism rate for domestic violence hovers around 60%."
- OldTownie
This article is about marijuana use. You're making a false equivocation (again).
Conflating usage of a recreational drug with battery is just stupid.
"So, I'm thinking education doesn't work."
Every time you post here, you prove that particular adage.
" Let's just remove all the consequences, then everyone can be happy."
That must really chap your hide, Gramps. The kids are having fun.
It must be difficult to be alive today, and old enough to remember inventing rope.
Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.
- H. L. Mencken
Tom
12:24 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Ha, that was pretty funny Naome Lixes. Thanks for the laugh. It seems if OldTownie had his way, we would still be throwing virgins into volcanoes. It's this kind of thinking that is bringing the Catholic Church to it's knees (pardon the pun). Out with the old, in with the new. The times (high) are a changin'
Dave F.
9:44 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
As thing are currently configured, it's society's resources & tax money that is "suffering" MORE than the individuals who make the decision to smoke, snort, drink or inject the substance(s). We've been fighting & funding an unsuccessful "War on Drugs" for 50 years & we're not ONE INCH closer to winning it. Rather than FIGHTING substance(s) that a percentage of the population obviously wants, let's (as a culture) redirect those vast resources to REWARD folks who choose NOT TO. And, because young people can then clearly see the difference, we don't have to "educate" them to the dangers. The dangers become clearly obvious. Your life will be rotten. Then why would they make that choice?
As for deregulation/decriminalization creating a price drop and an "explosion in usage", I respectfully disagree. Folks who WANT it will break any law & pay any price to acquire the substance. Folks who don't want it, don't (IMHO) abstain because of laws or price. Do you believe people abstain from murder or rape because it's illegal, or because it's contrary to their internal moral compass? I don't stop at stop signs because it's illegal to go through them. I stop because going through them can/will get me KILLED!
Ted Geisel
10:07 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
So this guy distributes kiddie porn of an 8 year old and gets 3 years probation. http://narragansett.patch.com/articles/uri-student-to-serve-probation-for-kiddie-porn-possession
This guy grew pot and will serve a year in the ACI and 4 years probation. http://narragansett.patch.com/articles/jamestown-narragansett-man-sentenced-to-year-for-marijuana-grow
Does that make sense to anyone?
Dave F.
11:12 am on Wednesday, December 5, 2012
It "makes sense" because nothing here "makes sense".....
Joe Sousa.
5:33 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012
The Money drugs provide has created the Gangs and Organized crime we see today. If it was not against the law prices would plummet. Till we realize the problem crime will continue to rise. Some blame it on the criminals. I blame it on the antiquated laws we live under. It is clear that people want these drugs and they are plentiful. The murders and robberies that take place are caused buy our inability to rectify this problem with proper solutions.
2.3 million people in prison at a cost of $33 thousand per inmate We need a solution that works.
Naome Lixes
6:25 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Stop making sense, Joe.
You're upsetting the balance of the Universe.
b kcaj
7:15 am on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Well put Naome!!!
Paulie10
12:12 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
I got news for all of you..... Teens and people in general have and will always smoke marijuana.Spare me bogus stats and quotes.It is no more a "gateway drug" than tobacco and alcohol.
OldTownie
12:27 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
To many people are violating the law, so the answer is to remove the law.
Everyone should be allowed to drive drunk.
NK Parent
12:31 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Is it possible for you to make a single comment without invoking a straw man?
OldTownie
12:43 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Is my premise wrong?
NK Parent
12:51 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Yes. NOBODY is advocating that everyone should be allowed to drive drunk.
OldTownie
1:27 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
No, your advocating the legalization of a controlled substance. Your argument is that it costs too much to enforce prohibition and that marijuana is as safe (or unsafe) as alcohol.
And we all know what a great job, we as a nation, have done in the responsible use of alcohol, right? So let's add another substance for us to abuse. Some studies indicate that the alcohol abuse price tag at close to 250B a year in economic costs in the US. How much do you think legalization will cost? Lost productivity, jobsite injuries, MV accidents...start adding it up. More than 17B? That's last years cost for the "War on Drugs".
NK Parent
1:43 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
You sure do like to quote "studies" :)
TAMORI
1:49 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Old Townie,
Yes, your premise is wrong. If you are smoking pot…that doesn’t really affect me. But if you’re driving drunk…that can affect/kill me. So, get rid of the pot law and keep the drunk driving law. We’re spending so much money keeping pot illegal. Legalize it and tax it just like alcohol and tobacco so that it’s a revenue source instead of an expenditure.
Ted Geisel
2:10 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
You know marijuana is already out there, right? People can abuse it and drive high right now.
The idea that because some people will abuse it we should treat everyone like a criminal seems poor at best, no?
What's the cost on people's lives who have a pot conviction on their record and are unemployed or underemployed as a result? What is the cost in lives of people who die in the drug trade? I bet that would add up too.
