BoBoBREWSKI
BURP!
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2008
- Messages
- 14,761
- Likes
- 6,511
- Points
- 113
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I am all for the legalization of pot too.
As someone who has literally never tried it in my life, and never will, I can't think of anything bad about legalizing it the way California is. Having less than an oz. of marijuana on you is a fine of a couple of hundred bucks. Big deal!!!!! I'd like to see it legalized and taxed the shit out of. California will get out of their debt in the first year of legalization of pot just from taxes. Just in case you are keeping score at home, I also think prostitution should be legalized for the same reasons and more.
I am all for the legalization of pot too.
As someone who has literally never tried it in my life, and never will, I can't think of anything bad about legalizing it the way California is. Having less than an oz. of marijuana on you is a fine of a couple of hundred bucks. Big deal!!!!! I'd like to see it legalized and taxed the shit out of. California will get out of their debt in the first year of legalization of pot just from taxes. Just in case you are keeping score at home, I also think prostitution should be legalized for the same reasons and more.
Never smoked weed. But isn't one of the knocks on it that it's a "Gateway Drug" to harder, much worse stuff? I mean, drinking Jack Daniels' doesn't get people on the track of snorting coke (that I know of), but the education provided by public schools stated that weed did. I'm sure many of you will swear that there's nothing to that, but are there actual studies and stuff that say it's "harmless"?
Weed is not a gateway drug. I've smoked plenty of it and have never had the urge to try any other drugs.
and, logistically speaking, how do you "tax the $hit out of it"? I mean, if there are bunches of people that users already get their product from, won't they just keep going to them? And I'm not fully convinced that drug dealers-turned-legit businesspeople will be as scrupulous about filing their state weed taxes as public liquor boards. Why would you go to ,say, Safeway or the Oregon Weed Store to get it if it's a $#it-tax more expensive and the same danger as getting it from Smokey at the YMCA?
Never smoked weed. But isn't one of the knocks on it that it's a "Gateway Drug" to harder, much worse stuff? I mean, drinking Jack Daniels' doesn't get people on the track of snorting coke (that I know of), but the education provided by public schools stated that weed did. I'm sure many of you will swear that there's nothing to that, but are there actual studies and stuff that say it's "harmless"?
Never smoked weed. But isn't one of the knocks on it that it's a "Gateway Drug" to harder, much worse stuff? I mean, drinking Jack Daniels' doesn't get people on the track of snorting coke (that I know of), but the education provided by public schools stated that weed did. I'm sure many of you will swear that there's nothing to that, but are there actual studies and stuff that say it's "harmless"?
"Willamette Week" lol...

Did you read the article? It's about HEMP, not WEED. There is a difference.
I was unaware that hemp production is economically viable for industrial purposes. What do you do with it that's not done cheaper and more effectively than other stuff?
Hemp has no effect as a drug. But it does have exceptional properties as a food, fuel, building material and textile. It’s also ultra-sustainable, growing quickly in almost any climate, with little water and no pesticides.
Advocates say the simple act of letting Oregon farmers grow hemp could eventually bring millions of dollars into the state. Canadian farmers made more than $8 million on hemp last year, according to the Canadian Hemp Trade Alliance. Advocates in Oregon say once a homegrown U.S. hemp industry gets started, the potential profits here are far greater.
Barker, who lives in West Linn, says he’s consumed “24/7” securing deals to commercialize the hemp fabric, called Crailar, for clothes and other products. He is now in the process of closing deals with Hanes for blending Crailar with the company’s cotton clothes and Georgia-Pacific for use in cleaning rags.
Hanes currently uses 2 million pounds of cotton per week in its socks alone. Yet cotton is one of the most destructive plants to farm, depleting soils wherever it’s grown and requiring massive amounts of pesticides and water. And its price is skyrocketing.
Hemp is one of the world’s most complete plant-based sources of protein, with all the essential amino acids. It also contains an ideal ratio of omega-3 and omega-6, essential fatty acids the body can’t produce on its own.
Hemp was one of the earliest plants cultivated in this country. Betsy Ross made the first U.S. flag out of hemp, and the Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper.
Hemp can be used to make concrete and the product is carbon negative, meaning more carbon is locked up in the process of growing and harvesting the plant than is expended in making it a building material. It’s waterproof, fireproof and seven times stronger than traditional concrete.
Why is it that a discussion about hemp inevitably turns into a discussion about marijuana? Yes, I understand that the similarity between the two is the reason that hemp is not legal, but seriously, can't the industrial merits of hemp be separated from the recreational merits of it's cousin?
My understanding is that it was the other way around. Hemp was outlawed first, as textile manufacturers using other fibers didn't want the competition from hemp in making textiles as it was supposedly cheaper to produce, so they lobbied to have hemp outlawed. As a result, the cannabis plant was made illegal to cultivate.
And yes, I think the two can and should be separated...personally, though, I'm in favour of both being legalized. I haven't seen anything compelling about it being particularly dangerous (at least, no more dangerous than alcohol or tobacco and likely less dangerous than either) as a recreational drug, and what I've read supports what Ronan says...that any "gateway" effect is due to having to buy marijuana from the same dealers that sell harder stuff, leading to exposure to the harder stuff. If hunting rifles could only be bought on the black market from people who also sold semi-automatic and machine guns, I think you'd see hunting rifles functioning as a "gateway" to bigger firearms.
I don't smoke marijuana myself and wouldn't even if it were legalized (since smoke from anything tends to be carcinogenic). This isn't an attempt to "justify" behaviour of my own, I just think it makes sense to legalize (and tax).

