bigdan1110 said:
Marijuana have been proven to have some benefices over the years, for people terminally ill, i've got a friend who's suffering from cancer, he prefer to smoke a couple a joints everyday instead of taking medication.
To my knowledge marijuana have never killed someone... heroin is killing people everyday...
BTW its because i'm drinking beer, that i would want to try stronger stuff like gin or whisky... :2 cents:
Very true. And as some other members have posted, it takes away the "forbidden fruit" aspect of it, not to mention that, if it is ever legalized, the control and distribution factors would be in the hands of the authorities (i.e., government agencies) and would be stringently regulated.
Do I advocate rampant drug use? Not at all. I've actually never done any kind of an illicit drug in my life. I drink alcohol.. beer, whiskey, gin, vodka, and bourbon. But I am wise enough - and have read enough history - to realize that the allure of any "outlawed" substance only makes its inherent street appeal that much more larger than life. You take away the illegality of the situation and you remove the overwhelming appeal of "doing somehting wrong". Case in point, prohibition.
Also, a few little known facts concerning illicit substances:
Heroin, opium, and morphine were all once sold over the counter in the late 1800's all the way up through to the 1930's and 1940's.
LEGALLY.
Coca-Cola was originally formulated with a derivative of cocaine. The main ingredient in the
original Coca-Cola formula came directly from the cocoa plant... the very same plant that cocaine is derived from.
Laudanum - once prescribed for migraine headaches and "fainting spells" (i.e., tremors, shakes, d.t.'s, just about anything that falls within a "fainting spells" category - is actually a lower grade of opium and is a direct forerunner of morphine; nonetheless, it was still highly adictive by virtue of it being an opiate. Quite a few well known historical figures were regularly prescribed and took laudanum. The most famous being one
Dr. John Henry Holliday (a.k.a., "Doc" Holliday of Tombstone, AZ, friend of U.S. Marshall Wyatt Earp.) He was medically prescribed laudanum for his continued fits of "consumption" (i.e., tuberculosis.) Another famous figure associated with laudanum is Edgar Allen Poe, author of "The Raven" and various other works.