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#1 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: GU1
Posts: 3,595
Likes (Received): 9
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Brown hints at return to tougher cannabis laws
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#2 |
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ß∂NNED
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Sheffield/Leeds
Posts: 11,520
Likes (Received): 1
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What would be the point.
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#3 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sheffield
Posts: 11,903
Likes (Received): 1
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So his Cabinet Ministers can concentrate in meetings?
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Any progress on this? |
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#4 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: London
Posts: 18,436
Likes (Received): 107
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Good. I fucking hate cannabis. It destroyed the lives of many of my friends.
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#5 |
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Rock Lord
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Blackpool
Posts: 12,920
Likes (Received): 4
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Well said Medo. My next door neighbour is a dealer and it fucking stinks and can't be good for you, especially the amount he smokes.
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#6 |
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Blood, sweat, gravy, egg.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,494
Likes (Received): 16
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I was pro cannabis for years, mainly because i was a smoker myself, then i started working as a Psychiatric Nurse 8 years ago (i stopped 'everyday' smoking 18 months prior to this) and was shocked at how fucked up and addicted so many people were, kids with full blown schizoid dissorders and 40 year olds who wished they were on heroin instead because at least they'd get methadone for the horrid withdrawls. It's fun on occaision i admit, but long term it does (most people) no good what so ever....
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#7 |
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member
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Bristol,England
Posts: 9,247
Likes (Received): 127
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After continuly smoking cannabis users sometimes try stronger drugs like extacy and cocaine then onto heroine then stuff goes missing from my garage and porch.Me i tried cannabis when i was around 17 and it never apealed probably because i had bucket bongs and chocking on a mouthfall of bong water.
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#8 |
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New Nottingham!
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Nottingham
Posts: 11,707
Likes (Received): 15
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Never really been interested in the stuff to be honest. Smoked it abit with my mates when we were about 15/16. Never really liked the effect so I just didn't bother.
A few of my friends are hooked on the stuff now and all their money goes on it so I'd welcome the change. Then I won't get phone calls off them asking me to lend them a tenna.
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#9 |
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Blood, sweat, gravy, egg.
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,494
Likes (Received): 16
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I used to love bucket bongs, a friend of mine still does them on a regular basis (2 prior to work, 2 during lunch...everyday) when he's not on them people ask him if he's ON drugs as he looks shit, can't eat, won't socialise. He's a good looking bloke with a wicked sense of humour yet (possibly) because of the masive 'Puff' intake, hasnt got laid for 15 years, still lives with his folks and suffers from depression, he knows there is a problem but will 'sort it out when i feel like it'...
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#10 |
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Better To Do Nothing
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: London
Posts: 10,536
Likes (Received): 1
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I find it amazing at the number of people who don't smoke, or have given up smoking because of the threat to their health, yet still enjoy the regular puff on a joint. Smoking may mess you up physically, but weed, especially the harsh stuff that most people smoke today will totally mess you up psychologically - i've seen the results of prolonged use myself.
However, its a tough position that the government is in, if they make the laws stricter it will pretty much be a waste of time with the widespread use it currently has, and it will do very little to reduce usage. They could legalise it, therefore allowing the sale of weaker, more natural weed and taking tax from the sale of it.......but that will obvously have its problems too. I'm not sure what the answer is, but personally, smoking weed isn't my kinda thing so i'm fairly indifferent as to what the government does with its drug laws. |
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#11 |
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I love those crazy dutch
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Manchester
Posts: 10,114
Likes (Received): 127
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While I've no qualms with the idea of prescribing cannabis to the elderly and severely disabled as some have campaigned for in terms of pain relief, there is no denying it is an extremely harmful drug. I've had two family members unfortunate enough to suffer some awful things because of it, mentally- one is now a paranoid schizophrenic and seemingly beyond reprieve and the other is doing well with a lot of medical help to overcome the effects of years of cannabis abuse.
It annoys me no end when people perpetrate the myth that Cannabis has no negative side effects or doesn't cause health problems. I support reclassification to B.
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~touched by his noodly appendage |
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#12 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,038
Likes (Received): 12
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It's like anything, do it in moderation and it will not harm you, do it in excess and one way or another it will. The arguments over legalisation are so cliché yet they are true. It causes more problems prohibited than it does legal. Alcohol IS more dangerous yet no one questions its legality. And to put heavy criminal penalties risks bringing in millions of people who are otherwise law abiding and decent into the classification as criminal. It is a dangerous waste of our police resources. The Netherlands and Belguim where it is legal has a far lower percentage of their youth taking both soft and hard drugs.
Quite frankly the way everyone here never questions the motivation of a man who wraps himself in a Union Rag. Your deference to Scots is disgusting. The reclassification has already gone under one review, which came out and agreed with it, why the need for a second? Simply as an attempt at political point scoring, for no other reason but to cast himself as a hard man. A much more sensible approach would be to legalise everything, but to restrict free health care to those who truly can't afford it and those who live frugal lifestyles. Liberty with responsibility. |
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#13 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: GU1
Posts: 3,595
Likes (Received): 9
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NBTD I completely agree with you... Making the laws harsher will only put more people in prisons...
