What part do you find funny, exactly?Good God this is a joke.
Pot doesn't make any one go crazy much less schizophrenic. :roll:
What part do you find funny, exactly?Good God this is a joke.
Pot doesn't make any one go crazy much less schizophrenic. :roll:
It is possible for someone who is schizophrenic, and not showing signs yet, to have their psychosis accelerated. I had a friend similar to yours.But I have worked with and been friends with many people who are consumers of mental health services. Most of them are on meds but also smoke pot and are perfectly capable of functioning. Those few that still drink, however, cannot function very well.
Personally, I don't smoke any more but I am around the stuff and its consumers constantly and other than the one case, have never seen any harm done in my forty five years of experience with it. By the way, the schizophrenic doesn't smoke any more either.
What part do you find funny, exactly?
The way it sounds like a review for Reefer Madness. A chemical imbalance could be one of the long-term effects of cannabis use in some people - just the same as cancer may be one of the long-term effects of following city busses.
I'm not following you? What are you claiming i'm saying?
I have not ascribed any words to you. Your post leaves me with the impression the condition was brought on by cannabis use. Though possible, it would certainly be a rare case. Scare tactics and misinformation were the whole gist of Reefer Madness.
I honestly don't know what brought about his problems. He was normal, 20 yrs later, at 37, he's not. He smokes a lot of weed daily, which doctors attribute to his diagnosis. That is what peaked my interest in that theory, but as far as I know, he could have had problems all along that I didn't notice until they began to surface in really strange ways. I know he always had and exceptionally good memory, especially for dates.
Cliffy: that's too bad about your friend, I take it he's not on any kind of medication?
The big problem with weed is the stigma attached to it. The pharmaceutical industry shuns it so it seldom gets a fair shake in assessment. As advanced as we've come to believe we are, what we actually know about drug interactions with the body and its chemistry is squat. Odd how what works for one person is a toxin for another. I have seen cannabis used to help keep schizophrenia in check. I suppose one doctor's opinion may well vary from the next.
What part do you find funny, exactly?
The part where you jump to a conclusion and then later in the thread attempt to back it up with some bs about it's what his doctors think.
For starters, there is a suggestion in actual research that a very very small percentage of youth who smoke pot chronically and show a tendency to psychosis later on in life, may bring about an earlier onset of Schizophrenia.
Of course it's starting to look more and more like some people who have a propensity for Schizophrenia happen to smoke pot as well.
Jumping to the conclusion that pot made your friend Schizophrenic is like saying watching TV makes you have a car accident because lots of people watch TV and have car accidents.
Lets recap what I said, in that post:
1. I do not acknowledge the original statistic as it was posted as a joke, hence the smilie. Anyone would half a brain would say 'gee Said1, what is the total number of people treated for cannabis induced psychosis in order to determine 80% are males?"
2. I said I didn't care if people used drugs and alcohol as I think it's their choice.
3. I said statistics do not explain the presence of mental illness in pot smokers.
4. I said I became interested in the statistical correlations as a friend of mine was diagnosed with a supposed pot related mental illness. I'm sure you're well aware of that fact that statistical correlations are not considered proof. I even used the word 'supposed', in relation to the doctor's diagnosis, which is pretty non-committal.
5. I said it's possible that he had problems prior to getting really bad, and I didn't notice.
6. I said he thinks he mimicked his mother's coping skills.
Is there anything else I need to clarify for you?
I've never smoked pot either. As for health effects, I did find this:
Effects of Marijuana - The Health Effects of Marijuana
and
InfoFacts - Marijuana
So it would seem to me that eliminating its use ought to be the government's long-term goal. This does not mean however that criminalization is necessarily the best way to fight it (remember prohibition in the 1930's?). Maybe it is, maybe not, but perhaps we could compare the solutions using historical comparison:
Criminalization
Tried prohibition in the 30s. It didn't stop alcohol consumption, but certainly reduced it. On that front, a success. Inversely, it also led to organized crime and the mafia getting into it. We could make a parallel with pot. It's illegal and so is in the hands of organized crime, and like alcohol in the 1930's prohibition era, isn't so openly used.
Legalization and taxation
After the prohibition era ended, alcohol consumption increased, but at least organized crime was out of the picture again. So then the government tried increased taxation, at least in Canada (I don't know about the US) which helps to reduce consumption but again can promote organized crime and smuggling of tax-free cigarettes for example.See above. It's a massive waste of money to attempt to prevent someone who wants to, from growing and having a plant that grows damn near any where with little help at all.
That is for all intents and purposes harmless, and has an artificial value that attracts violent criminals who use that money generated to further their criminal activities.
PrescriptionWe criminalize it, but allow addicts to purchase it with prescription. This of course could have strings attached like turning in the dealer, and gradual reduction of quantity over time, etc. tax free prescription marijuana could be the lure as an alternative to the expensive illegal stuff.
There are no pot addicts. It's a turn of phrase like being addicted to golf. Cigarettes are an addiction. Heroin is an addiction. Pot is a non addictive cocktail.
Some people find that it helps to alleviate symptoms of chronic ailments, pain, nausea, stuttering and a host of other things. For most people it's just fun and doesn't leave you hung over.
I honestly don't know which is the best alternative to fighting marijuana consumption, but here are three that I know.
Why bother to fight it at all? It's not like there aren't enough serious crimes to take care of or dangerous violent criminals to round up.