Depends on your definition of Harmless. Here is JAMA saying that pot has no effects on the lungs and increases lung capacity. http://yourbrainonbliss.com/Blog/?p=1621
Here is JAMA again: http://blog.norml.org/2012/01/10/jama-long-term-exposure-to-cannabis-smoke-is-not-associated-with-adverse-effects-on-pulmonary-function/ “What we found instead was no association at all, and even a suggestion of some protective effect” among marijuana smokers who had lower incidences of cancer compared to non-users."...“Our findings suggest that occasional use of marijuana … may not be associated with adverse consequences on pulmonary function.”
Naome Lixes
6:38 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
That's the best argument you can make - setting up a false equivocation, again?
You've got all day, with nothing to do, and this is what you post?
Operating Under the Influence is already on the books.
OldTownie
1:31 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
New research confirms that marijuana is a gateway drug for most teens who use it.
Some will tell you marijuana is a harmless drug, but the Journal of the American Medical Association isn't one of them.
Young people who smoke marijuana are two to five times more likely to move on to harder drugs. That is the formal opinion of researchers, who published their conclusions from a recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
Ted Geisel
2:11 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Lynn Zimmer, PhD, Professor Emeritus at Queens College at the City University of New York, stated in his 1997 book Marijuana Myths - Marijuana Facts:
"In the end, the gateway theory is not a theory at all. It is a description of the typical sequence in which multiple-drug users initiate the use of high-prevalence and low-prevalence drugs.
A similar statistical relationship exists between other kinds of common and uncommon related activities. For example, most people who ride a motorcycle (a fairly rare activity) have ridden a bicycle (a fairly common activity). Indeed, the prevalence of motorcycle riding among people who have never ridden a bicycle is probably extremely low. However, bicycle riding does not cause motorcycle riding, and increases in the former will not lead automatically to increases in the latter.
Nor will increases in marijuana use lead automatically to increases in the use of cocaine or heroin."
OldTownie
2:36 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Ok, I'll play.
The US Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), stated in an Aug. 28, 2002 press release about SAMHSA's report; "Initiation of Marijuana Use: Trends, Patterns and Implications:"
"A new federal report released today concludes the younger children are when they first use marijuana, the more likely they are to use cocaine and heroin and become dependent on drugs as adults...
Increases in the likelihood of cocaine and heroin use and drug dependence are also apparent for those who initiate use of marijuana at any later age."
Aug. 28, 2002 - Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)
Tim
4:13 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
I wonder what the numbers would be if you substituted cigarettes for marijuana. I bet the instances of using harder drugs is even higher among those who smoked cigarettes first. Just saying...
Naome Lixes
6:47 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Old Townie uses a 2002 study without significant references to scale or scope -
Sample size? Total numbers? Quantification of "increases"?
(Here's the part where you fluff off any challenge and say - read it yourself.)
Face it - you don't have a dog in the fight and you're bored.
Tom
12:35 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
OldTownie, "A new federal report released today..." Have you considered the source? What did you think the federal report was going to say, Pot is ok? All the federal law enforcement agencies would be out of a job. Would you believe it if the federal government told you there are WMD's in Iraq? Ooops, never mind.
It is what it is
1:21 pm on Thursday, December 13, 2012
It is what it is
10:38 am on Thursday, December 13, 2012
@OldTownie
I didn't really want to weigh in on this but it really bothers me when people take studies and spout them off as fact. Here is just one example of another study proving how biased the claim that "marijuana is a gateway drug" is. If your going to use random studies to back up your arguments you should at least be aware that many studies are biased and those that are published in regard to government/social/economic factors often have an agenda. Science is an evolving field, and studies are just that...studies, they are/can/will be subject to change with a different study from a different angle.
PROBLEMS WITH MARIJUANA GATEWAY THEORY
The marijuana gateway theory suggests that only marijuana use contributes to the subsequent use of other drugs. The research needed to confirm this theory is, unfortunately, an impossibility. Unlike research on animals in a laboratory, human environmental influences cannot be controlled. Therefore any attempt to prove that marijuana use alone will result in a progression to illicit drugs, is doomed from the start. Subjects for this study lacking any previous environmental, social, or cultural influences will never be found. Ultimately, the biopsychosocial perspective limits the viability of the marijuana gateway theory as an accurate approach to understanding marijuana’s effects on illicit drug use.
http://healthpsych.psy.vanderbilt.edu/MARIJUANAGATEWAY.htm
NK Parent
4:54 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Here's a nice counter-argument made by Virgin founder Richard Branson:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/06/opinion/branson-end-war-on-drugs/index.html?iref=allsearch
Albert Cabestany
5:04 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Richard Branson is a NUT, too.
Naome Lixes
6:41 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Richard Branson is a billionaire GENIUS nut who is 1/3 Helium.
That doesn't make him wrong about this.
Albert Cabestany
4:57 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Here's blood on your hands.....Mexico has experienced 10,000 related murders each year for at least the past decade for marijuana deaths related to U.S. demand. It has NO medical value whatsoever, and for those who claim they get hungry? It's because it attacks your central nervous system and makes you THINK your hungry. It should not be legalized and, even if the government legalized it and gave it away for FREE! I would not waste one minute of my time with it.
Tom
12:48 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
No blood on my hands Albert. Personally, I dont smoke Ganja, but I support those who want to. The blood is on the hands of people that insist Pot should be outlawed, which makes Pot a very lucrative business for bad guys. I hope you can sleep at night.
