Read my first post. No, I am not talking about addictiveness at all, again, go back and re-read what I have written. — TimeLine
When I was helping a young girl remove herself from a toxic environment that enabled her addiction to drugs to appear normalised... — TimeLine
There are other issues here then medicinal cannabis and I really do not want to discuss the highly addictive chemical THC and cannabis with you. — TimeLine
Since when is statistics bullshit? — TimeLine
When a very small percentage of those engaged in an activity become addicted to it, why would you categorize that activity as addictive? — Metaphysician Undercover
How does your word matter to me without any practicality in what you say? In the real world, a drug-test kit is not practical, not for the millions of young people who access drugs from sources like friends or acquaintances. If you have some facts, why is it difficult for you to just show me? — TimeLine
That depends on character. If most people make a lot of money, you see them the whole day at the pub >:O .I dunno - the rich and leisured life gets boring very quickly without personal growth. — Jake Tarragon
Drug test kits for party going kids trying MDMA are supported by the Australian Federal Police "Drug testing isn’t perfect. Not only will some people take what they have anyway, some might be allergic to a substance in the drug and not know it. But senior figures including former Australian Federal Police commissioner Mick Palmer say they would support pill testing to reduce the danger for young people who choose to take ecstasy. “I have no problem with it at all, I think it makes absolute sense to try to test the quality of the drugs that people are taking,” Mr Palmer said. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Can you imagine people bowling up to a festival with their drugs in their hands and happily testing them outside the gates? They’ll have to do it before they get to the festival. I can never see that happening in this country.
It still does not change my initial remarks against the practicality of using drug-tests, but please don't get me wrong, I support the use of them. This was arranged at the music festival and I remember watching that program for which the article is written and many figures on the show were against the use of them. For instance, our Ice epidemic is mostly in rural country settings, amongst friends in backyard parties and not at festivals and access to these kits are not readily available. It also provides a false security and that the purity of any drug does not suddenly change the danger factor, as said in the end of the article: — TimeLine
This is the problem and another diversion used to fuel your argument. The government will never endorse the kits despite what Palmer stated. And perhaps you should read between the lines, rather than speak about these isolated groups at music festivals — TimeLine
"Drug use shows no sign of slowing down at festivals, along with its the deceptive marketing and sale to attendees. It's pretty clear as forms of oblivious consumption remain a plague... "I've seen so many terrible things happen to people at events; people die, people run their bodies and minds, and have years of lasting effects from using these substances... [festival-goers] just aren't aware what's going on most of the time." — TimeLine
f most people make a lot of money, you see them the whole day at the pub — Agustino
The beer, the entertainment, etc. - that is everything to them :POK, so personal growth ain't everything. — Jake Tarragon
Small percentage" from where? Which "statistics" did you get that from, or are you carefully trying to use such expressions to somehow verify a moot point? — TimeLine
Whether a person is "addicted" to marijuana or any other drug or not, continuous and repeated use over a lengthy period of time as highlighted in my post that shows the effects it has on the brain leads to a cycle of continuous use. That may not be an "addiction" in the way that you are attempting to highlight, but it is certainly disorder characterised by compulsive engagement in rewarding stimuli, despite adverse consequences. — TimeLine
"Drug use shows no sign of slowing down at festivals, along with its the deceptive marketing and sale to attendees. It's pretty clear as forms of oblivious consumption remain a plague... "I've seen so many terrible things happen to people at events; people die, people run their bodies and minds, and have years of lasting effects from using these substances... [festival-goers] just aren't aware what's going on most of the time." — TimeLine
Check any statistics, they're all over the internet. — Metaphysician Undercover
Statistics are bullshit. — Metaphysician Undercover
I guess I'm addicted to the hammer that I use every day — Metaphysician Undercover
However 1 in 9 cannabis users meet the clinical criteria for dependence as described by the ICD10 or DSM-IV. — TimeLine
Thus, under appropriate conditions, it can be demonstrated that THC and related cannabinoid agonists have an addictive potential and fulfill the reward-related behavioral criteria for drugs of abuse." — TimeLine
Another key feature of all addictive drugs is the increase in dopamine levels where the brain reinforces the positive and pleasurable effects it has that causes a person to continue the use that only increases in strength as one becomes more tolerant to it. — TimeLine
Sorry, it's my clumsy choice of words. Really I meant the perception of fulfilment in their eyes. A typical delusion experienced by addicts.I didn't say they're a path to fulfilment, just a path that many people take, probably because it's easy, and not very painful upfront.
Do you believe that the addiction to sweets is caused by sugar? If so, why don't you turn your rant toward a real problem sugar addiction, rather than a pseudo problem, THC addiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Ok, so we're down to 11%. To me, that's already a low percentage. Now how many of those who meet the criteria for "dependence", meet the criteria for "addiction"? — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why I claim that your use of statistics is "bullshit". The statistics are meaningless with such usage. — Metaphysician Undercover
Check any statistics, they're all over the internet. — Metaphysician Undercover
I would assume that if 11% of the people who try marijuana get addicted to it, you would say that it has "addictive potential". I would also assume that if 1%, or if.1%, or .01%, or .001%, (etc.), of the people who try marijuana get addicted to it, you would also claim that it has "addictive potential". — Metaphysician Undercover
So, they claim, "LSD causes chromosome damage". You see the deficiency of this claim don't you? In the way that I stated the example, there is no control group, and it is highly probable that the few incidents of chromosome damage were caused by something other than the LSD. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you believe that the addiction to sweets is caused by sugar? If so, why don't you turn your rant toward a real problem sugar addiction, rather than a pseudo problem, THC addiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
THC is not physically addictive, like some drugs which have serious withdrawal symptoms in which illness can follow abstinence. — charleton
Did you click on and read the link that defines clinical addiction? IF 11% of 183.3 million is more than 20 million, how is that a low percentage to you? — TimeLine
Just reminding you of your doucheness. — TimeLine
There is clarity around what these percentages mean, around the likelihood vis-a-vis excessive use whereby the potential damage could occur, the risks to the brain if taken for a lengthy period of time etc. How you read the statistics is your problem, but it is not actually a problem. — TimeLine
Alcohol, fat, sugar, tobacco, and many other common substances have the same risks when you ignore the importance of saying how much and for how long exactly.There is clarity around what these percentages mean, around the likelihood vis-a-vis excessive use whereby the potential damage could occur, the risks to the brain if taken for a lengthy period of time etc. How you read the statistics is your problem, but it is not actually a problem.
— TimeLine — TimeLine
Alcohol, fat, sugar, tobacco, and many other common substances have the same risks when you ignore the importance of saying how much and for how long exactly. — charleton
Do you even know what "percentage" means? 11% is a low percentage whether the overall number is two, twenty, twenty million, or twenty billion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you not see that this is extremely faulty inductive reasoning? Suppose that 11% of people saw a certain object as green, while 89% saw that same object as blue. Would you insist on the conclusion that the object is green? Your argument makes no sense at all. As in the case with the 11% which say that the object is green, I would say that your 11% who are purportedly addicted, just have difficulty describing what they experience. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is like talking to a wall. — TimeLine
Do you not value human life? — TimeLine
Did you click on and read the link that defines clinical addiction? IF 11% of 183.3 million is more than 20 million, how is that a low percentage to you? — TimeLine
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