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Teens trying out soft drugs isn’t so bad for them - or for us
"Smoking the odd (nonskunk) joint isn’t automatically going to turn a teenager into a raving, scabby crackhead. Frankly, it’s more likely to turn him into a newspaper columnist." "Smoking the odd (nonskunk) joint isn’t automatically going to turn a teenager into a raving, scabby crackhead. Frankly, it’s more lik... more
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Police Attack Rainbow Family Gathering in Wyoming
Here was my original posting: http://current.com/items/89079458_aclu_investigates_hip...
This is an update...
Editor’s note: Harmless hippies, gathering since 1972, are attacked by the feds, who consider their peaceful event a threat requiring “incident management,” that is to say rubber bullets and pepper spray. “Scientists who studied the group say it provides a chance to offer medical help or counseling to people under 30 who are falling through the cracks,” the AP writes in a caption to a photo showing members in tie-dyed t-shirts in a pastoral setting. Helping people who fall through the cracks? Makes sense the feds won’t stand for that.
U.S. Forest Service officers pointed weapons at children and fired rubber bullets and pepper spray balls at Rainbow Family members while making arrests Thursday evening, according to witnesses.
“They were so violent, like dogs,” Robert Parker told reporter Deborah Stevens of the libertarian-oriented, Round Rock, Texas-based We the People Radio Network [www.wtprn.com] after the incident.
“People yelled at them, ‘You’re shooting children,’” Parker said during an interview on the network’s “Rule of Law Show.”
About 7,000 people have arrived at the gathering near Big Sandy in the Wind River Mountains for the annual Gathering of the Tribes, a seven-day event of fellowship, partying including illicit drug use, praying, and living on the land.
They camp on Forest Service land around the country every year, but the Rainbow family’s nonhierarchical methods — no one can speak for the Rainbows, much less sign a land use permit — often have stymied their relationships.
But rarely do the tensions escalate into violence.
The Forest Service’s Incident Command Team in Rock Springs issued a press release Friday morning, saying officers were patrolling the main meadow of the gathering Thursday evening when they contacted a man who fled and was later caught. Another Rainbow was detained for physically interfering.
Officers began to leave the area with the subjects and were circled by Rainbow participants, according to the news release from Rita Vollmer of the Incident Command Team.
Ten officers were escorting the detained subjects when about 400 Rainbows surrounded the squad, and more officers were requested, according to the news release.
“The mob began to advance, throwing sticks and rocks at the officers. Crowd control tactics were used to keep moving through the group of Rainbows,” the news release said.
Other law enforcement agencies were called to the scene, the news release said.
Continued in article.
Here was my original posting: http://current.com/items/89079458_aclu_investigates_hippie_arrests_pelleting_and_pepper_balling ... more -
Sharing Drugs? You're A Dealer!
"Hey, bad news! The Second District court—that's New York, Vermont, and Connecticut—has decided that you might be a drug dealer and you don't even know it. Back in 2003, this guy named Ricky Wallace, who lives with his dad in Rochester, poor schmuck, sold two little bags of coke to a some narc. When they came to raid the house, they found 1.5 grams of it and a good deal of pot (well, $600 worth) and an AK-47. They also found a lot of little ziplock baggies. Mmm, Rochester! His rent was $400 a month, by the way.
Li'l Ricky told the court about his stash: "Most of the time I used it by myself ... but if a lady friend comes by we use it together, you know, have some and relax...." Ah, sure. Coke is so relaxing. But uh oh! Said the court: "This testimony is direct evidence that Wallace engaged in the distribution of cocaine base." Um, if you mean "getting ladies high," then yes!
And, oy, those ziplock bags!
When the Rochester police searched Wallace's bedroom, they found (among other things) 1.5 grams of cocaine base parceled out in more than a dozen small ziplock bags; a dinner plate holding numerous new and unused small ziplock bags; a ziplock bag containing numerous new and unused small ziplock bags bearing green dollar signs; a dresser drawer full of empty and unused glassine ziplock bags; and a semi-automatic assault weapon and ammunition for it. Viewed in the light most favorable to the government, this evidence supports the inference that Wallace had the intent to distribute narcotics.