Naome Lixes
8:01 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
"It's because it attacks your central nervous system and makes you THINK your hungry." -Albert
Cite your source. That sounds like "truthiness" - something you believe, rather
than something you can prove. There IS a difference.
FYI - The cash crop for Mexican gangs is cocaine, not marijuana.
"Mexico has experienced 10,000 related murders each year for at least the past decade for marijuana deaths related to U.S. demand."
That's sort of the point in ending the prohibition, Genius.
You do remember Al Capone, doncha?
http://www.albany.edu/~wm731882/organized_crime1_final.html
http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2010/04/us-strategy-against-mexican-drug-cartels-flawed-and-uncertain
" It should not be legalized and, even if the government legalized it and gave it away for FREE! I would not waste one minute of my time with it."
That's a personal choice, which costs the taxpayer nothing.
Interdiction of marijuana use, sales and cultivation has done what for the taxpayer?
Ed
5:09 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Legalize it, period! Look at the facts here, the use is out of control and we are making the drug lords rich to no end.
We can put farmers to work growing, processing plants to package, and put the Mexican drug lords out of business. This puts Americans to work and generates tax revenue.
JOBS, JOBS, JOBS... Something our government fails at miserably...
no regr allia b
5:39 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
By the way, legalizing alcohol did nothing to stop those who produce it from continuing to make it except they became legal companies not to be raided by feds. You really think druglords are not involved in legal entities just like the mob was and they would not continue to produce. Only difference here would be if it was legal for you to grow it. Which is not discussed either. As with any product that can be sold to the public there will have to be regs for that also. Not as simple as you say to just legalize it.
no regr allia b
5:41 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
By the way Moonshine is still illegal most everywhere because of the danger of people who have no regulation oningredients and can kill you if not made right.
no regr allia b
5:09 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Sorry this will be a quite a few post long as this topic is far from simplistic in my opinion. So I thought I would give you some things I never see discussed on this topic for the most part.
Part 1
First and foremost I am in full support of legal medical maryjane. On the full legalization I have asked people many times on both sides of the issue these questions which I do see answered nor have a clue how you would do it. I foresee a very troubling slippery slope in the legal arena. Well it will be an economic boom for trial lawyers; I doubt it will be the boom in tax revenue. People say it but no figures have ever been addressed that can show it I have found? Just my opinion on that.
Problems I see with it is that alcohol does not have are these. If smoking and a baby or child is in the room is that child abuse. We all know that getting a child stoned intentionally is a crime and DCYF can remove the child. Now the problem. As with the second hand smoke theory there is ample evidence that if you are in the same room someone is smoking pot in, the chances are very good you will become stoned especially with the quality of it now. It does not matter if you don’t want to be stoned, you will be. Much more refined and potent then the 60’s.
no regr allia b
5:21 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Forgot to add that this is also all the problem that would come with each individual drug legalzed if you did as many libertarians say legalize all drugs. All the same problems arise with that. Unless all of these and the many others problems people can think up, it is a legal and social nightmare to me with n answer to many of the problems we can all come up with. Not so simplistic now is it ;-}.
Ed
5:26 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Dear "no".. What planet are you from? What parent will allow guests to even smoke cigarettes in the same room as their baby? What idiots out there would even light up anything with a baby in the room. We have a boat load of laws in place to protect people from second hand smoke and your point is... those don't count?
I don't like the stuff, wouldn't use it, but you don't even come close to making a valid point!!!
no regr allia b
5:30 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Ed I dont know it the rest of the post have come up as they say they are pending. But you missed the point on the homes totally. Just one parent smoking it, There are no laws on pot smoke which is not considered to cause cancer like cigs or cause any other health problem.
no regr allia b
5:34 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Ed you are also missing the point that I am looking at it from legal repercussions not the pot itself but how to regulate it as it obviously would have to be just like alcohol except it is airborn. There lays the rub. You can ignore my opinions on it but the fact remains all of that will have to be addressed at somepoint in the legalization process.
Ed
7:18 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
No, I didn't miss your point... We don't need laws against ignorance. If people smoke cigarettes in front of babies, they are already smoking pot in front of them, period. You and I will not stop that. Our culture does breed that and no matter what the laws are, it will be violated. I'm sure that if legalized, laws would be similar to cigarette smoking. Wake up and smeel the coffee, ignorance can't be fixed, no matter how many laws.
no regr allia b
7:33 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
You are missing the point ED. You can say you cannot make laws on ignorce but the facts are that we have millions of laws and regulation doing just that. Read a label on almost everything. Have skull and crossbones on bleach. Then on top of that "do not drink" duh. On the Empire State Build the obvservation deck had a sign last time I was there " Do not climb over safety fence injury may result" It was in 5 languages.
Again my point is what at least I feel will happen is those people who think they can legislate stupidity will. They always do. See any self-responsibility around today for the most part. Nothing is anyones fault anymore. Take the Foorball players a week ago. Was it his fault. No it was the gun. Then one of the stupidest things ever said. Bob Costas. "If he did not have a gun they would be alive". No kidding Bob. Duh again.
