Showing posts with label marijuana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marijuana. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2015

Letter to the Editor on Marijuana Use


      In an editorial dissent written for the Badger Herald entitled “An impaired decision” (Nov. 23rd, 2009), Beth Mueller argued against the legalization of cannabis for purposes other than “well-controlled and justified medicinal use.”
      Mueller characterized marijuana use as “inherently harmful.” This statement neglects the fact that the negative effects of marijuana use may be greatly diminished if safer absorption methods are utilized. Heating marijuana to the appropriate temperature of approximately 185° F causes Δ-THC, the most well-known active ingredient in cannabis, to boil, thus allowing the user to inhale the vapor while avoiding the cancer-causing effects of combusted carbon, as well as the pain and damage to the lungs caused by inhaling hot fumes. Hence, the immediate, non-psychological, detrimental health effects of marijuana use may be easily avoided with proper care and equipment, expensive though it may be.
      Mueller also claimed that marijuana use causes “[t]he impairment of reason” and “block[s] the ability to think rationally”. She used cliché arguments against recreational users of marijuana, such as that they seek “only pleasure over the higher... goals of humanity”, and to “forget [them]selves and the world just to feel good.” She also wrote that marijuana use for purely recreational, non-medicinal purposes is “mere escapism” and causes “artificial warping of the mind”, and claimed that it diminishes awareness.
      It was irresponsible of Mueller to use such arguments without citing supporting medical evidence. For decades, opponents of marijuana have claimed that it kills brain cells, decreases short-term memory, and impedes the user's ability to think rationally, but recent medical evidence suggests just the opposite.
      According to the website of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), researchers at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon found in 2005 that the administration of synthetic cannabinoids in rats stimulated the proliferation of newborn neurons in the hippocampus region of the brain. Not only that, but a 2007 study by the American Association for the Advancement of Science revealed that endocannabinoids shape neuronal connectivity.
      In laymen's terms, the active ingredients in marijuana not only assist the transformation of neuronal (nerve) stem cells into adult neuronal [...] cells, but also facilitate the building of connections between such cell, which may actually serve to increase the brain's capacity to store memory. Arguments that characterize marijuana use as harmful to the brains and minds of adults are, at best, ill-informed and pseudoscientific, and at worst, intentionally deceptive and alarmist.
      Other medical studies have suggested that marijuana use may have effects that are helpful in either preventing, curing, or relieving symptoms of Alzheimer's disease, Tourette's syndrome, heart disease, and cancers such as glioma, a cancer of the nervous system. However, this is not to say that marijuana consumed via the safest available methods is completely without harm. Marijuana use can cause cognitive defects in fetuses, and, according to UW [University of Wisconsin] professor Amy Mosher-Garvey, M.S.S.W., it is physiologically addictive.
      I agree with Beth Mueller's main thrust that the consumption of cannabis for purposes other than “well-controlled and justified medicinal use” should be warned against, but I believe that the list of reasons that constitute justified medicinal use is longer and more broad than the list of reasons Mueller would be likely to accept.
      Neither I nor any doctor would ever suggest that anyone smoke pot while operating heavy machinery or in the presence of minors, nor that an expecting mother do the same. When it comes to the willful ingestion of controlled substances for recreational purposes, safety, moderation, and keeping oneself well-informed should always be encouraged.


Written in Late November 2009
Edited on October 30th, 2015
Originally Published on October 30th, 2015

Note: This piece was not published by the Badger Herald.

Sunday, April 20, 2014

15 Reasons to Legalize Marijuana

Written on June 17th, 2011



1. Reduction of marijuana prices by 90%.
2. More expendable income for pot-heads.
3. More white-market spending.
4. Less hunger and poverty.
5. Less violent crime.
6. Less expensive criminal justice system.
7. More reasonable criminal justice system.
8. Less crowding in jails and prisons.
9. More government tax revenue.
10. Less border violence.
11. More rational immigration policy.
12. More positive public perception of immigrants.
13. More available sources of fuel.
14. More available sources of fiber.
15. More medical science research on glaucoma, nerve cancer, autism,
            Asperger’s, Alzhemer’s, Parkinson’s, and Tourette’s




http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html
For more entries on justice, crime, and punishment, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/thrasymachus-support-for-justice-being.html

Conversation with a Liberal on Taxing Marijuana

Written on April 9th, 2011
Edited in April 2014
Based on a real conversation



   Me: "I heard that taxes by governments make up 20% of the price of gasoline. That's more than oil companies make in profits. And the government doesn't even provide any service for the gasoline, except letting it come into the country."