That's nice that we're viewing things "in the light most favorable to the government" to support an "inference" that someone has "intent" to do something. That'll end well for a lot of us. "
Throw away your baggies, potheads! Or better yet, give them to your drug dealer friends! "Hey, bad news! The Second District court—that's New York, Vermont, and Connecticut—has decided that you might be a drug dealer and yo... more -
Disillusioned Cynical Cat
Josh Peck breaks down his 18-year old drug dealer character in The Wackness. The Wackness is out now.
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Emerging from the Drug War Dark Age
Here are a few excerpts from the article which I find telling and encouraging to anyone who has any opinion in this field. Please take the time to sit back and read some of this.
The return flight from Switzerland was a mix of hope and solemnity for Rick Doblin, the only American to attend the funeral of Dr. Albert Hofmann, the inventor of LSD who had just died at the age of 102. Doblin, a Harvard-educated Ph.D and founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, an organization that conducts legal research into the healing and spiritual potentials of psychedelics and marijuana, had spent his entire career trying to break through the virtually impenetrable wall of obstinacy that surrounds psychedelic compounds and their potential benefits to society.
More than anyone else in his field, Doblin is all too familiar with what he refers to as the "40-year-long bad trip" that researchers like him have faced in dealing with the fallout from the introduction of LSD and other psychedelic compounds to the Western psyche in the mid 1960s. This 40-year intellectual Dark Age, Doblin says, has been characterized by "enormous fear and misinformation and a vested interest in exaggerated stories about drugs to keep prohibition alive."
A Return to Respectability
Much greater than usual media attention accompanied the most recent World Psychedelic Forum held in March in Basel, Switzerland, the home of Albert Hofmann. A headline in the May issue of the staid British medical journal The Lancet -- known for challenging the Pentagon's Iraq casualty numbers -- read, "Research on Psychedelics Moves into the Mainstream."
The Healing Potential of Psychedelics
Unlike other treatments, which have shown pitifully low success rates, psychedelic-assisted therapy focuses on the emotional context under which a patient suffers addiction, not the use of the drugs themselves. "This," says Tom Roberts, a professor of psychology at Northern Illinois University and the co-editor of a new two-volume compilation, Psychedelic Medicine, "is what makes them uniquely effective. They allow negative ideas and feelings -- where most addictions have their origins -- to surface into consciousness. With the guidance of a mental health professional, the person can let them go." Once these negative feelings are gone, Roberts says, the person no longer feels the need to deaden them with drugs or alcohol.
Here are a few excerpts from the article which I find telling and encouraging to anyone who has any opinion in this field. Please take... more -
Pot Kills! Be Scared! New Study! WTF
When will the government stop funding these ridiculous scary studies?
Read some of the quotes:
“The potency of marijuana in the United States has doubled since the mid-1980s,” said Rafael Lemaitre, spokesperson for ONDCP.
better product has the higher potential for addiction and is better business for the bad guys.”
“Today, we are seeing more teenagers in treatment for marijuana addiction than for any other illegal drug, including alcohol,”
troubling links between marijuana use and different kinds of psychosis, depression and schizophrenia have been found.
youth revealed that six percent of ninth-graders and seven percent of eleventh-graders admitted to smoking marijuana.
17 percent of eleventh-graders in San Diego County admitted to using marijuana in the past 30 days.
children frequently post photos of themselves smoking pot or using bongs
be vigilant about clothing lines that promote marijuana
utilize home test kits which can detect drug use
As far as the ONDCP is concerned, the marijuana of today is a new drug.
For more False information about this subject, log on to www.theantidrug.com and www.WhiteHouseDrugPolicy.gov.
When will the government stop funding these ridiculous scary studies? Read some of the quotes: ... more -
Marijuana initiative would allow pot sales at Ore. liquor stores
YouNewsTV™
Related Content
KATU Poll: What do you think of the idea?
Story Published: Jul 7, 2008 at 1:02 PM PDT
Story Updated: Jul 7, 2008 at 5:45 PM PDT
By KATU Staff Video SALEM, Ore. - Relax it and tax it.
That's the motto behind a new cannabis initiative that would allow Oregon's state-controlled liquor stores to legally sell marijuana to adults.
