Found this article which, even for someone who's pro legalization like me, makes scary reading:https://www.tremr.com/marty-nemko/should-marijuana-be-kept-illegal
Can all these studies be wrong?
Can all these studies be wrong?
Found this article which, even for someone who's pro legalization like me, makes scary reading:https://www.tremr.com/marty-nemko/should-marijuana-be-kept-illegal
Can all these studies be wrong?
So for some reason I imagined you riding a rather large horse with a cowboy hat and a shiny star when you posted this ..........either way I'm moving along sheriff ......lolBullshit post, move on, nothing to see here people...
If smoking weed caused cancer, we'd know about it. In fact, many long term studies have shown that while tobacco certainly causes cancer, cannabis does NOT.You have to look at these 'studies' closely. If you are not experienced at reading this sort of thing it is very easy to get the wrong impression. It is easy to jump to the conclusion the authors guide you to in spite of the fact that this is not the conclusion the paper came to.
Many references in the list are articles from popular publications like newspapers and websites. Non-scientist journalists are, at best, poorly qualified to understand the actual significance of a real scientific study. Instead, they look for the grabber headline. Combine the grabber headlines with an organization or individual that has a matching agenda and you get an article like the one referenced. The usual label for this kind of journalism is 'cherry picking', i.e. include only articles that support your conclusion regardless of how many there are that do not support your conclusion or flatly deny it.
This type of journalism can be very convincing to the uninformed. A really good current example of the selling power of this sort of approach is the alternative medicine pitch from your local PBS station during pledge week. 15 minutes of watching will convince you that the presenter has solved a horrendous medical issue that has cause suffering and death for millions of years. You have to ask yourself, if you came up with a cure for the common cold would you decide that the best way to serve humanity and possibly make a profit was to sell your cure on PBS during pledge week?
I sum up this with the guiding principle of cherry pickers, three card monte dealers and PBS presenters everywhere, "If the pitch is right the suckers will bite".
Cannabis usage is one of the worlds largest ongoing, unintentional epidemiological studies. People have been using cannabis for literally thousands of years. Cannabis usage has undergone extensive study in the last 50 or so years. Any significant effects would have been noticed by now. Most of the listed studies are either just excuses to publish a scary headline or an investigation of a narrow spectrum of use or users.
I do take the studies of diminished I.Q. seriously. But the studies have trouble controlling other factors that may affect intelligence so I'm not completely convinced. However, there is sufficient evidence to keep cannabis away from children. I think this message is clear. The Colorado cannabis legislation for example contains a lot of regulations intended to keep cannabis out of the hands of under-aged users based on this evidence.
I also must add, ANY inhaled plant product is probably a carcinogen and probably has other significant long term health effects. Studies show cannabis is far safer than tobacco not because cannabis smoke is somehow less likely to have a carcinogenic effect but because tobacco smokers tend to consume 10-20 times (one joint a day vs one pack a day) as much as cannabis smokers so the carcinogenic effect is very much greater for tobacco smokers.
lmao, yeah just looked a little suspect, guys first post, seems like a troller for a pharma company to meSo for some reason I imagined you riding a rather large horse with a cowboy hat and a shiny star when you posted this ..........either way I'm moving along sheriff ......lol