marijuana ohio

KingWyrm420

Well-Known Member
i just joined norml to help fight for our rights and i was looking around for some stuff with ohio and this here below caught my eye. some of this i have witnessed myself, more and more ganja is here in ohio, just today i was driving home from work and at a stop light i looked out the window and at a nearby house i could see into there backyard and there sitting on a picknick table was a ft tall plant, all i could do was shake my head. tell me about some pot stuff going on in ur ohio neighborhood!


Ohio
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[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Marijuana is more potent now than at any point during the past 30 years, fueling concerns about how it's affecting users.

"It's very scary when you see adolescents smoking especially potent marijuana because they're going through a developmental period for parts of the brain," said Brad Lander, a psychologist at Ohio State University Medical Center. "It's unlikely they're going to catch up with that development."

A study by the University of Mississippi's Potency Monitoring Project found that the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, called THC, is at 9.6 percent in samples from 2007. Ten years earlier, it was at 5 percent.

Marijuana use can cause difficulties with concentration, memory, learning and sexual performance. Long term, it can cause cancers of the lung and lip.

Lander, who helps treat people who have failed in other recovery programs or failed screenings for jobs or sports, has noticed an increase in the plant's potency firsthand.

"It's been rising steadily since the '70s," he said.

"( Most users ) tend to be adolescents, anywhere between 13 and early 20s," Lander said. "After that, you still see a lot of people smoking marijuana, but it's usually a mix with other drugs."

Last year, the Columbus police narcotics unit confiscated 7,439 pounds of marijuana, 1,397 indoor plants and 207 outdoor plants with a combined street value of almost $16 million.

With the help of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, the police recovered more than 2,000 plants in raids last month.

"The amount of marijuana being seized is up," said Jay Evans, commander of the narcotics bureau. "I think that it's quite substantial in central Ohio."

The Office of National Drug Control Policy said there are 14.8 million current users of marijuana who are 12 or older.

"Particularly worrisome is the possibility that the more potent THC might be more effective at triggering the changes in the brain that can lead to addiction; however, more research is needed to establish this link between higher THC potency and higher addiction risk," Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, said in a statement.

The increased potency is not surprising, said Anthony Marotta, the Drug Enforcement Administration assistant special agent in charge of Ohio.

"With fertilizers, you're going to get better corn and you're going to get better marijuana," he said. "It's not something that all of a sudden they came out with this new hybrid. It takes time."

The University of Mississippi researchers collected more than 64,000 samples from 48 states, predominantly seized by law enforcement, including cannabis, hashish and hash oil.

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VictorVIcious

Well-Known Member
Did you want this taken apart point by point?? Or would it just suffice to say in order to be 'Medical Grade' I believe in Holland, may have been Sweden it would have to be over 13% thc, that is good because you smoke less, vaporize and all of that smoke goes away.
I have never advocated young people use cannibus. VV
 

speedhabit

Well-Known Member
So...People tend to like to smoke more, better weed....huh....

I never thought I followed trends before, bring on the good nugget
 
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