Posts Tagged Marijuana
Instead of banning surgary drinks and food would it be better to enforce drug laws since Marijuana causes the?
Posted by admin in Drug & Alcohol Laws on February 7, 2012
Question by JOSE DIDDLY JR.: Instead of banning surgary drinks and food would it be better to enforce drug laws since Marijuana causes the?
munchies and the munchies causes a person to consume more sugary drinks and foods thereby causing more Obesity.
ENFORCE THE DRUG LAWS MARIJUANA CAUSES OBESITY.
“NO ONE EVER DIED FROM SMOKING MARIJUANA”
SEE WHAT DRUGS CAUSE.
Best answer:
Answer by avail_skillz
better idea is to decriminalize anything that doesn’t form such a horrible addiction that you would kill someone for a fix.
Give your answer to this question below!
how do u get marijuana out of your system for a drug test?
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on October 4, 2011
Question by Eponine: how do u get marijuana out of your system for a drug test?
if u have to do a court ordered drug test, what r sum DEFINITE ways to get pot out of your system so that ur drug test comes back clean? thanks so much!
Best answer:
Answer by Ej
It’s going to take about a month for pot to clear your system. There isn’t anything you can do to make it get out faster. Drinking lots of water can help you clear your system more efficiently, but won’t give you a clean test until you haven’t smoked in a month. Drinking things meant to clear your system just makes you pee a lot, which dilutes your urine. The idea is that your urine will be diluted to the point where the pot will have a low enough concentration not to show up. However, most drug tests now also check for the levels of electrolytes and other chemicals in your urine. If these are diluted past a normal level they are going to suspect something is up, and may test again or take a blood test.
In addition, court ordered drug tests are often tests that look for the metabolites pot produces in your liver. Nothing will disguise a blood test.
Sorry.
What do you think? Answer below!
Teen admitted to drug court in marijuana sales
Posted by admin in Court Ordered Rehabilitation on April 14, 2011
China likely Winner of the Information Age Ecommerce Supply Chain by maintaining peace and corporate property rights

Image by Wonderlane
Teen admitted to drug court in marijuana sales
A 19-year-old Gardnerville Ranchos man was admitted to drug court Monday and warned he would go to prison if he fails to complete the program.
Read more on The Record-Courier
Ameng also ordered to be given 10 strokes of the rotan
MALACCA: Ameng Spring, lead vocalist of rock group Spring, was sentenced to 13 years in jail and ordered to be given 10 strokes of the rotan by the Sessions Court here on three counts of drug possession and abuse.
Read more on The Star
Cops and Courts
Mazzola ordered to pay ,555 in defamation suit ELYRIA — Sam Mazzola, a Columbia Township exotic animal owner, lost a defamation suit earlier this week and was ordered to pay ,555 to a Lorain woman, according to Lorain County Common Pleas Court records. The suit stems from a 2005 letter he wrote to the Better Business Bureau regarding Michelle Matejcik accusing her of wrongdoing.
Read more on The Morning Journal
Why does Law Enforcement call Cocaine and marijuana a narcotic?
Posted by admin in Drug & Alcohol Laws on July 26, 2010
Question by Dynodikk: Why does Law Enforcement call Cocaine and marijuana a narcotic?
It isn’t, any shape or form. Narcotics are opiate pain-killers. If they are basing this because they intoxicate, than alcohol is a narcotic and a drug.
Best answer:
Answer by laughter_every_day
just shorthand for any illegal controlled substance. The actual laws do not call cocaine a narcotic, but in casual conversation most cops just use the term as being synonymous with any controlled substance.
Give your answer to this question below!
Should marijuana be legalized due to our economic situation?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 11, 2010
I dont care what you think about marijuana and what it is…
I’m asking if you believe it should be legalized to help out with our deficit. Men lie, numbers dont:
1. 17 billion a year for the Office of National Drug Control Policy
2. 20,000 a year per inmate for keeping non violent criminals in prison
3. 1.7 million people in jail 22 to 33% of these are for marijuana sales
4 11.3% percent of students tried marijuana before age 13
Legalized it would be much more in the sense of alcohol, even though its not as dangerous as alcohol.
The Hemp grown from the stalk could be used for so many different things what people dont know is that big corporations dont want marijuana legalized because then Hemp would be legal and alot of people would go out of business. But so many more good things would happen fo the people of America
I just learned Henry Fords first Model-T ran on hemp gasoline. with our more sophisticated science we cant do it again?
And marijuana grows fast we would be off oil uh oh just put the oil companys out of business
1 acre of marijuana is equal to 4.1 acres of trees for making paper uh oh just put logging industries in the hole
i dont smoke weed i’m an American for real and i care about my country.
I will conclude with this, it is said, by officials in our government that there has been no official marijuana studies when in fact there has it seems that it will take at least 3 more generations to get over the barriers that the government has created in effects to marijuana. I know people who have smoked for 20+ years and all the things that i hear bad about it are untrue.
