You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Will Your View Evolve Also? Next Year, Marijuana Could Be Legalized in the United States

in #politics7 years ago

My dad's contrasting views against Marihuana seem, to me, very exotic.

He had family members whose lives were destroyed by drugs, so I do understand his fixation against drug usage. I was talking to him about this on the 21st of April, (The day after 4/20). I told him that the 20th is the day of Marihuana, and he was kind of apprehensive about my words.

He said that it's addictive, I told him that a lot of the scientific studies that denied this probably had backing. He said that no, they're addictive, starting point for harder drugs, that it's just a strange campaign much like the one by tobacco companies.

I don't think that he's a conspiracy theorist, but he's got a big collection of cons and seems to be immune to the pros of Marihuana. I myself have never smoked it, but I find it interesting, to say the least, and well, despite my family's opposition, I'd be willing to try it, at least to see what all the fuss is about.

Sort:  

Your dad is a smart man. He has a good point. You should learn from him)

Make sure you live stream that event :P

I hear it really gets those creative juices going. I wouldn't know though.

He's lived some difficult experiences and that's meaningful to him. The fallacy seems to be lumping together all of these substances as illegal drugs. I'm not a user, but I have taken a hard look at the data and it seems to suggest that marijuana is not as dangerous as those other drugs.

He always refers to them as a stepping stone or a first step. When I told him that it isn't dangerous or addictive, he said that somehow, they still are, just less, and that people have a strong tendency to go into harder drugs, and that's their demise.

I'm not sure what to believe, but I'm still curious about its effects.

I think the illegality of marijuana is what causes it to become a "stepping stone". You need access to the drug, so you need (or needed, 20 years ago) to find someone to sell it to you. This person was the drug dealer, or a customer of one. The drug dealer had a little of everything -- merchandising = profit -- so if you heard about another drug, like cocaine or crack, you could ask about that, and get it.

I think it's different today, because medical mj doesn't connect you with the drug underground.

On the other hand, doctors overprescribing vicodin, a pretty addictive drug, has become the gateway to heroin. It's because the drugs are similar.

He's right that it's historically been a "gateway" to other drugs. That's something we need to recognize and deal with (as I wrote in my piece), but not reason enough to ban it either.