DarkSun
:eltiT
I have studied the "slippery slope" through the eyes of Law Enforcement (student); everyone likes to think that Marijuana is "the gateway drug", no :sorry1: its alcohol. I am speaking also from experience; after being involved in an automobile accident that left me with severe migraine headaches (at least 4 a week, some last for more than a day) my husband and I took a trip to Amsterdam. Yes I visited a Coffee Shop or two, and guess what I did not have a migraine the entire trip. I do not believe in breaking the law, but nor do I think the law is always right. Being that there are other ways to ingest Marijuana that are not detrimental to your health (any way aside from smoking it) why are addictive drugs being used as treatments? I have studied some laws in which nations do allow harder drugs and yes crime rates are lower for the most part, but lets get real, we live in a country where too much is not enough, don't you think in the end legalizing harder more addictive drugs may increase the number of people who become dependent as well as having a sever impact on our Health Care System (an impact that is not needed, there are enough flaws as it is). Another fact that people constantly negate is that alcohol is a drug that if the dependency is severe enough, quitting cold turkey will kill you, other drugs can not make this claim (if a death ensues from stopping other addictions, it is usually not the drug leaving the system, it is the shock on the system itself).
See, I agree with this. I have no problem with marijuana being used medicinally, if only under the supervision of a medical practioner. The problem I have with people 'self-medicating', is that the people doing it are rarely qualified to do so... Not sure if you agree or disagree with this, but I don't think that legalising the recreational use of a psychoactive like marijuana is really that brilliant an idea.
By the way, about the lowered crime rates thing.
[youtube]I3cwJC6BM1w[/youtube]
YouTube - ‪Real Stories - Legalised Crime‬‏