Whereas the real danger lies in the actual smoke inhalation not the plant. If you inhale any form of smoke you will kill braincells and the government used that to say marijuana kills brain cells when the truth is THC is the only chemical found in a plant that our brain has a receptor for. Our brain sends other chemicals to these same receptors but the use is still unknown.
Thank you all for answering and being logical.
Marijuana and U.S. Drug Scheduling?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 9, 2010
Marijuana is currently listed as a Schedule I Dangerous Drug. Drugs must meet all three of the following criteria in order to qualify for this scheduling:
(A) The drug or other substance has high potential for abuse.
(B) The drug or other substance has no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States.
(C) There is a lack of accepted safety for use of the drug or other substance under medical supervision.
Since the evidence, both scientific and anecdotal, overwhelmingly shows that marijauna, while not completely harmless, has a lower risk of abuse than does alcohol, caffeine, or nicotine; has many accepted medical uses; and has a lower level of toxicity than drugs many of us allow our children to ingest (caffeine), why won’t the government admit it is scheduled improperly?
Who stands to profit the most from keeping marijuana in its current status? Big medicine? Big tobacco? Big alcohol? Drug cartels?
¿Smoker Or Not: Do You Think Marijuana Will be Legal Almost Everywhere in 50 Years from Know? Arguments?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 8, 2010
1 out of 100 American adults are in jail. When you see that figure, what comes to mind? You may ask yourself, “Why are so much people in jail?”
One of the big answers is: Marijuana. In the year 2006, 43.9 percent of the 1,889,810 total arrests for drug violations were for marijuana- a total of 829,627. Out of that 829k, 738,916 people were arrested for just marijuana possession alone. Think of how much it would have risen since then? In the recent news report about the jail rates it said on average a state spends 25k per inmate. That’s around 18,472,900 dollars- If they where arrested all in the same state, since some sates spend even more, or less per inmates.
Oh, yes. Don’t forget the cost of fighting Marijuana “States spent $42.89 billion on Corrections in 2005 alone. To compare, states only spent $24.69 billion on public assistance.” So, in 2006 to around 2005, if you add all that up, the cost of jailing the inmates, and the correction costs: it all adds up to more then 42,908,472.900 being spent!
Those 829,627 people did nothing wrong, they did no violent act. If free they’d be any normal working tax payer in the US.
The point of this article is to show you that Marijuana isn’t the work of a bad force. Rather the work of a good force but clouded by the government and its drug laws. If we stopped spending all that money, we could put it into something that’d help the economy. Give it to schools, or help feed some poor people. This war on drugs has done nothing to stop the flood of drugs entering the US. “Did alcohol use decrease during the Alcohol Prohibition? No.” in fact “Consumption by women and children increased dramatically” Today we’re seeing the exact same thing when it comes to the drug war. “Every hour spent investigating a drug user or seller is an hour that could have been used to find a missing child…”
I’m in favor of legalizing drugs. According to my value system, if people want to kill themselves, they have every right to do so. Most of the harm that comes from drugs is because they are illegal.”
Prominent Leaders Speak Out on Marijuana in California
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on July 4, 2010
Prominent Leaders Speak Out on Marijuana in California
At an event on Friday, June 25, 2010 at the Universal City Hilton Hotel in Universal City, California, the San Diego-based non-profit CADFY hosted community leaders who shared their professional and expert perspectives on the dangers of marijuana in California.
Read more on PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance
Do you think marijuana should be legalized?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on April 28, 2010
Why Marijuana Should Be Legal
Liberty: people deserve freedom to use marijuana.
The first and most basic reason that marijuana should be legal is that there is no good reason for it not to be legal. Some people ask ‘why should marijuana be legalized?” but we should ask “Why should marijuana be illegal?” From a philosophical point of view, individuals deserve the right to make choices for themselves. The government only has a right to limit those choices if the individual’s actions endanger someone else. This does not apply to marijuana, since the individual who chooses to use marijuana does so according to his or her own free will. The government also may have a right to limit individual actions if the actions pose a significant threat to the individual. But this argument does not logically apply to marijuana because marijuana is far less dangerous than some drugs which are legal, such as alcohol and tobacco.
SUMMARY: Individuals deserve the right to decide whether or not they should use marijuana. The government should not tell individuals what to do as long as they do not harm others.
Cost: keeping marijuana illegal is expensive.
The second important reason that marijuana should be legal is that it would save our government lots of money. In the United States, all levels of government (federal, state, and local authorities) participate in the “War on Drugs.” We currently spend billions of dollars every year to chase peaceful people who happen to like to get high. These people get locked up in prison and the taxpayers have to foot the bill. We have to pay for food, housing, health care, attorney fees, court costs, and other expenses to lock these people up. This is extremely expensive! We could save billions of dollars every year as a nation if we stop wasting money locking people up for having marijuana. In addition, if marijuana were legal, the government would be able to collect taxes on it, and would have a lot more money to pay for effective drug education programs and other important causes.
SUMMARY: We would have more money to spend on important problems if marijuana were legal.
Failure: prohibition doesn’t help.