Also my point is this stuff would be used exactly how my examples are explained. There is no doubt in my mind it will happen. It always does when government/lawyers gets involved and looks for more ways to fleece more money out of citizens. Do you really think none of my examples will happen? You see it in the media every day. Do you know that fed/state/local government agencies in this Country produce 10's of 1,000's of regulations every day in this Country. Blue laws will be back in force all over the place also. May not be right but when is the government very right?
Tom
1:02 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Winner: Ed. "We don't need laws against ignorance". That is so true it hurts. Sorry no regr allia b, your arguments are non sequitur.
no regr allia b
4:13 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Sorry Tom, but they are not arguments or illogical. They are the history of governments involvement in regulating the private citizens in society with the old "for the good of the people". Our history shows this all to be true and it has gotten progressivly worse in recent decades with many freedoms lost. This to will happen with this you can depend on it.
I support Medical pot and really could care less about anyone who smokes it as long as it does not impact me personally. What people do with their lives is thier business as long as they only affect thiers. If you think none of the senario's I posted will not come to pass, then you can not be that old or have forgotten the past.
Pot was declared illegal in I think it was 1939, and the government went on a campaign of terrorto demonize it (wrongly in my opinion). But it worked and is still being used today. The movie "reefer Madness" which I have a copy of ;-} is 2 things. One of the most comical movies ever made and one of the most scarey of propoganda by our government to dupe the populace and deny people the right of free will.
If I thought for one minute, nothing of what I wrote wouyld come to pass through lawyers/government, I would say legalize it totally. But as a pessimist of government intervention I know those senario's will come to pass. I agree you cannot legislate to stop stupidity. If you could our government would be geniuses lol. We all know hey they could screw up a ------ dream ;-} and will.
Joe Sousa.
7:00 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
There is a big difference between decriminalization and legal. I see a plan like Portugal's using as being much more effective . Dealers would still be subject to criminal prosecution. Marijuana to me is another story. I think it should be legal . People should be able to grow it if they chose. I don't see it as a hard drug like PCP, Barbiturates . or Amphetamines.
no regr allia b
7:15 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
I agree with that Joe as long as medical pot is regulated properly, what ever that would be. As for some saying gateway. I do not subscribe to that at all. Have know hundreds in my life who never went to anything harder except maybe alcohol. I think the reason for harder drugs is peer pressure more than anything else. The old "hey man your already doing drugs man, come on try this everybody is doing it. It is hard for many of the young to refuse this and well it is their own self-responsibility in doing it. It is very hard to resist in front of your friends. That is just the way it is. No answer to that I think either as everything has been done in my opinion that can be done on education of drugs of anykind. If they are foolish enough to go hard it is on them not socety.
no regr allia b
7:17 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Should add that "decriminalization"does take the perception of getting away with something and defience of the powers that be. This would greatly help the peer pressure I think. If I remember right pot use actually dropped there I think. Take away the stigma and it may become a fad.
b kcaj
8:42 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
Joe Sousa and Jack Baillargeron debating drug control policy-Not much different than Ernie and Bert discussing the theory of relativity.
If there were an award for Patch comedy, the back and forth between those two brain surgeons would win hands down.
Joe Sousa.
5:25 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
b kcaj The Town Clown . We can have a discussion with out your stupid comments . Can you comment with out being stupid?
RIRider
7:29 pm on Sunday, December 9, 2012
Nice addition to the conversation there b kcal. Well, maybe not now that I think about it.
DownTown
8:47 pm on Thursday, December 6, 2012
This blog post is complete dribble. Patch should delete it as it has no basis in reality.
Marijuana has been a civil fine in Massachusetts for a couple of years now and that State hasn't blown up. Police there don't like the law though. They have been arresting anyone they see passing a joint - calling it 'distribution' and using the smell as probable cause for warrantless searches. The State's Supreme Court will be ruling soon on 4 related cases.
The police prison industrial complex is the big loser with any movement towards legalization and they are the ones who fund crackpot studies.
Legalization breaks the link between marijuana and hard drugs which are truly dangerous. Marijuana will be sold & taxed in stores in Washington State in 2013.
Those stores will not try to sell cocaine and heroin to marijuana users.
Joe Sousa.
5:43 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
SEATTLE —
The crowds of happy people lighting joints under Seattle’s Space Needle early Thursday morning with nary a police officer in sight bespoke the new reality: Marijuana is legal under Washington state law.
Read more: http://www.tauntongazette.com/news/x1665845769/Smokers-celebrate-as-Wash-legalizes-marijuana#ixzz2EMTv5KrG
Gunslinger
9:05 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
The tipping point has finally been reached, under Washington law MJ is LEGAL, thank god it's about time.
I've never understood why MJ is so demonized.
Alcohol.....now there's a dangerous drug.
b kcaj
7:22 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Joe-Here's an idea for you: Instead of using the van you purchased to smuggle illegal cigarettes with no tax stamps into Rhode Island, why don't you take things a step further and start transporting marijuana from Washington to Rhode Island?
