And I bet all those Kali Libtard Legislators were just SURE the Ganja Gambit was gonna be a Gold Mine.
F-'em.
Greg
F-'em.
Greg
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Very insightful Nik. Addiction, to anything, is a disease.
Mag we are going to depart on this opinion.Very insightful Nik. Addiction, to anything, is a disease.
And I bet all those Kali Libtard Legislators were just SURE the Ganja Gambit was gonna be a Gold Mine.
F-'em.
Greg
Tell it to someone with cancer.......
FYI PMC, it took me nearly a decade to fight off two bouts with lymphoma during most of the 90's, Hodgkins and Non-Hodgkins both. For the record, I never once got into the weed, and while it wasn't fun, I do just fine these days.
Yours is a specious argument, that weed is the real answer to anything related to cancer. Weed can't do a damned thing for cancer that legal drugs can do just as well or better; I know, I went through both radiation and hard chemo.
Next time, pick your targets with more care, but don't pick me, I won't be reading it. You're now ignored permanently.
Greg
Woops just noticed Greg put me on ignore permanently.
Never had that happen before.
Strange I thought I was supposed to feel a disturbance in the force like millions of voices calling out than suddenly silenced........
another myth busted.
Mag we are going to depart on this opinion.
My Dad didn't choose his parkinsons, a disease.
I've yet to encounter someone with an addiction that hadn't tried the substance once or many times.
Actions have consequences, some more than we'd like.
The word disease has been hijacked.
R
Ive been around this block with him before. He'sangry and not able to understand the poblem beyond his opinion; that syndrome is largely true of the populace. Unfortunately Greg, like someone else here, seems to need a whipping boy.
I expect he'd be a good one to have at your back in a firefight.
Mag we are going to depart on this opinion.
My Dad didn't choose his parkinsons, a disease.
I've yet to encounter someone with an addiction that hadn't tried the substance once or many times.
Actions have consequences, some more than we'd like.
The word disease has been hijacked.
R
Very insightful Nik. Addiction, to anything, is a disease.
Unfortunately, this disease, addiction to hard core drugs, has been seen to cause more unrelated crimes and cause more non disease related issues than any other recognized "disease".
1. Burglary of residences, businesses, and vehicles.
2. Theft of property, all types.
3. Robbery.
4. Assaults to include murder.
5. Child neglect and abuse, to include child prostitution, and child death.
6. A host of other violations that cost taxpayer dollars like no other disease ever has.
Mental illness in several forms come close 2nd causing crimes listed above.
Alcoholism never reached the criminal levels drug addiction or mental illness has.
Cancer and those diseases cause what criminal behaviour ??
And people want to excuse drug addiction as a disease when it rides a crime wave. A select group of citizens will never accept the disease excuse . And the two sides will never compromise.
It isn't a disease in the sense of cancer or parkinson's. Those are organic and quite different. You may be a victim but you may have done little wrong to deserve the disease you get.
Addiction is a behavioral disorder pure and simple. Not to come off like a know it all as I am not but I have seen and LIVED this with friends and family more than I would care to remember. Addictive behavior is the opposite of maturity in action: developing higher-level and more abstract principles to enhance decision making in a wider range of contexts. People with addictions never matured beyond a child-like decision making process. I feel good so it is good...there is no negative. It is a purely cause and effect relationship. A child who eats too much of a favorite food and then suffers with a stomach ache for a while remembers both the good and bad. It tempers their decision the next time it occurs. There is the good and bad and sometimes the bad leaves its mark and teaches a child better decisions.
Unfortunately, opiates are incredibly powerful. Even the memory of a bad trip cannot dissuade you to stop because the high is so good and the memory of the bad pales in comparison. The power of opiates is too strong for 99% to overcome. That is why Mr. Langelius is correct. The pushers are a huge issue. Addiction follows the same pattern of psychosis whether it is drugs, gambling, smoking or sex. The common denominator is the pusher who preys on the misfortune of these people and should receive the harshest of penalties.
I'm very familiar with addiction.It isn't a disease in the sense of cancer or parkinson's. Those are organic and quite different. You may be a victim but you may have done little wrong to deserve the disease you get.