Initiative backers said their plan would send 90 percent of the proceeds from the state's sale of marijuana to Oregon's General Fund, which could lower Oregonians' state tax burden.
Smaller percentages would go to funding drug abuse education and treatment programs.
The initiative would also legalize the growing of hemp, a non-drug variant of cannabis that can be used to make industrial-strength fibers and bio-fuels.
Supporters claim that allowing cannabis cultivation and sales through state liquor stores would add $300 million in combined tax revenues and savings to Oregon's budget.
Paul Stanford of the Oregon Cannabis Tax Act said the measure would also put a dent in illegal dealing of the weed.
"We want to take marijuana out of the hands of children and substance abusers, who control the market today, and put it in the hands of the state's liquor control commission and the age limit of 21 will be strictly enforced," Stanford said at a press briefing.
Supporters have two years to collect nearly 83,000 signatures to get the measure on the November ballot in 2010.
YouNewsTV™ Related Content KATU Poll: What do you think of the idea? Story Published: Jul 7, 2008 at 1:02 PM PDT ... more -
The Poppy: Helmand's biggest problem
Recapturing Musa Qala from the Taliban is more than an important morale-boosting event for Nato and Afghan forces, writes Richard Norton-Taylor
Richard Norton-Taylor Guardian Unlimited, Tuesday December 11 2007 Article history · Contact us Contact usClose Report errors or inaccuracies: userhelp@guardian.co.uk Letters for publication should be sent to: letters@guardian.co.uk If you need help using the site: userhelp@guardian.co.uk Call the main Guardian and Observer switchboard:
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Advertising guide License/buy our content About this articleClose This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Tuesday December 11 2007. It was last updated at 15:12 on December 11 2007.
An Afghan farmer tends to poppy plants. Photograph: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images
Musa Qala town lies in a rich, opium poppy-growing area of Helmand, the southern Afghanistan province that supplies about half of the world's opium and, in turn, some 90% of the heroin on British streets.
The poppy, General Khodaidad, the Afghan counter-narcotics minister, said in an interview with the Guardian, is the biggest problem facing the country.
"Poppies are feeding terrorism in Afghanistan", he said. The problems they created were "bigger than terrorism, bigger than al-Qaida, bigger than warlordism, bigger than corruption".
Drug money bought the weapons, ammunition and explosives that were smuggled over Helmand's borders with Pakistan and Iran, Khodaidad said.
British military commanders distance themselves from the battle against drugs. They are concerned about the backlash if they get directly involved in destroying poppies, a vital crop for so many Afghans and their families.
According to the latest annual report of the UN office on drugs and crime, the total export value of the country's opium harvest amounts to more than $3bn (£1.5bn), almost half the size of the country's entire gross domestic product. More than 12% of Afghanistan's population of 23m is involved in opium poppy cultivation.
Khodaidad said the Afghan government, having seen off US proposals to spray the crops with chemicals, was changing tactics. Instead of trying to apply throughout the country directions imposed from on high from Kabul, he and his officials will adopt a more subtle, carrot-and-stick approach. This would involve local councils and tribal elders in a counter-narcotics drive, offering alternative employment to farmers in projects such as building bridges, roads, and schools, and industries including carpet-weaving, the minister said.
Provinces that agreed to get rid of opium poppies would be rewarded with $1m, with the promise of more to come, he said.
Last year, the number of provinces that agreed to stop opium poppy cultivation had increased fom six to 13; poppy growing had been reduced or abandoned in four other provinces - Nangahar, Badakhshan, Laghman, and Baghlan - Khodaidad said. But he admitted it would be a long time before the problems caused by opium poppies would disappear. Gordon Brown is expected to raise the issue in his statement to the Commons on Afghanistan tomorrow.
Recapturing Musa Qala from the Taliban is more than an important morale-boosting event for Nato and Afghan forces, writes Richard Nort... more -
FedEx delivers 200 lbs. of pot to wrong address
"FedEx prides itself on reliability. But a mistaken delivery tipped off police to a 200-pound shipment of marijuana that someone tried to send from Pembroke Pines, Florida to Baltimore via the shipping company. Police tell The (Baltimore) Sun they learned about the shipment when it was delivered Tuesday to the wrong resident.