If you thought illegally smuggling cigarettes into the state and selling them at your social club was lucrative, imagine how much money you could make smuggling marijuana. You would be making so much money you would be able to quit your jobs banging nails and plowing snow.
kyle
9:41 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Over 36,000 Americans died last year in car accidents. If you think Marijuana should be illegal because it is dangerous, please walk to work and never drive again.
TAMORI
10:43 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Old Townie – You’re “gateway” argument doesn’t work.
“The proportion of students reporting using any illicit drug other than marijuana has been following a gradual decline for some years...”
Link to complete article - http://ns.umich.edu/new/multimedia/9-videos/20124-marijuana-use-continues-to-rise-among-us-teens-while-alcohol-use-hits-historic-lows
OldTownie
11:16 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
did you read the whole article? Or just the parts that "bolster" your argument?
"but has remained fairly stable over the most recent three years, with 2011 levels being similar to the 2008 levels"
And to quote Naome....the word ""may" was used an awful lot in it.
Ultimately, for every study that says "no correlation", there is an equal and opposite study that says "yes, there is". Same goes for health effects.
justsayyes
11:39 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
oldtownie - please explain the methodology used to prove the direct correlations you claim are scientifically sound. Every educated person knows direct correlation is very difficult to prove. How many analysis' and research studies have you conducted? By the way - the gov't can't even keep drugs out of prisions, never mind society. Just give up on your argument and never utter thr word correlation. You are insulting Intelligent people. I love the study from 1978 - very current
OldTownie
1:21 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
I will admit that direct correlation is difficult to prove. That does not, however, make the research conducted or the conclusions presented invalid. The Pro-legal lobby wants it both ways. Any research that refutes your beliefs is flawed. Any research that bolsters your beliefs, (and they are no more than beliefs) is proof positive that you are right. I am, and have been willing to look at both sides. I am a proponent of MM. I am not, in support of full legalization, but would be willing to support decriminalization.
To answer your question about my background, I have done more analysis than I care to remember over my career. I also fail to understand your line of thought that because someone has not conducted "research" they therefore don't understand them.
Bill
2:51 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Isn't this the same logic/approach which was used for ciggarettes? It was "proven" to be harmful back in the 50s. Then, it was "proven" to be healthy, then harmful, then inconsequential, then harmful, then healthy, etc. I'm sorry, but breathing ash and char and VOCs into your lungs from burning anything is harmful. To suggest that it is inocuous or even beneficial is just idiotic.
That said, I have no issue with people smoking pot just like I have no issue with people smoking cigarettes. You cannot begin to make the argument, though, on the basis of proof of harmful/healthful side effects. It IS harmful but probably no more harmful than unfiltered cigarettes.
Tom
11:46 am on Friday, December 7, 2012
Regardless of which side you're on with this subject, I don’t think there's any arguing that the War on Drugs is a complete failure. We seem to have learned that in Iraq and took appropriate action, and soon will do the same in Afghanistan. I'm surprised our Government hasn’t learned the War on Drugs is a disastrous failure as well. On second thought, no I'm not.
MVD
2:20 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Like it or not, marijuana will be legalized in all states. It's just a matter of time. You will probably see an increase in use, but this could be attributed to people acknowledging they smoke pot instead of lying about it. Look around you. You would be surprised at the amount of people you know, and probably think vey highly of, that smoke pot. Most of the arguments presented here against legalization are out of fear and understanding. If you don't approve, don't vote for it and don't smoke it.
TAMORI
3:00 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
MVD is right. Cops, school teachers, politicians…
Not that ‘everyone’ is doing it. But people from all walks of life are.
Joe Sousa.
3:39 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Even if it becomes legal people should refrain from using . Do you want your doctor smoking before an operation? Truck Drivers hauling freight in 18 wheelers down the highway. There has to be some control over it's use.
no regr allia b
4:38 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
True Joe. The problem I see as I statd above is how to determine the length of time before you are not stoned or considered impaired. Will be interesting to see how they can determine that and test for that in the field. For the life of me I cannot figure out how they would since it affects parts of the brain like alcohol does. However determining a level seems impossible right now anyway.
no regr allia b
4:40 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Read the link I posted. There is a case of a guy fired for using medical pot off the job but failing a job drug test. There are other cases listed in it also and still in court.
no regr allia b
4:20 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Like I said in one of my senario's. So it begins.
Story an hour ago from the AP "Legal pot complicates drug-free work policies"
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iO5W4GyYlb1K9TfWXJ8nMXiZm_Sw?docId=d655df6bd3e343ca87f659c12d819ade
Soon the lawsuits will begin. Not to mention the Fed crackdowns. Maybe we should have a nationwide vote to take it out of its foolish classification and put it in the same class as alcohol. That would solve it all. Then you could use most current laws and regulations. Though the driving under influence is still a problem with determining how to test if you used to much pot that makes you impaired in my opinion.
Robert E
11:05 am on Saturday, December 8, 2012
The company I work for just had a drug "education" meeting and informed everyone that the company policy on marijuana use has not changed. Even if you have a medical marijuana card from the state you will still be fired if you test positive. They said as long as federal law prohibits use the policy will not change.
Joe Sousa.