Addiction is a behavioral disorder pure and simple. Not to come off like a know it all as I am not but I have seen and LIVED this with friends and family more than I would care to remember. Addictive behavior is the opposite of maturity in action: developing higher-level and more abstract principles to enhance decision making in a wider range of contexts. People with addictions never matured beyond a child-like decision making process. I feel good so it is good...there is no negative. It is a purely cause and effect relationship. A child who eats too much of a favorite food and then suffers with a stomach ache for a while remembers both the good and bad. It tempers their decision the next time it occurs. There is the good and bad and sometimes the bad leaves its mark and teaches a child better decisions.
Unfortunately, opiates are incredibly powerful. Even the memory of a bad trip cannot dissuade you to stop because the high is so good and the memory of the bad pales in comparison. The power of opiates is too strong for 99% to overcome. That is why Mr. Langelius is correct. The pushers are a huge issue. Addiction follows the same pattern of psychosis whether it is drugs, gambling, smoking or sex.
YOu basically nailed it. I would guess that it usually starts with alcohol, then elevates.
To PM above, again, I add "ultimately its about freedom" and equal justice. If you want to make it just outlaw alcohol...WAIT! we saw how that went down.
Fiorello La Guardia (mayor of NYC) on progibition.
Ive seen people try alcohol and say "Nah, not for me wont drink ever again"
Than some people taste that alcohol and it immediately grabs them and takes hold.
The second person is the rarer. More people will not drink or drink in a controlled manner.
Have you ever heard of someone trying heroin and than not ever doing it again?
Alcohol may take over someone predisposed to addictive behaviors mentally.
Heroin can take someone with no predisposition and make them a mess in one go, all though it can be argued their addictive behaviors got them in steps to the point of heroin.
I dont think heroin is step one in the chain.
Still the conscious decision is made to use in the first place.
My point is it isn't conscious. It is an escape from a world that offered little hope.
Comparing heroin to nicotine or alcohol is ridiculous. Neither are as powerful in the intensity of the high and neither offers the escape of heroin and that is what these people crave...escape. I've worked with many of these people and never have I met one that didn't have a history of abuse that led them there. No one that is well adjusted suddenly decides to shoot heroin. It is a series of steps down the wrong path because of their past.
I don't really expect you guys to understand it. I've lived it and have volunteered to help them due to my experience of seeing what it did to friends and family. It is easy to categorize the users as losers...but that is not my experience.
That is why I am so opposed to these free clinics, etc. Perpetuating the problem via "legal" methods like methadone is the worst treatment I know of. Does nothing and never will. Pushers are vermin that should be destroyed at all costs.
Up to your last sentence I agree wholeheartedly. But under 'life liberty and the pursuit of happiness'" I say legalize it all. that will by default put the pusher our of business. But if a person wants to do this stupid shit it their funeral and their right to it just as much as one who wants to smoke cigarettes or drink booze. Anything else is a miscarriage of justice.
Maggot,
I agree with life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, however, a child does not have these rights as they do not possess the maturity in their decision making. Neither do these people. I have no siblings but a number of 1st cousins. My 2nd oldest one was like a brother. Born a week apart. We grew up together, played hockey, etc. He went down the wrong road. He was not the sharpest tool in the shed and was still making decisions like a child. He died on a street in Boston during the winter because he escaped from a "treatment" center and got a fix that was loaded with something besides Heroin. He was 31 years old.
His life, liberty and pursuit of happiness was at my expense and his family's and his wife's and his friends'. If I knew the pusher, I guarantee he would be wearing his tongue like a necktie. These people kill thousands...they should be hanged after conviction. They are worse than serial killers or pedophiles IMHO. They will prey on anyone - man, woman or child. I don't want to see it happen to anyone else hence my volunteering.
Up to your last sentence I agree wholeheartedly. But under 'life liberty and the pursuit of happiness'" I say legalize it all. that will by default put the pusher our of business.
Good for you...it is a horrible thingJust throwing this out there, but there are also those who didn't 'chose' to start oxy and the like. There are folks who woke up in the hospital a WEEK later who'd been in an accident (of another's making/fault) and had their life completely changed. To have casts and braces on all your extremities except your left arm, and on IV medication NOT of your choosing, is involuntary. After being weened off the IV and onto oral meds, whilst living in the hospital for months waiting for your pelvis to mend back together as well, those pain meds actually ARE working. And you're confused at the fact that you haven't been (the typical) stoned once yet.
This is because the medications actually are working on what is ailing you. All through the day. And weeks. And months.
There's a difference between "addicted" and "dependent" when it comes to this stuff.
Get out of the hospital, and simply choose to not get that script filled. Say to yourself: I'm glad I don't need to take these pills every 2 hours anymore.
