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Dope, blow, cannabi...
 

[Closed] Dope, blow, cannabis, weed etc. Opinions please.

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TandemJeremy - Member
Really - we are so different from our european neighbours? Have you ever been abroad?

Yes, and yes.
anyone who's lived abroad would notice big cultural differences in eating and drinking habits, unless of course they were too stoned ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 9:57 am
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I dont [i]rely[/i] on weed, I enjoy it as a recreation. I'm not a compulsive liar although like everyone else I am not absolutely honest in all circumstances. My happiness may not be complete but it is genuine. I have a great life, and pot enhances it, in the same way that cycling does.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:00 am
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mrtin - the government reduced its classification from "b" to "c" - and then after outrage in the press put it back to "b"

We are supposed to have a classiication of drugs according to the harm they cause - downgrading cannabis would be in line with the actual evidence.

This makes for interesting reading (note it has cannabis as C - its now B again
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:00 am
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Whatever Sweepy... you're an addict and you're kidding yourself. You don't fool me though ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:04 am
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Alcohol abuse in this country is mental.

I dont drink much, ill go out for a drink with mates for social. I know lads who go out to get smashed and I am sure there are people on here who do.

What damage does Alcohol cost this goverment every weekend? A&E Bills, Smashed windows, drink driving etc.

I have been in bars where blokes & women can hardly stand whilst ordering their drinks, yet still get served. Why? Why doesnt the goverments stop clubs opening until 8am in some places. Pubs should shut sooner etc.

Just saying.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:05 am
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anyone who's lived abroad would notice big cultural differences in eating and drinking habits

Depends on which part of 'abroad' you are talking about. Here in Germany things don't seem that different. Train carriages commandeered by loudly singing piss-heads, congealed puddles of puke on the pavement on a Sunday morning etc.

The French might see less alcohol fuelled mayhem but then again they have a big problem with deaths from liver cirrhosis.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:14 am
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Can someone explain this - presumably criminals think, aha, I'll sell drugs, so that I can make enough money to keep my loss making hobby in prostitution going? Or am I missing the point - surely when people do the big bad 'significant' crime, they are doing it to make money, so I don't see why they need the money from drugs in order to make other crime make money?

Joe

Think the point is that canabis under it's current prohitive status is just another one of many avenues open for criminals to swell their coffers, I don't think they use the profits to suppliment other activities, though it could enable some to earn enough cash to start investing in other areas..

In my mind, since consumption is a given, legalisation and taxation is the only sensible option, I'd love to disascociate with any criminal element, current legislation prevents me from doing this. The law isn't always in the right, and is in the wrong here imo.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:17 am
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I have been in bars where blokes & women can hardly stand whilst ordering their drinks, yet still get served. Why? Why doesnt the goverments stop clubs opening until 8am in some places. Pubs should shut sooner etc.

Kind of strange because I believe it's illegal to be drunk in a bar.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:17 am
 DezB
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Smoking weed is very much a chav thing these days, isn't it.
Strange how it's gone from hippies in the 60s to council estate scrotes these days.
(Grew up on a council estate before accused of [s]snobbery[/s] anything.)


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:17 am
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Whatever Sweepy... you're an addict and you're kidding yourself. You don't fool me though

Well thank goodness im fooling myself then, thats the main thing ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:17 am
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molgrips - Member

Depends on which part of 'abroad' you are talking about.

Sure does, was thinking more of the southern countries I guess....


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:19 am
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Best thing is Sweepy that you probably won't remember this conversation until 2020 or so.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:19 am
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Kind of strange because I believe it's illegal to be drunk in a bar.

You go in any major city in the UK and see if its been acted on.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:21 am
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Its a drug, not a miracle- it wont cure chavvery. Wont cause it either tho.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:21 am
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Regarding addiction also, I find it extremely difficult to believe that anyone is addicted to it...As with alot of people i've smoked it daily in the past for years on end(not because of any need to but because i wanted to) and when i did decide to give it up i had no withdrawl what so ever and gave it up instantly. I've also been to function normally in life, been through college never been unemployed in my life etc etc.. tbh i think alot of people use it as an excuse for their own personal life problems and lack of motivation.

Now i'm not saying there are no ills to it as i'd love there to be proper clinical tests on it so we can know for sure, what exctly the negatives are, which i'm sure there will be some..

Also regarding the psychosis side of things, i wonder if it could ever be developed into a diagnostic tool for these people?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:23 am
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Best thing is Sweepy that you probably won't remember this conversation until 2020 or so.