I think that growing cannabis at home for personal use should be relaxed a little... Especially when all of the gear is bought from Hydroponic shops and therefore the money is going back into the economy and not into the pockets of criminals. Talking about growing and different strains.. Strong strains of cannabis have been around as long as the plant have.. They are simply more widely available today. It is not a new thing... Strains that have been fucked around with in a lab i.e. 'Purple Haze' where the buds are actually purple and is because the strain is actually laced with LSD. Dependency to cannabis is a silly thing imo and those who have it should be checked into rehab as it is very similar to alcoholism. Those who claim cannabis is a 'gateway drug'... the kind of person who would 'move on' to harder drugs would probably do hard drugs regardless to cannabis. As the distribution of cannabis goes.. It is just one of those things that a lowly student can deal or it can be done by organised gangs of criminals who also distribute class A drugs. I do not agree purchasing cannabis from dealers as it only serves organised crime and it should be quashed... Yet as long as there is a demand there will be a source for it... While Brown may call it a menace to society some nations find good medical uses for it and other nations have no problem with recreational sale such as in Holland... The cannabis the Dutch smoke is are not super strains but fairly week gear and is treated like having a pint.. You would see a businessman in an expensive suit and his portable computer sitting down in a café smoking a blunt after work... It is not so socially unacceptable as the politicians of our great nation claim...
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#14 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,038
Likes (Received): 12
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Those who claim cannabis is a 'gateway drug'... the kind of person who would 'move on' to harder drugs would probably do hard drugs regardless to cannabis.
What is more I guarantee that nearly 100% of all those who have taken heroin have had alcohol, doesn't mean that alcohol is a gateway drug. |
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#15 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: L O N D O N
Posts: 36,143
Likes (Received): 913
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I don't do any drugs myself (only ever tried cannabis 3 or 4 times in college), but I firmly believe all drugs should be legally available, controlled and taxed.
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#16 |
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click click
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Suffolk, England
Posts: 7,900
Likes (Received): 96
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what happens when the suppliers undercut the price of legally available drugs?
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#17 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,038
Likes (Received): 12
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That would be quite surprising.
Firstly just as there is a considerable risk in being a dealer, there is a considerable risk in any kind of smuggling, which carries a prison sentence with it. People won't get involved unless there is a considerable mark up, a lot of the current cost of drugs involves the shipment, multiple transactions, the time that someone invests in dealing as well as a little extra for the risk. None of those will exist in the same way. You won't even get the small time cottage industries in the same way, they'll be competing against legal supplies and most people for convenience would get them there. Additionally whilst we have smuggling of legal items, say cigarettes. It is smuggling of cigarettes that are legal and regulated somewhere else, not a lot of fags that are made in some dealers home from the tobacco he himself has grown. |
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#18 |
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click click
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Suffolk, England
Posts: 7,900
Likes (Received): 96
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not really that surprising though. vast quantities of cigarettes are manufactured and distributed illegally; criminal gangs are always happy to exploit markets and you can be certain there'll be a market once all the 'quality control' costs and taxes have been piled on to the official product. drug use is also a constantly evolving recreation/lifestyle...any sanctioned product will obviously be heavily regulated anyway as to its effects so there'll always be markets for alternative varieties...so the profit incentive remains.
believe me, i'd love to live in a completely free society where whatever i wanted to indulge in i could, but people aren't so responsible as you. legalising drugs would be the biggest cluster fuck since some twat rat dealer from central asia decided to catch the plague and spend his holidays in europe. nope...carpet bombing south america and afghanistan is the only way. maybe france. |
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#19 |
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ball bag
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: crime
Posts: 1,908
Likes (Received): 5
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i have a love/hate relationship with weed. i used to smoke it all the time and get battered every day - it was fun for a few years, then it stopped working properly and messed with my head. since then i've smoked it much less, and i havent even had a spliff since may. i've accepted that it's never going to give me all the good effects it used to give me again, so there's no point smoking now.
i do however think anything that encvourages people to see and think about things from a totally different perspective is a good thing. i reckon there are a lot of people who would benefit greatly from getting battered for a year or two and experiencing life in a state that makes you appreciate things in a diufferent way. they'd soon stop being cunts to each other. i've had my fill though.
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Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh |
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#20 | |
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Against ID Cards
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Manchester
Posts: 9,823
Likes (Received): 0
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Quote:
I'm seriously starting to wonder whether I like where Brown is heading with the decision to effectively kill off casinos and now hardening the line on cannabis. If anything we should be moving in the opposite direction. Whilst there have been many deaths as a result of alcohol and numerous health problems, cannabis has killed very very few people and the reason so many people are having mental health problems from smoking hash, is the stronger varities available. Another reason why it should be legalised. In moderation it is perfectly safe for 99% of the population. Bringing it back to class B will only criminalise people, put further strain on prisons and cause more problems. Cannabis use has fallen since the reclassification incidentally. Question: why is alcohol legal when it causes liver cirrosis, heart problems, kidney problems, depression etc... Relating to this topic it's also interesting to point out that more people die every year from swallowing bees than from ecstacy tablets. Cannabis should be legalised, people should be far better educated on the topic and we'd kill of alot of criminal acitivity overnight and have a healthier society as a result. |
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