4:45 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
When working on the base we are subject to testing. The contract requires it. Companies with out a test policy are not eligible to bid. The Federal law would have to change before local laws will lax on testing, Companies can still require testing even if the State says it's legal
no regr allia b
9:05 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
Quite right Joe. The same will happens with Federal Highway funds the States get, you can bet that will be enforced also. Also none of this will ever succeed as long as it is in the Federal classification with Heroin cocain etc. Federal law trumps State law. Just ask Arizona and every other State that Holder keeps suing when they pass a State law that conflicts with Federal. Though this Administration is very selective in that.
We must also look at the fact that the people have lost so many rights in the last decade because of Government intervention into State rights, why would this be any different? It will not. I agree with Albert that what is coming down the pike makes this pale in comparison. We are headed straight for a show down between the Government and the very fabric of the Republic.
This also is an issue that is or should be very low on the radar with so many other problems this Country is facing with fiscal responsibility and a Government gone mad with destroying the Constitution this Country was Founded on.
b kcaj
10:21 am on Saturday, December 8, 2012
Here's an interesting fact Joe-If you do a bit of research, you'll find almost every police and fire department collective bargaining agreement in the state of Rhode Island forbids random drug testing of police officers and firefighters. One drug test before they are hired, and that's it-the union contract forbids any random testing after that.
It would be interesting to see if your buddy Jack Baillargeron had that clause in his contract over at the base.
Albert Cabestany
7:47 pm on Friday, December 7, 2012
This whole blog is right out of Saul Alinsys book, Rules for Radicals "Opiate the Masses",and their minds will be that much easier to manipulate. It appears a majority of Patch respondents feel this is an important issue. You get the Government you desrve. You have no idea whats coming down the pike.
Naome Lixes
6:43 am on Saturday, December 8, 2012
Tell the truth Albert, you had never heard of Saul Alinsky before Newt Gingrich
demonized his tactics. The same tactics were employed by Newt Gingrich.
http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/s/saul_alinsky.html
Karl Marx referred to religion as "The Opiate of the Masses".
We get the government we deserve, true enough. When incredulous people stood on the sidelines while you Tea Party hacks ranted, we had the 2010 debacle.
You haven't got a clue what you're on about, Albert - do you.
Robert Trager
8:01 am on Saturday, December 8, 2012
We're quoting Karl Marx now? It figures.
"Pistol" Pete Maravich
10:19 am on Saturday, December 8, 2012
"I am not a marxist" Karl Marx
no regr allia b
12:09 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012
Another thing to think about;
Most insurance policies for life, house, car medical etc have riders in them thatthey will not pay due to negligence on the policy's owner such as intentionally under the influence of legal or illegal drugs or substances. Somehow I do not see that changing, nor the random drug testing of private Companies.
The Federal Government requires Random drug testing and have for over 30 years for all employees especially those involved in Law enforcement and emergency services. Also the military does this. OSHA has the same type of rules concerning drugs and alcohol. The federal government has a program called "Safe Harbor" which means as long as you turn yourself in before you are caught. You will get help one time. If you are caught before this chance you are fired, it is a no tolorance policy. This can effect pensions and disabilities if you are injured as a result of being under the influence as well whether legal or illegal substances that impair your ability to do your job.
Many private Companies follow these same rules to protect them from liability if a worker harms someone do to their own negligence. Again there is nothing cut and dry on legalizing pot. There are many things that must be changed first. You will see States that are doing it be sued for people that cause damage or injury for legalizing something that is illegal under Federal law. That isreality. You may not like it but that is what it is.
no regr allia b
12:15 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012
The reason the States will be sued is because they have the deepest pockets with the power to tax for revenue to pay off claims. There have been suits like this for many thing through out mosern history. Only the Federal Government has imunity for the laws it creates and even then they have lost cases in the past as well as States. Remember in the End a Judge in a Court of Law desides these things not the people or politicians.
no regr allia b
12:28 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012
If you have a job you may as well quit it, as you cannot possibily work a schedule that will permit you to test negative.
How Long Can Marijuana Be Detected?
Some THC metabolites have an elimination half-life of 20 hours. However, some are stored in body fat and have a elimination half-life of 10 to 13 days. Most researchers agree that urine tests for marijuana can detect the presence of the drug in the body for up to 13 days.
However, there is anecdotal evidence that the length of time that marijuana remains in the body is affected by how often the person smokes, how much he smokes and how long he has been smoking. Regular smokers have reported positive drug test results after 45 days since last use and heavy smokers have reported positive tests 90 days after quitting.
How Effective Are Marijuana Urine Tests?
Although false positives are common for other substances, they are rare for marijuana due to the sophistication of today's tests.
http://alcoholism.about.com/od/pot/a/marijuana_test.htm
no regr allia b
12:31 pm on Saturday, December 8, 2012
Notice false positives are very rare, which is why the Court system rarely if ever rules against the test or Company and the Labor Boards almost never rule in favor of the employee nor does an Arbitraitor.
b kcaj
7:38 am on Sunday, December 9, 2012
Wow Jack-How impressive! How is it that anyone in this world can be such an expert on every subject known to man? Please tell us Jack, where did you garner all this knowledge? Graduate degree in humanities from Harvard? Rhodes Scholar? Nobel Peace Prize winner?