According to the drugs talk we had at school i'll be found dead in a public lavatory long before that anyway, Damn the evil weed ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:23 am
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There is no addiction in the medical sense to cannabis - simply does not happen.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:24 am
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I think the lethal dose is about 3lbs, and it has to land on your head after being jettisoned from a smugglers plane ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:27 am
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There is no addiction in the medical sense to cannabis - simply does not happen.

tj, i can only assume that you are a toker, because only tokers are so delusional as to believe that dope is not addictive.

i don't care if that is a physical addiction or a mental addiction - two cheeks of the same arse as far as i'm concerned.

yours, an ex pot addict.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:31 am
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It's a complex issue, no doubt about that. I'd like to see it taxed and controlled properly like many on here.
Then perhaps more research could be done and better support offered to those who struggle with usage.

I see it as a more positive drug than alcohol, again like many on here.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:31 am
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Until the 30th June 2011 I smoked each and everyday. During uni my intake was much heavier and I would regularly smoke during the day. Since leaving uni and getting a job I only really smoked during the evenings, maybe a couple of joints and usually one before bed.

I've noticed that when I was abroad and doing snowboarding or Riding I didnt notice not smoking it however I would often Switch to smoking lucky strikes or rollups - something I do when I'm drinking as well anyway.

I have noticed over the recent years a change in the weed available and that is a direct function of the govt. policies and boarder control due to terrorism. Now the majority is UK and people grow Canabis which is selctively bread to be very high in THC (the psychotic element) and low in CBN's (the calming element that makes you mellow). This is a profit thing as they know that can grow poor quality weed that they can still sell as it will be very strong. However this isnt helping the psycosis side of things.

I think the best way for the govt. to deal with the canabis issue is to legalise and control it in the same way as alcohol. Issue licenses to grow it and be harsher on illegal growing for profit. It should be tested for strength before sale and clearly labelled in terms of thc and cbn content. It should be taxed as alcohol is. I would have had no problem with this. If you removed the dodgy contaminated weed and that which is stupidly strong and controlled the availability In the same way as alcohol - I can't see the problem getting worse, mearly taking it out of the hands of those gangs in it for pure profit - the police know who the criminal gangs are and could see to it they don't get licenses and that any illegal operations are harshly dealt with.

I can say honestly I know that prolonged use of canabis hasn't helped my mental health. I have always been predisposed to being fairly depressive and at times manic depressive. I can't say for certain that canabis caused this I think the signs were there before and I cant say for definite whether it promoted the depression at times but I suspect strongly it didnt help.

The issue of canabis and mental health is a contentious one as not enough controlled studies have been carried out. The much touted study that all the tabloids latch on to re: it causing schizophrenia is a particularly bad one as it was a very very sample group (15 ppl iirc) and they were predisposed to the condition.

I can say that I was useless at getting up in the mornings, was a lot lazier and passed up some opportunities because of it.

I quit on the 30th the day I signed my contract to go work in Oz. Im not saying it was easy - but it wasn't as hard as I expected. Providing I didn't put myself in the situation where I was sat at home not doing anything where I would usually just default to skinning up I have been on the whole ok. I have, I admit, spent more time in the pub and endded up drinking more - but that's more as a result of not wanting to be sat at home where temptation and routine lie, rather than needing to get drunk to cope with not being high.

I have now been clean of weed for 19 day's the longest in a decade. Last night I sat on sofa with a girl I care about who would smoke if I was smoking so it wasnt as if I was prohibited. I didnt drink either last night and had a total of one roll up.

I can honestly say that I'm happy i've stopped, I feel clearer head and happier - however that is a lot to do with where I am in my life at the moment - going to oz to work and for an adventure and meeting someone I really get on with - albeit weeks before I leave the country but I have a feeling it'll work out.

I think as a long term user that quitting needed to be part of a life change and I don't think I would have done it having just been remaining in the same routine.

Oh and im far more positive ๐Ÿ™‚

(some of you know what a grumpy bugger i've been on here over the last few years and I don't think you'd recognise the giddy Idiot I am this morning)


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:33 am
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trailmonkey - its about understanding what addiction is. You do not get addicted to cannabis [i]in the medical sense[/i] - simply because of the way it works and how that is defined.

Addiction is to do with the actions of the drugs and neurotransmitters and causes physical effects on withdrawal.

I have worked in drug rehab and I have seen people in the throes of withdrawal from valium, alcohol and opiates. Benzodiazepine and alcohol withdrawal can be lethal. heroin withdrawal rather unpleasant to say the least. Cannabis does not cause physical withdrwal symptoms.

"psychological dependence" is a somewhat controversial idea and is not an addiction in the medical sense.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:37 am
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Occasional use, the only bad thing is not wanting to get up the next day, but same goes for drinking and this comes without a hangover and is a lot cheaper than a night out. Only bongs now though, baccy makes me feel sick. Hasn't affected my productivity at all really. I still do my work the same quality, and deadlines are always met. That being said it has made a couple of my friends pretty lazy, depends on your personality and mindset I guess.

Looking forward to BC bud ๐Ÿ˜‰


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:41 am
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"psychological dependence" is a somewhat controversial idea and is not an addiction in the medical sense.