Authorities posed as FedEx employees and arrested the shipment's intended recipient, 30-year-old Richard Gwatidzo. Officials say he was charged Thursday with possession of a large quantity of a controlled dangerous substance with intent to distribute along with other drug related charges.
Police say they also seized eight other FedEx boxes with nearly 400 pounds of the drug. Authorities are trying to determine the sender's identity." "FedEx prides itself on reliability. But a mistaken delivery tipped off police to a 200-pound shipment of marijuana that someone tried... more -
marijuana used to help the skin problems
The body makes chemicals similar to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, to help the skin, scientists reported.
In the journal of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, researchers said that learning more about so-called endocannabinoids could lead to drugs that treat acne, dry skin or skin tumors.
The researchers treated the cells that produce oil for the skin with endocannabinoids to make them produce more oil.
One scientists said the products could include new skin creams.
"This research shows that we may have something in common with the marijuana plant," said Dr. Gerald Weissmann. "Just as THC is believed to protect the marijuana plants from pathogens, our own cannabinoids may be necessary for us to maintain healthy skin and to protect us from pathogens."
just another way marijuana could enhance the lives with skin disorders... The body makes chemicals similar to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, to help the skin, scientists reported. ... more -
Skunk smokers 18 times more likely to develop psychosis
That 'sticky-icky' you might have been smoking could make you eighteen times more likely to develop psychosis, compared to those who only smoke hashish.
Dr. Marta Di Forti of Kings College London conducted the research into skunk use and found rather alarming results. 80% of people who had experienced psychosis - delusions and paranoia - had smoked some hi-grade, compared to 76% of people who had no mental health problem who had smoked hash.
That 'sticky-icky' you might have been smoking could make you eighteen times more likely to develop psychosis, compared to those who o... more -
McCain evokes war on drugs
US Republican presidential hopeful John McCain waded into drug policy Wednesday, on the second day of a Latin America tour meant to burnish his foreign policy and national security credentials.
McCain wrapped up an overnight stay in Colombia, the world's top producer of cocaine, and was to travel to Mexico, the main route for illegal drugs flowing into the voracious US market, later in the day.
"Drug cartels have basically taken control of some towns on the Mexican border," McCain told ABC News Wednesday, speaking from Colombian seaside resort of Cartagena.
"There is clearly a continued threat of drugs pouring into the United States of America, which can harm us and our young people very badly."
The Arizona senator praised progress Colombia has made against drugs and the leftist insurgent FARC, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, after a lengthy meeting late Tuesday with Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.
"Certainly it's my view that significant progress has been made against the FARC in the presidency of President Uribe," McCain said of the rebel group, whose hostages include three US nationals seized in 2003 during anti-drug operations in the region.
McCain, in a tough battle against Democrat Barack Obama to win the White House in the November 4 election, is hoping to use the Latin America trip to score points over Obama in the arenas of trade and foreign policy.
He was accompanied by his wife Cindy McCain, independent Senator Joseph Lieberman and Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.
McCain also gave his backing to the US-Colombia free trade pact agreed by Uribe and US President George W. Bush but now stalled in the US Congress, where opponents cite Colombian government violence against trade unions.
On Monday, McCain savaged Obama over his opposition to the pact and accused him of being unwilling to recognize the magnitude of the Uribe government's duel with FARC, the long-running leftist rebel movement.
"He doesn't support the Colombian free trade agreement. I think it would have very serious consequences if we rebuked our closest ally," McCain said.
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) meanwhile launched a new attack against McCain, accusing him of appeasing big business at the expense of US workers.
"We are seeing nothing but a continuation of the economic policies that have failed working people, not just the working people in Colombia but working people in this country," said DNC vice-chair Linda Chavez-Thompson.
"Senator McCain is going to follow George Bush's failed economic policies, we can't afford that," she said on a conference call with reporters.
Mark Levinson, chief economist of the Unite Here trade union, said McCain should worry more about the plight of US workers than new trade pacts.
"It is clear that whatever he is doing, it is not in the interests of US workers," he said.
"The situation with the Colombia trade agreement is a particular outrage.
"There are more trade unionists killed in Colombia than the rest of the world combined.