   Liberal: "Well, government provides plenty of services. Health care for retired people, for instance. The public roads that we drive on. I mean, those taxes have got to come from somewhere."

   Me: "If you can name a problem and say the taxes for it have to come from somewhere, but where they come from can be totally unrelated to the causality of the problem, then you can justify taxing any random thing just because there are problems out there...
   "Say we decide to legalize and tax marijuana. When people smoke marijuana, it causes lung cancer. It has a health detriment. I have no problem with the government taxing alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana if they spend the tax money to address health problems caused by those substances. And they do, they spend tobacco taxes on children's health care. And the public roads, some of that money comes from tolls that the people who drive on them directly have to pay while they're using them. That kind of causality-based taxation makes sense to me."

   Liberal: "Well, okay, it would be fine if we legalized medicinal marijuana, and even recreational marijuana, if the government could tax it, and it would especially make sense if that tax money were spent on medical care."

   Me: "I agree, and some estimates say that if we did that, then the price of marijuana would go down more than 90 percent."

   Liberal: "Well, in that case, I would want the government to keep the price of marijuana artificially high, like, for example, the same price it was before. You don't want people who are disadvantaged to smoke a lot of marijuana."

   Me: "That's ridiculous. First of all, price-fixing is never a good idea, whether you're keeping the price artificially high or artificially low.
   "Second, if you allow the price of marijuana to drastically decline, drug dealers aren't going to be able to afford to make any money off of it, and they'll have to look for real jobs, which would eventually cause a decrease in unemployment.
   "Third, if government forms a price cartel on marijuana and makes marijuana dispensaries sell it at that fixed price, you'd still have pot dealers who are willing to use violence against their competition, which would then be government employees selling marijuana legally.
   "Fourth, lowering the price of marijuana is not going to significantly affect the amount of pot that poor people smoke; there aren't many people that really need more than an eighth a week.
   "And lastly, why would you want to keep it difficult for poor people to afford pot? Don't you think poor people would do better to spend $45 a week on food, instead of paying that money to the government in the form of a 900% vice tax?"

   Liberal: "I don't want to make it hard for poor people to afford drugs or food! How could you assume I meant such a thing!?"

   Me: "You basically said you don't want to make it easier for poor people to do drugs affordably. That's the obvious outcome of what you proposed."

   Liberal: "Well, that's not how I meant it."

   Me: "Oh, so you just want to impose huge taxes on whatever you can for the pursuit of whatever problem you personally feel exists. Well, at least you're consistent."
   "Do you suggest we use that tax money to beat up pot dealers who out-compete the legal dispensaries? I believe that qualifies as 'change we can believe in'."





http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html

For more entries on taxation, please visit:

Sunday, January 5, 2014

The War on Drugs

Written in January 2012
Originally published 1-18-2012



The inhumane repression and prosecution of the peaceful, safe, responsible, and voluntary use of controlled substances is an immoral threat to our civil liberties and our personal freedoms, and represents an unnecessary financial burden on taxpayers.

If elected to the 113th Congress, I would vote to repeal all federal anti-drug legislation (as well as pursue the abolition of the Drug Enforcement Administration [DEA]); end the funding of foreign governments to combat the non-violent cultivation, manufacturing, distribution, sale, purchase, and consumption of drugs; and urge the president to pardon some 40,000 imprisoned non-violent federal drug offenders. To end the War on Drugs would eliminate 10,000 federal bureaucrats, and could save the federal government as much as $28 billion annually.

While I would vote to prevent the federal government from intervening in the illicit drug policies of the states (unless constitutional amendments against the prohibition of marijuana and other drugs were to appear as realistic and necessary prospects), I would urge the governors of the states to pardon some 200,000 imprisoned non-violent drug offenders, and to work with their legislatures to legalize the cultivation and manufacture of drugs (including hemp and drug precursors), as well as the medicinal and recreational use of illicit drugs. To end the War on Drugs could save the state and local governments as much as $16 billion annually.




http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-food-and-drug-administration.html

For more entries on justice, crime, and punishment, please visit:
http://www.aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2010/10/thrasymachus-support-for-justice-being.html


Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Speech at the Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Fest on October 7th, 2012