I now know what all the 'heroin junkies' and whatnot go through. Worst 3 day period of my life. Simply laying on the floor not able to move. Middle of the afternoon on the 3rd day, I was trying to clean up, and getting things ready for laundry. Going through pants pockets, and found 1 single pill in a container that I'd forgotten about. One of my "go meds" for when out on excursions. I took that, just out of desperation and hope that it'll help my ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING hurting.
20 mins later I was straightened right out. My old self again. Damn. Now I learned what "addiction" was about, and the "dependency" thing.
So now, over a decade later, I continue to not do that stuff, and avoid at all costs anything that has 'oxy' in it. Have had a few more bouts of issues requiring immediate hospitalization, but always say NO when asked "do you want...."
I'll take the T3's instead. Kidney stones were a bit of a different story, and I had a different med. But I never want to go through that "dependency" thing again. Those months in the hospital affect a person in ways they don't even know.
Maybe, maybe not. CA and marijuana tax
First, we're takling (somewhat) responsible adults, not children.
If it were legal your cuz could have gotten something that wasnt poison. Thats my point. Its his right to get high, and should be able to do that w/o risking his life. Just like legal booze, legal cigarettes, etc.
Im not encouraging that behavior, just defending the right to do it.
Your story is very similar to a friend of mine. He works a normal job, but is dependent on opiates to basically function. He got into a car accident that really fucked up his back. That's what got him on the stuff. It's not to get high, it's to treat chronic pain. At this point he is chemically dependent. If he quits cold turkey (like his doctor cutting off his prescription), he will not only have to deal with debilitating pain, but also 4 or 5 years worth of withdrawal symptoms.
Drug companies marketed heroin as a non-addictive pain killer and as a treatment for chronic pain fully knowing the dangers they possess. Patients didn't know that the pills they were taking were for all intents and purposes heroin. It's safe to assume doctors didn't know either because they were being actively mislead as well.
Around 80% of heroin users started out on prescription pain pills. Most people don't wake up and say "Hey I wan't to go do heroin". A lot of people started in similar situations as yours and eventually end up on heroin because they need it to function. Most people don't have the luxury of missing work for a weak to deal with withdrawals. They don't know that they are addicted until it's too late.
In part one of the benefits of marijuana legalization is that it causes opiate use to go down, and is in a lot of cases a viable treatment for pain that is less addictive. It's not a miracle drug, but it's better than the current situation by a huge measure.
I understand your position. However, no good can come from legalizing these type of drugs. Pot, booze, etc. are one thing. Heroin and those class of drugs have no purpose other than misery. I think the money could be better spent teaching addicts the reasons why they become addicted. This will break the cycle of addiction versus perpetuating it.
I would agree with treatment over jail/prison but I stick to my position on it being a matter of personal freedom.
Different pdople handle things differently. Ive been prescribed narcotics for pain several time and have NO problem with them. Use them when I need them and put them away.
On the other hand I was miserably addicted to cigarettes (likely born addicted because of parental use amd heavy use while I was youung) and went through a living hell getting free from them. If you laid a thousand $$$ on the table I wouldnt touch a cigarette.
Pain management is an important part of healing.
Take a hip replacement for instance.
Try to come back from that, don't manage the pain, screw up your gait, next thing you know the other hip is fucked.
We are not reinventing the wheel.
Everything medicine should have learned about opioids should have been learned after the Civil War because we have been through this before when opioids were an over the counter medicine.
Opium addiction was a huge problem after the Civil War as well. There is a reason we decided to regulate it. However the people making the calls for regulation (the temperance movement) got a little overzealous and banned basically anything they viewed as sinful. We got marijuana prohibition and alcohol prohibition out of it too.
Drug policy needs to make sense and keep pace with the times. There needs to be a reversal in how willingly doctors give out highly addictive pain pills. There should also be consequences for drug companies deceptively marketing something as non-addictive when in fact they knew it was not. We did the same thing with Tobacco companies when they were lying about the links between smoking and lung cancer. Drug companies should be the ones paying for the getting people hooked on heroin. Capitalism means that profits are a corporations primary responsibility, but there needs to be some incentive to not actively poison your customers! Right now we are all worse off because of how they lied about their product. To that effect, Trump has mentioned punishing pharmaceutical companies involved, but to what extent, or whether or not he follows through remains to be seen. He is at least saying the right thing, so I'll give him credit where it's due.