"While John McCain is in Colombia, Senator Obama is in Ohio, ground zero of the affect of these bad trade deals in the US economy.
"We think this just highlights the stark difference between these two candidates."
McCain was to leave for Mexico City later Wednesday for talks on Thursday with President Felipe Calderon, the recipient of fresh US aid for its fight against drugs.
The US Senate last week approved a 1.6-billion-dollar, three-year package of anti-drug assistance to Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean known as the "Merida Initiative."
An underworld war between rival drug gangs and police has escalated into open bloody conflict in Mexico in recent weeks, with more than 1,500 people killed this year, some 500 of them in the northern border city of
US Republican presidential hopeful John McCain waded into drug policy Wednesday, on the second day of a Latin America tour meant to bu... more -
Cop chokes marijuana suspect
WKRN News 2 reports that “the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is investigating after video shot from inside a Mount Joliet patrol car shows an officer choking a suspect.”
In the video, the officer has both hands around the neck of the suspect and is telling him to “stick your tongue out.” The suspect, James Anders, then passes out.
According to WKRN, “The incident began with a traffic stop. Officer Cosby said he smelled burning marijuana, ordered Anders out of the car and told him to spit out something he had in his mouth. … Cosby didn’t find any marijuana in Anders’ mouth but did find a small bag of the drug inside his car.”
Anders was arrested on charges of possessing marijuana, resisting arrest, and tampering with evidence. The charges were later dismissed because of the police officer’s behavior. Cosby was reprimanded and the tape was handed over to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation.
This video is from WKRN News 2, broadcast July 1, 2008.
WKRN News 2 reports that “the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation is investigating after video shot from inside a Mount Joliet patrol ca... more -
Why isn't it legal? Marijuana Policy Project @ the Playboy Mansion
Interviews at the Playboy Mansion with celebrities and musicians regarding medical marijuana. Kat Von D, LA Ink, Perry Farrell, Jane's Addiction, Jackie Martling, Adrianne Curry, Margaret Cho, Scott Kirkland, Crystal Method, Christopher "Kid" Ried, Kid 'N Play, House Party, Rob Kampia. The Marijuana Policy Project. Bernie Ellis CORRECTION In the video Bernie Ellis is identified as a doctor with a DR in front of his name. He is not a doctor nor did he claim to be, this is a technical mistake that is being fixed as soon as possible. Interviews at the Playboy Mansion with celebrities and musicians regarding medical marijuana. Kat Von D, LA Ink, Perry Farrell, Jane's... more
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2008 Chicago Hempfest
The "Highest Click In Chicago" gets it poppin at the 2008 Chicago Hempfest!
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No Smoking Please, Unless it's Pot
Okay, I SMOKE. Shoot me! It’s a TERRIBLE habit and now-a -days, practically illegal to do anywhere except in the privacy of your home or on a dirty sidewalk.
Maybe if New York City followed Holland's lead I could stop. Holland officially outlawed the use of tobacco in the country's infamous weed loving cafes. However the wacky tobacky may be freely smoked in over 700 "coffee shops".
Talk about a great way to take the edge off a bad day. Okay, I SMOKE. Shoot me! It’s a TERRIBLE habit and now-a -days, practically illegal to do anywhere except in the privacy of your home... more -
Americans are world's top drug users despite harsh drug laws
Americans are the world's top consumers of cannabis and cocaine despite punitive US drug laws, according to an international study published in the online scientific magazine PLoS Medicine.
The study, released Monday, revealed that 16.2 percent of Americans had tried cocaine at least once, and 42.4 percent had used marijuana.
In second-place New Zealand, just 4.3 percent of study participants had used cocaine, and 41.9 percent marijuana.
The research was conducted at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, based on World Health Organization data from 54,068 people in 17 countries.
Rates of participation differed from country to country, and researchers noted uncertainty over how honestly people report their own drug use.
"Nevertheless, the findings present comprehensive data on the patterns of drug use from national samples representing all regions of the world," a PLoS statement said.
A vast majority of survey participants from the United States, Europe, Japan and New Zealand had consumed alcohol, compared to smaller percentages from the Middle East, Africa and China.
The data also revealed socioeconomic patterns in drug use. Single young adult men with high income had the greatest tendency to regularly use drugs.
