Its probably been easy access since the 60s.Agree, poor choice of words. Public education, early intervention.....like with everything it requires a layered or network response and some people will fall through.
The people battling with it will have a life long battle regardless of the legality, they will always find a way to get it. I don't think we do keep the majority away from it in the long run. I went to 3 high schools, 1 in a low socio-economic area and 2 at the upper end. The kids who wanted to try weed at all 3 had more than enough access to experiment.
There has been easy access to weed for a lot longer than 20 years?
Just to expand - the weed today is a lot more potent. Probably triple what it was in the 90s and god knows how much since the 60s. Different growing methods as well.There has been easy access to weed for a lot longer than 20 years?
Its probably been easy access since the 60s.
It tends to get left behind in high school for a lot of kids. And like I said before, you are restricted by the grow cycle to some degree. When it goes dry it gives people a chance to quit.
If its illegal a lot of people won't try due to the loser stigma. More open acceptance will change that.
You also get varying degrees of strength currently. Not the hydro potent strains day in day out if it were legal.
But then you have issues with pgrs and mould in badly cured buds( with the illegal stuff). So its a toss up.
Its been decriminalised. I'm for that, not legalisation.Hydro has been around as long as I have so that must be 20 years +. By regulating weed the potency could be regulated.
Strongly disagree with this one, tobacco and Portugal suggest otherwise.
https://mic.com/articles/110344/14-...-all-drugs-here-s-what-s-happening#.iuXJVm4TX
Its been decriminalised. I'm for that, not legalisation.
Haha more quality trolling
dontdecriminalize.org haha
Umm govt report. Reading 101.
I'm guessing your scruples went out the door when you invested in someone like Bruce Linton?
They used meta-analysis in this study which isn't that hard on conclusions and themselves said "more research into this area needs to be done".
More adults are using and they want to triple the market. This is also for medical marijuana use- not legalised recreational marijuana use.The results showed no significant increases or decreases in adolescent recreational use following the legalization of medical marijuana. Meta-analysis revealed that none of the studies demonstrated significant changes in marijuana use prevalence among teens pre-post enactment of medical marijuana laws compared with simultaneous changes in states without medical marijuana laws (standardized mean difference = –0.003).
“While medical marijuana laws did not increase the risk for marijuana use in teens so far, that does not diminish the potential seriousness of regular or heavy early use, which requires clinical attention in states with and without medical marijuana laws,” Hasin told Healio Psychiatry.
Of 11 studies included in the meta-analysis, all studies that compared states with and without legalized medical marijuana found that states with medical marijuana laws had higher rates of past-month marijuana use before the passage of such laws. Although the impact of legalizing medical cannabis on additional marijuana outcomes and subgroups produced nonsignificant results, limited heterogeneity warrants further study, according to the authors.
"For now, there appears to be no basis for the argument that legalizing medical marijuana has increased teens' use of the drug. However, we may find that the situation changes as commercialized markets for medical marijuana develop and expand, and as states legalize recreational marijuana use,” Hasin said in a press release. "This warrants additional consideration, especially with the decreasing national trend of risk perception among adolescents and as the current perception gives rise to more medical marijuana stores and commercial opportunities."
On the other hand, other evidence indicated that more adults may use marijuana recreationally after the passage of medical marijuana laws, according to Hasin.
“The $8 billion cannabis industry anticipates tripling by 2025,” she said in the release. “Obtaining a solid evidence base about harmful, as well as beneficial, effects of medical and recreational marijuana laws on adults is crucial given the intense economic pressures to expand cannabis markets.”
Yeah I do. But theres a bigger time lag on commercialization of weed as the safety barriers are broken down and greed hits its stride.Do you realise how easy it is to get medical pot in the states
That article was basically "People like weed".Why not quote this then?
Yeah I do. But theres a bigger time lag on commercialization of weed as the safety barriers are broken down and greed hits its stride.
Haha I don't have time to read links from posters I don't respect. You are not blocked because you are good for a laugh!!!
Note: I do read links from the opposing side of the argument from most posters
That article was basically "People like weed".
Was there a specific part of the article?
So we let the bikies and crooks reap the rewards?Yeah I do. But theres a bigger time lag on commercialization of weed as the safety barriers are broken down and greed hits its stride.
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