Thank goodness the world has a valuable research tool such as yourself when they need the answer to any question known to man.
Joe Sousa.
2:11 pm on Sunday, December 9, 2012
THC can be detected in hair samples . You long hairs better look out. Wikipedia
Hair drug testing is a method that can detect drug use over a much longer period of time,[24] and is often used for highly safety-critical positions where there is zero tolerance of illegal drug use.[25] Standard hair follicle screen covers a period of 30 to 90 days. The growth of hair is usually at the rate of 0.5 inches per month. The hair sample is cut close to the scalp and 80 to 120 strands of hair are needed for the test. In the absence of hair on the head, body hair can be used as an acceptable substitute.[24] Even if the person being tested has a shaved head, hair can also be taken from almost any other area of the body. This includes facial hair, the underarms, arms, and legs or even pubic hair. Because body hair grows at a different rate than head hair, the timeframe changes, with scientists estimating that drug use can be detected in body hair for up to 12 months. Currently, most entities that use hair testing have prescribed consequences for individuals removing hair to avoid a hair drug test.
The claim that a hair test cannot be tampered with has been shown to be debatable. One study has shown that THC does not readily deposit inside epithelial cells so it is possible for cosmetic and other forms of adulteration to reduce the amount of testable cannabinoids within a hair sample.[
Ed Renehan
10:53 am on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
That marijuana is a schedule 1 drug under federal law is absolutely absurd. The same goes for LSD. Both non-addictive, and the former only profitable for "dealers" because it is a "controlled substance." (LSD not profitable at all, due to its ease of creation, thus no "illicit" trade in it. No scarcity and never will be.) Steve Jobs - a frequent pot smoker - also told an interviewer: "Taking LSD was a profound experience, one of the most important things in my life. LSD shows you that there's another side to the coin, ... " Francis Crick, the Nobel Prize-winning father of modern genetics - and another occasional user of dope - told journalists he was under the influence of LSD when he first deduced the double-helix structure of DNA. I could go on with a long list of high-achievers.
Robert Trager
11:24 pm on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Maybe it should be on the school lunch menu. Does anyone here even know an addict?
Stephen Greenwell
2:16 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Just as an FYI, the URI SSDP has sent in an op-ed in retort to this op-ed: http://narragansett.patch.com/blog_posts/best-way-to-protect-teens-from-marijuana-tax-and-regulate
no regr allia b
3:42 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Wow Stephen here we go again. Just transfer all these comments to that one and save the time and effort lol.
Portsman
4:30 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Very well written article by Eric Casey.
Anon
9:50 am on Thursday, December 13, 2012
Well written? I disagree. I count at least three run-on sentences. ;)
Local Bargain Jerk
9:54 am on Thursday, December 13, 2012
-- Well written? I disagree. I count at least three run-on sentences. ;)
Perhaps "Porstman" should have said "Well written.....considering."
<...long and powerful inhale...>
Because, ya know, it's very difficult to keep track of orderly sentences when you're ... when you're ... when you're in the middle of ... when ... well, ya know.
<...long exhale...>
john begin
7:13 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
I heard that POT makes black men 100% more violent towards white women.oh and it will make you eat peoples faces off!And the stat about POT use increasing in states that it was legalized in.Really is that the biggest load of crap ever?Whats the average age of this coalition against the bad and dangerous?POT puts pharmaceutical company profits at risk because it is medically legal already for this exact purpose.Can our generation step out the 1950's on this issue it's legal for god sake so leave the people who use it alone.please just my two cents.
Joe Sousa.
7:21 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Eric Casey. agree with most of his ideas. I wouldn't want businesses to be told they cant test. Safe work place laws need to stay in place.
Joe Sousa.
7:24 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
I wont buy a Chrysler
News that Chrysler reinstated more than a dozen workers who'd been caught by a local Detroit TV station drinking and smoking pot on their lunch break has lit up the Internet, prompting the automaker to issue two separate statements.
Chrysler fired the workers in September 2010 after Detroit Fox 2 filmed the men buying alcohol and then drinking and smoking in a public park. The TV station even caught them tossing empty cans into the grass before heading back to work.
The United Auto Workers union filed a grievance on behalf of the fired employees, and a third-party arbitrator sided with the union. They started back at Chrysler's Jefferson North plant in Detroit this week.
b kcaj
10:28 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Typical Joe Sousa-He sees a story where he can villify the unions, and he goes and posts it.
Here's some advice for you Joe-Why don't you go and move to Detroit, seeing that the scumbag legislators there just passed a right to scab law. You and your fellow union hater Jack Baillargeron would love it there.
Joe Sousa.
5:50 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Richard J. AKA b kcaj is a clear example why you don't want your kids on drugs.
b kcaj
7:02 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Joe-Who is this "Richard J"? Is it a made up name, or just a figment of your imagination?
Tom
11:44 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
I'll never buy a Chrysler again. The UAW just makes lousy vehicles. I know, I own one. It's a piece of crap. My Chrysler has been a nightmare for over five years. My sister just bought a brank new Chevy Equinox (2012) and there are more creaks and sqeeks than an old wooden boat. UAW just makes crap. From now on, it's Honda, or Toyota. My Honda has been trouble free for over 10 years.