Drug use "does not appear to be simply related to drug policy," the researchers wrote, "since countries with more stringent policies toward illegal drug use did not have lower levels of such drug use than countries with more liberal policies."
In the Netherlands, where drug policy is more liberal than the United States, 1.9 percent of survey participants said they had used cocaine and 19.8 percent marijuana.
Twelve US 12 states including California permit medical use of marijuana, but possession and use remains prohibited under federal law.
And despite the US government's massive anti-drug efforts, the United States remains the world's top drug market, one amply supplied by South American cartels.
The US Drug Enforcement Agency has observed ever larger quantities of illegal drugs pouring into the country.
"We are seizing greater quantities of illegal drugs than ever before," said a DEA statement last week.
In 2007, agents seized 41 metric tons of cocaine in just two raids, and denied drug traffickers record-breaking revenue of 3.5 billion dollars for the year, it said.
Americans are the world's top consumers of cannabis and cocaine despite punitive US drug laws, according to an international study pub... more -
Loads of weed seized in Northern Ireland
8.5 million pounds worth actually.
Police conducted a series of raids across N.I and reportedly nicked and charged 45 people who they believed to have been cultivating the plant.
One of the arresting officers spoke out about the rise in organised gangs cultivating the drug and how a relocation on their part hasn't fooled the police.
"Organised crime gangs have turned their attention from mainland UK to Northern Ireland, presumably because they thought they wouldn't get caught. They were wrong."
8.5 million pounds worth actually. ... more -
Marijuana potency reaches 30-year high in 2007
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Marijuana potency increased last year to the highest level in more than 30 years, posing greater health risks to people who may view the drug as harmless, according to a report released Thursday by the White House.
A report says marijuana potency has increased, posing health risks to people who may view the drug as harmless.
The latest analysis from the University of Mississippi's Potency Monitoring Project tracked the average amount of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, in samples seized by law enforcement agencies from 1975 through 2007. It found that the average amount of THC reached 9.6 percent in 2007, compared with 8.75 percent the previous year.
The 9.6 percent level represents more than a doubling of marijuana potency since 1983, when it averaged just under 4 percent.
"Today's report makes it more important than ever that we get past outdated, anachronistic views of marijuana," said John Walters, director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. He cited baby boomer parents who might have misguided notions that the drug contains the weaker potency levels of the 1970s.
"Marijuana potency has grown steeply over the past decade, with serious implications in particular for young people," Walters said. He cited the risk of psychological, cognitive and respiratory problems, and the potential for users to become dependent on drugs such as cocaine and heroin.
While the drug's potency may be rising, marijuana users generally adjust to the level of potency and smoke it accordingly, said Dr. Mitch Earleywine, who teaches psychology at the State University of New York in Albany and serves as an adviser for marijuana advocacy groups. "Stronger cannabis leads to less inhaled smoke," he said.
The White House office attributed the increases in marijuana potency to sophisticated growing techniques that drug traffickers are using at sites in the United States and Canada.
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Working out may prevent drug and alcohol addiction
A report from the office last month found that a teenager who has been depressed in the past year was more than twice as likely to have used marijuana than teenagers who have not reported being depressed -- 25 percent compared with 12 percent. The study said marijuana use increased the risk of developing mental disorders by 40 percent.
"The increases in marijuana potency are of concern since they increase the likelihood of acute toxicity, including mental impairment," said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which funded the University of Mississippi study.
"Particularly worrisome is the possibility that the more potent THC might be more effective at triggering the changes in the brain that can lead to addiction," Volkow said.
But there's no data showing that a higher potency in marijuana leads to more addiction, Earleywine said, and marijuana's withdrawal symptoms are mild at best. "Mild irritability, craving for marijuana and decreased appetite -- I mean those are laughable when you talk about withdrawal from a drug. Caffeine is worse."
The project analyzed data on 62,797 cannabis samples, 1,302 hashish samples, and 468 hash oil samples obtained primarily from seizures by law enforcement agencies in 48 states since 1975.
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Dumb,Dumb people...pot bust yet again..boy he was dumb.
whoo hoo! another 'pot' bust story.. boy this 27 year old was DUMB!
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