Written in October 2012
Edited in May 2014



As a libertarian-leaning independent, I would urge my fellow [candidates for] representatives in the House to repeal all federal anti-marijuana legislation, vote to repeal all federal drug laws on Interstate Commerce Clause grounds, and urge the president – whoever he may be – to pardon all non-violent federal drug offenders.
If elected, I would invoke the Commerce Clause to dispute the constitutionality of not only federal drug laws, but also the states’ outright bans on the importation of illicit drugs across state lines. The only constitutional position on this issue is one which promotes the use of federal power to prohibit the states from regulating marijuana in a manner that causes undue inhibition of the freedom of trade of all commodities – marijuana included – across state borders.
My Republican opponent Chad Lee has not thus far made his stance on marijuana well-known, but I think this fact is sufficient to infer that Mr. Lee would not enthusiastically promote the N.O.R.M.L. agenda. While my Democratic opponent Mark Pocan has made some statements in support of decriminalization, I feel that his support of vice laws opposing freer trade and use of legal substances like alcohol and tobacco suggests that his support of personal freedoms could stand to be more principled and consistent.
If I am elected, I would be outspoken in my support of the decriminalization and legalization of marijuana – be it for medicinal, recreational, industrial, or entheogenic purposes – as well as in my opposition to the expansion of the drug war into overseas theaters such as Latin America, South America, Afghanistan, and others.
As a write-in candidate, I will not be on the ballot for U.S. House this November, but with enough write-in votes, I can still win the seat. Just remember to vote for independent Joe Kopsick – K-O-P-S-I-C-K – by writing-in my name on the ballot for U.S. Representative on Tuesday, November 6th.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Addiction and Neurodegenerative Diseases


     Autism is a neurodegenerative disease, a class of afflictions which includes Asperger's, Tourette's, Parkinson's, and Alzheimer's. A common cause of neurodegenerative disorders is the phosphorylization of the tau protein, which agglomerates in neuronal cells, causing links between cells to tangle and clump-up.

     A recent article said that autism may be triggered by low levels of anti-depressant medications in our drinking water. Drinking water often contains sodium fluoride.

     Fluoride causes calcium deposits to build up in the pineal gland, which is the gland in the brain that secretes melatonin and can be stimulated by psychedelic drugs, which cause hallucinations.

     Hallucinations are also experienced by people with psychotic symptoms, treatment for which often includes anti-psychotic and anti-depressant medications, both of which often contain fluoride or fluorine.

     Symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases include communication disorders; immobility and impaired mobility; and repetitive patterns of behavior such as tics, highly structured play in children, and ritualistic behavior.

     Delta-9-THC - the psychoactive chemical in marijuana - has been shown to help prevent the agglomeration of the tau protein which causes neurodegenerative disorders. It has also been shown to facilitate the growth of adult stem cells into working neurons, and to promote the growth of connections between neurons.

     Marijuana has a reputation among its users as aiding in communication, promoting social cohesion, and increasing capacity for sympathy, which would seem to sugest that it could be prescribed to treat the social aspects of autism and Asperger's. It has been shown to ameliorate the kinds of tics associated with Parkinson's and Tourette's.

     In "The Doors of Perception", Aldous Huxley made reference to D.C. Broad's description of "the mind as a reducing valve". This refers to the idea that the mind must filter-out all unnecessary and superfluous information, so that our consciousnesses are not overwhelmed with vivid sensory information associated with the memory of everything we have ever experienced.

     Ideas like this have been construed to suggest that forgetting has its advantages. Perhaps the short-term memory-loss problems associated with marijuana use are not as disadvantageous to our minds as the long-term memory effects associated with Alzheimer's, some symptoms of which THC has been shown to treat.

     Alcohol and psychoactive drugs such as marijuana and LSD have reputations for improving communication skills, and removing inhibitions, leading to novel and varied behavior. Not that alcohol promotes neuronal development, but these types of behavior seem to be the opposite of symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases, such as delayed onset of communication skills in childhood, and ritualistic behavior.


     There seem to be two paradoxes here.

     The first paradox is that hallucinations, behaviors which societal norms cast as too experimental and disordered, and lack of ritual and regularity in everyday living are all things which can be cited in order to support diagnoses of “psychosis” or “neurosis”, which are both vague, overused, practically meaningless medical terms. Psychosis and similar “afflictions” are often treated with anti-psychotic or anti-depression medications, which often contain fluoride or fluorine.

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