Steve O
7:57 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
I believe that NANCY DEVANEY draws a healthy $alary from this "volunteer group"! And I would like to know how many things they do all year for the grant funds they receive which is grant monies. And if they have ANY effect on drug use. And if that is documented. THEN I'd be interested. Because grant money addiction does not necessarily reduce drug addiction!
Steve O
9:20 pm on Tuesday, December 11, 2012
In fact, her efforts are fruitless (except to her). In one of her own newsletters, she disclosed last month that over 30% of survey respondents claimed they smoked marijuana in the past month. Narragansett for the past 10 years has a serious substance abuse problem amongst teens.
Tom
12:33 pm on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
It's not unique to Narraganset. The entire country has a teen abuse problem. The common denominator is "Drugs are Illegal". That's why teens do it in the first place. It's considered a form of rebellion against authority. I'm surprised our brilliant politician’s haven’t figured this out yet. Oh, I forgot, they want to get re-elected. Throwing teens in jail for pot seems to guarantee re-election. The problem with this backwards mentality is many teens will be marked for life with a marijuana conviction on their record. They will no longer be allowed to join the military or get a security clearance to work in government or many other jobs. Don’t forget, this could very easily be YOUR teen. Legalize Pot and Tax it.
Ted Geisel
9:07 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Steve O, you might be on to something. Here's an article about the NPP getting $123,336 from just one grant. http://www.whitehouse.senate.gov/news/release/ri-delegation-announces-over-34-million-in-crime-prevention-funding
Some info on Nancy: http://www.zoominfo.com/#!search/profile/person?personId=249075277&targetid=profile
Info about the NPP: http://ucc.state.ri.us/CorpSearch/CorpSearchSummary.asp?ReadFromDB=True&UpdateAllowed=&FEIN=000054669
It seems Mrs. Devaney was the Grant Manager and Project Director for Initiatives for Human Development for a while also. According to the Secretary of State their incorporation was revoked for failing to file and it seems their website no longer works.
But that's not all folks... She's also part of VetCorps! Here is a job description listing her as the reporting supervisor. http://www.cadca.org/VetCorps/careers/VetCorpsPreventionCoordinator%E2%80%93Charleston-RI
Seems like there is good money in those grants. It would be a shame to see it go away if Marijuana was legalized...
Steve O
9:43 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Found this she has on her profile:
"Through the work of that grant in cooperation with partners in the community, studies have shown a 10 to 12% decrease in underage drinking. As a community coordinator, Nancy knows that sustainability is critical to prevention efforts. She engages all sectors of the community and stages public events to bring the community's attention to problems related to alcohol and substance abuse.
When she is not working on the community level, Nancy's face is well known in local and state government. She has testified and successfully advocated for "best practice" legislation related to alcohol, illicit drugs and tobacco on both the state and local levels."
Steve O
9:44 am on Wednesday, December 12, 2012
I would like to see what 'studies' have shown the decrease, and how much of that is NPP vs "with partners".
TenRodTownie
4:47 pm on Thursday, December 13, 2012
More government scare tactics to keep it illegal. Independent studies have proven that being addicted to alcohol or tobacco is much more harmful than marijuana use.
Politics Sheriff of NK
12:50 am on Friday, December 14, 2012
NANCY DEVANEY gets herself lots of this "grant money". I just want to know any benefits are real. From these posts, I feel there is doubt, on NPP for example.
The count
11:17 am on Saturday, December 15, 2012
More garbage from the patch
Warren Hudson
4:17 pm on Wednesday, February 27, 2013
I do believe that this law shows exactly what type of people thrive on Smith Hill. What type of an IDIOT would vote for a law that would guarantee that in the future these people would not be able to get any job that requires a drug test, from School Bus Driver to Defense worker. I already know exactly what type of IDIOT would sign it.
Politics Sheriff of NK
8:52 pm on Wednesday, February 27, 2013
NANCY DEVANEY gets herself lots of this "grant money". I just want to know any benefits are real. From these posts, I feel there is doubt, on NPP for example.
Henry Doyle
7:55 am on Thursday, February 28, 2013
1. I'd rather my teen smoke pot than abuse alcohol.
2. Carl Sagan would probably disagree about smoking pot lowering IQ. He was a recreational marijuana user and the preemminent astronomer of his time.
3. Legaizing marijuana may increase the use in teens slightly but what it will really do is not ruin a teens future if they are caught using. Getting busted is more of a gateway than actual usage.
frmr resident
11:19 am on Friday, April 5, 2013
After looking at the organizations web site, I am impressed with the messages there and the information as to how important drug abuse PREVENTION is very important, especially for our children.
However, to focus on one of the leadt harmless of all drugs is not really, in my opinion a priority as to oppsed to the other messages I saw on the site.
Alcohol, tobacco and pharmaceutical companies are shifting the dangers of the "legal" drugs, of which all are.
Prioritise,, while marijuana abuse is something to worry about, much like methadone, it is a safer alternative.
If teens are switching from alcohol, tobacco and pills,,, I see that as a positive move.
No one dies from Marijuana.