The third major reason that marijuana should be legal is because prohibition does not help the country in any way, and causes a lot of problems. There is no good evidence that prohibition decreases drug use, and there are several theories that suggest prohibition might actually increase drug use (i.e. the “forbidden fruit” effect, and easier accessibility for youth). One unintended effect of marijuana prohibition is that marijuana is very popular in American high schools. Why? Because it is available. You don’t have to be 21 to buy marijuana — marijuana dealers usually don’t care how old you are as long as you have money. It is actually easier for many high school students to obtain marijuana than it is for them to obtain alcohol, because alcohol is legal and therefore regulated to keep it away from kids. If our goal is to reduce drug consumption, then we should focus on open and honest programs to educate youth, regulation to keep drugs away from kids, and treatment programs for people with drug problems. But the current prohibition scheme does not allow such reasonable approaches to marijuana; instead we are stuck with ‘DARE’ police officers spreading lies about drugs in schools, and policies that result in jail time rather than treatment for people with drug problems. We tried prohibition with alcohol, and that failed miserably. We should be able to learn our lesson and stop repeating the same mistake.
SUMMARY: Prohibition does not work. Education and treatment are better ways to address the drug problem.
There are plenty of other reasons why marijuana should be legal. Just to name a few:
Medicinal use: Marijuana can be used as medicine because it helps to stimulate apetite and relieve nausea in cancer and AIDS patients.
Hemp: The hemp plant is a valuable natural resource. Legalizing marijuana would eliminate the confusion surrounding hemp and allow us to take advantage of hemp’s agricultural and industrial uses.
Religious Use:Some religions instruct their followers to use marijuana. Just like Christianity and Judaism instruct their followers to drink wine on certain occaisions, some Hindus, Buddhists, Rastafarians, and members of other religions use marijuana as part of their spiritual and religious ceremonies. These people deserve the freedom to practice their religion as they see fit. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution says that the government cannot ‘prohibit the free exercise’ of religion, and so marijuana should be legal.
Why don’t we reinforce prohibition of alcohol if Marijuana is such a harmful drug?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on April 26, 2010
I don’t understand why Marijuana is Illegal when the long term side effects of the drug is just as bad as alcohol.
All as I see with Marijuana being an Illegal substance is Crime and my tax dollars paying to keep a Pot head in jail, and loss of tax revenue.
Why do feds get tough on marijuana but ignore hard drugs like crack & cocaine?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on April 26, 2010
Please do not insult my intelligence by saying that they do not. I would like to hear from a law enforcement official or from a lawyer/judge what it is about marijuana that makes it so much worse than heroine, EX, cocaine, crack, etc.
I don’t drink, no other drugs, just pot that I get from my family. I don’t harm anyone and no one gets hurt. I have no problems with my life.
My father does cocaine because drug tests don’t pick it up on urine samples. He also abuses alcohol, has saught both drug and alcohol treatment numerous times, and will likely die when his kidney/liver explode from being pushed to the brink for the last 40 years. His alcohol drove him to physically abuse my mother, mentally abuse me, and use his influence to create theatrical lies about me to the rest of my family in order to cut me out of the will; all because I would not accept his habits, and he saw it as a challenge.
I will restate the question: Why do feds grab up all the marijuana but leave the harder drugs on the streets?
As a “pothead” I am downright outraged at all these commercials about how terrible smoking cigarettes is, about how “this is your brain on drugs”, and all this other garbage… as if I needed a reminder of truly “bad influence” that federal law enforcement simply does not seem to grasp, and I am not alone.
Do your freakin job.
i hate to nag on cops though because they just do what they are told, but feds like the DEA dont answer to dirtballs like that.
Oh, really? You’re some expert, right? I already informed you of my abusive father. The life or death situations I was in as a child gave my PTSD. In many ways I was a soldier before I could even learn to formulate thoughts properly. Instead of taking some medication that will put me into a coma or kill me, I have chosen to smoke marijuana. In the long term it is also much cheaper. I have had no anxiety, and depression is much better than it was many years ago… but, with all due respect, I do not expect you to understand that in your own shoes.
the above msg is meant for fang
thanks for taking part in my question.
Why should punitive Marijuana laws inflict more harm than the actual use of the drug?
Posted by admin in Uncategorized on February 8, 2010
This is not a police bashing question so if your here just to say the police are evil don’t bother commenting!
If a person gets caught with Marijuana misdemeanor charge and suffers from hardship in finding employment that requires background checks and pays the fine how are they any better off after that happening compared to an individual that smokes marijuana but doesn’t get caught?
Now that same analogy with a more illicit and more dangerous drug like cocaine
An individual who get’s caught with misdemeanor quantity of cocaine that ends up doing jail time and sentenced to court ordered rehab and community service and pays a huge fine..
Now comparing that to a individual who is also a cocaine addict but doesn’t get caught and continues there drug of abuse .
This makes good sense to me since the cocaine addict will eventually destroy there health and turn on there family by stealing and hurting the people who are close to them so it would be better off if they had been handcuffed and put in jail to get clean. So what is there governments reasoning?



Recent Comments