Thebobo
Lifer
all forms of intoxication form all substances are immoral and to be condemned, obey it or GFTO of my country.
GFTO?
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=gfto
all forms of intoxication form all substances are immoral and to be condemned, obey it or GFTO of my country.
That's cool. I didn't mean anything by the question (gave up the herb huh?). I always thought I had you pegged as a fellow AT user...but I think I'm still in good company nonetheless 🙂I smoked it a bunch in high school. Still managed a 3.9 gpa.
Every once in a while in my 20's.
I'd be lying if I said I 'never' smoke it. Will I in the future? Maybe. I'm not around many people smoke it anymore and none of the girls I like to date are into it. I don't see it as being any more harmful than drinking a soda, so if I want to I will.
It's just not something that's part of my daily routine. I just think it's a travesty that it's illegal in spite of all the harms that prohibition causes and how harmless the drug itself is. I come from a family of teacher's, and I think education is key. All of that prohibition money could be going to the school systems and other meaningful programs.
That's why I'm so adamant about it. Marijuana prohibition is a giant waste of money. It should be regulated, taxed, and educated against, but that's it. No more, no less. Free up the courts and prison systems, let the cops focus on real crimes, and stop impeding on personal liberties.
However you want to justify it, you're smoking pot to get an artifical high because you either live a dull boring life, or are unable to cope with life through normal means.
Needing pot, alcohol, ect to make you feel better is a sign that you have deeper psycological issues.
You need a new user name.However you want to justify it, you're smoking pot to get an artifical high because you either live a dull boring life, or are unable to cope with life through normal means.
Needing pot, alcohol, ect to make you feel better is a sign that you have deeper psycological issues.
Here is your reasoned rational responce...
all forms of intoxication form all substances are immoral and to be condemned, obey it or GFTO of my country.
You sound like me in High school; a self-righteous, ignorant sod.
Do you plan to go through life, bathed in such monumental ignorance, or will you ever simply accept that there are things out there for which you know nothing, and are completely unqualified to comment?
You've got to be fucking kidding me? Even I think that's insanity, what does intoxication have to do with morality?
That's cool. I didn't mean anything by the question (gave up the herb huh?). I always thought I had you pegged as a fellow AT user...but I think I'm still in good company nonetheless 🙂
It actually started with William Randolph Hearst, and now it is tobacco, alcohol, and pharmaceutical companies.
Lets debunk the myth that marijuana makes people non-voilent right now:
everyone wants to point to the netherlands as an example of how decriminalization will reduce crime rates... what they forget to tell you is, what about the top 10-11 other countrys where marijuana is legalized/decriminalized/not enforced
1)Argentina
2)Cambodia
3)Costa Rica
4)Equador
5)India
6)Jamaica
7)Mexico
8)Pakistan
9)Peru
10)Portugal
11)Uruguay
hows that working out for you?
Over 1/2 of these countrys are in the top 20 for violent crimes rates per/capita...
Only a single first world country, and only 2 of those 11 have lower violent crime rates per capita than the US does now.
I've seen many angry potheads when the dealer is taking too long & they can't get their fix.
I've seen many angry potheads when the dealer is taking too long & they can't get their fix.
Criminal Justice
There's no conclusive evidence that marijuana use or abuse leads to violent crime; indeed, the pacifying nature of the drug would seem to indicate the contrary. Yet there have been more than 20 million arrests for marijuana-related crimes in the U.S. since 1965, taxing our already over-crowded corrections system. Not only is there a moral question associated with locking someone up for a victimless crime, there's a significant economic dimension: In my home state of Kentucky, it costs taxpayers $19,000 a year to imprison one inmate. Incarcerating nonviolent pot smokers and distributors, accordingly, costs American taxpayers tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions of dollars annually -- money that's desperately needed for essential social services. A significant slice of corrections funding could instead be freed for proven, effective drug treatment programs (such as this outstanding peer-mentoring model) that truly tackle the problem of drug dependence and empower addicts to take control of their lives.
Mere decriminalization of marijuana use would seem to help address our corrections crisis. But it would do little to mitigate the horrible violence associated with cannabis trafficking by organized crime cartels here and murderous drug gangs in Mexico. The creation of a legal, domestic marijuana industry -- fully regulated like alcohol to ensure a safe product and to prohibit sales to minors -- would cut off the financial lifeline that empowers gangs to disrupt our streets and threaten our southern border.
lol. did someone actually say that?
lol. I guess this is what happens with homeschooled/fundy religious upbringing or whatever.
lol.
Here is your reasoned rational responce...
all forms of intoxication form all substances are immoral and to be condemned, obey it or GFTO of my country.
Oof, were you really such an uptight irrepressible prick?
Your country? Oh, how little you know.
The pilgrims that you love so much survived by drinking Ale on their mayflower, not water.
The very first building built in this country--both at Jamestown and at Plymouth, were breweries.
There is no US history without forms of intoxication.
what an ignorant and obtuse puss bucket you are.
This country tried prohibition, only to disastrous effects. To ignore the history that already exists and can be examined, is to be profoundly ignorant.
You need a new user name.

according to SAO, prohibition was only disastrous because it was poorly implemented and today it is working fine.