In fairness TeeJ, as tm says, it's two cheeks of the same arse (and that's a phrase I shall be borrowing for down the pub ๐Ÿ™‚ )


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:44 am
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Addiction is to do with the actions of the drugs and neurotransmitters and causes physical effects on withdrawal.

how does that explain gambling addiction or sex addiction then ?

you see, i'd have a rather simpler definition of addiction - reliance on something whereby it's withdrawal adversely affects a persons ability to function.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:45 am
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and that's a phrase I shall be borrowing for down the pub

+1


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:45 am
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It simply is not. Have you seen someone in the throes of withdrawal? Shaking, puking, heart rate climbing, bp dropping, uncontrollable sweats, severe pain, pupil reactivity altered, goosebumps. Real physical symptoms that can be measured objectively.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:47 am
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but do gambling or sex addicts function more poorly when they cant indulge?
IMO gambling and sex addiction do not exist, they are keen interests rather than true addictions
Maybe obsessions but not addictions


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:47 am
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It's funny though teej that someone working in re-hab would be that closed-minded or pedantic on the subject..

what about crystal meth addiction..?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:48 am
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they are keen interests

This is brilliant - I'm picking up [s]excuses[/s] phrases for down the pub all over the place. ๐Ÿ˜€

TeeJ, I don't think tm is saying they are physiologically the same thing - nor am I - but they are (drum roll) two cheeks of the same arse!


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:49 am
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It simply is not. Have you seen someone in the throes of withdrawal? Shaking, puking, heart rate climbing, bp dropping, uncontrollable sweats, severe pain, pupil reactivity altered, goosebumps. Real physical symptoms that can be measured objectively.

My mate get in massive mood swings without it.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:49 am
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Its not about being of closed mind - its about understanding the issues.
have you seen someone in the throes of real withdrawal? I have on many occasions.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:50 am
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Ill not disagree that crystal meth is a more harmful drug, but even here the danger is exaggerated. All those stories about being 'addicted after one hit'- Cobblers. Its just scaremongering, If you want people to make sensible informed decisions regarding drug use you have to give them honest facts.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:52 am
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how does that explain gambling addiction or sex addiction then ?
With the former they should really just get a grip on themselves, and the latter, we'll what's the problem? ๐Ÿ˜€


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:53 am
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have you seen someone in the throes of real withdrawal? I have on many occasions

yes.. very close friends.. often.. for the last 20 years..

what about about crystal meth addiction..?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:53 am
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Its not about being of closed mind - its about understanding the issues.
have you seen someone in the throes of real withdrawal? I have on many occasions.

yup, my brother was and died, a heroin addict.

there's not a great deal you're going to teach me about addiction tj.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:53 am
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This is brilliant - I'm picking up excuses phrases for down the pub all over the place.

Dont get me wrong here, im not a sex or gambling addict, I think that people use the concept of sex/gambling addiction to justify poor behaviour.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:56 am
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what about about crystal meth addiction..?

Never seen it, no knowledge or experience of it. I have known users, I have seen people mess up on it,

We are arguing here about a definition of addiction and I prefer a strict medical definition not this nebulous concept of a "psychological dependence"

I get grumpy if I have not been out on my bike for a bit. Is this addiction withdrawal?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:58 am
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Dont get me wrong here, im not a sex or gambling addict, I think that people use the concept of sex/gambling addiction to justify poor behaviour.

check out mr due north on the moral compass


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 10:59 am
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TJ that could be a medical dependance? I mean, when youre exercising the chemicals in your brain change, when youre not, well, they change?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:01 am
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check out mr due north on the moral compass

This harmonises very nicely with my post of m_f's logo thread ๐Ÿ™‚

I have seen (at arm's distance thankfully), what gambling addiction can do - and I think that bookies, online gambling sites and casinos have a lot to answer for.

I don't know enough about sex [s]addiction[/s] to comment really, but I suspect a few people have used it as an excuse to be shagnasties here and there.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:02 am
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Trailmonkey, I dont mean to belittle your loss but what exactly killed your brother. Clean heroin of a known strength using clean equipment, at an affordable price is reasonably safe. Its when you have wild variations in quality/strength, no access to safe means of use and have to get involved in dangerous activitytofund it that the real dangers appear.
Like i say, I am sensitive to your loss, but it may be that if heroin were legal then your brother would be alive today, and a productive member of society who happened to take heroin.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:02 am
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Sure does, was thinking more of the southern countries I guess....

Like Spain, where kids hang out drinking calimocho in the streets till late at night?

Or Italy - in Rome where they had to ban drinking on the street?


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:03 am
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Aye that may have been a bit judgemental regarding gambling addiction, gamblers are sucked in to a large extent by clever bookies ruses. I stand by it for sex addiction tho.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:06 am
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Sex, gambling, exercise... all provide chemical releases... highs if you wish.

Some people are addicted to destructive relationships... they're addicted to misery.


 
Posted : 19/07/2011 11:06 am
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