#dontdrivehigh

As a medical patient, is it better to drive sober and ill or medicated and well?


  • Total voters
    13

GreenHighlander

Well-Known Member
For me medicated and well is the safest way. Like everything else with cannabis it is on an individual by individual bases. Which is why they will never have a law that stands up in court around driving with thc in your system. It is NOT like alcohol. Nor has it been proven scientifically to actually impair driving abilities like alcohol has. Fight each and every impaired by cannabis charge.
Cheers :)

PS. Based on an experience I had with a pilled up driver who tried to run me off the road. I can tell you they can't even make prescription drug charges stick. The crown themselves told me that but to keep it under my hat . haha fuck you crown lol
 

ANC

Well-Known Member
The world is already too full, we are not about to run out of them because a few shit in the gene pool.
 

llnknth

Well-Known Member
with their proposal? can't say the last time I would pass thier test..
Ill take a sobriety though
and Kill it!
only thing thats impaired here occifer is YOUR ATTITUDE.
been doin this since I was 16
never had an accident in my life. Im a pilot as well.
i agree 100%.....ive never been in one accident high/stoned.....ever!just another way to get money while shaming good people....its a joke

but what really scares me is the science.....a while back in the states 2 major drug test companies(the 2 that supplied police agencies country wide)test kits were tested and repeatedly tested false positives on many household items,one being coffee!scary shit!how many innocent peoples lives were affected by that?
 

Farmer.J

Well-Known Member
"That said, Dr. Furlan does not rule out the possibility that medical marijuana could boost safety under certain circumstances. She cites studies that have shown that opioids prescribed as pain relievers can improve driving ability in some users. “They drive really bad because the pain is a distracter,” she says, but taking medication to alleviate the pain can make a big difference. “If a worker is getting medical marijuana for prescription, and it is treating a condition, it may be better for them to use than not to use.”

Read the full article here:

Weed at Work - OHS Canada Magazine
ohscanada.com
 

VIANARCHRIS

Well-Known Member
"That said, Dr. Furlan does not rule out the possibility that medical marijuana could boost safety under certain circumstances. She cites studies that have shown that opioids prescribed as pain relievers can improve driving ability in some users. “They drive really bad because the pain is a distracter,” she says, but taking medication to alleviate the pain can make a big difference. “If a worker is getting medical marijuana for prescription, and it is treating a condition, it may be better for them to use than not to use.”

Read the full article here:

Weed at Work - OHS Canada Magazine
ohscanada.com
Absolutely correct. The link to the rest of the story didn't work, but my fist thought was someone using cannabis for pain regularly will not be impaired anyway. I can't remember the last time I was actually 'high'. I get a small buzz for a few minutes after smoking and then it's just enough to numb the pain.
 

Farmer.J

Well-Known Member
Absolutely correct. The link to the rest of the story didn't work, but my fist thought was someone using cannabis for pain regularly will not be impaired anyway. I can't remember the last time I was actually 'high'. I get a small buzz for a few minutes after smoking and then it's just enough to numb the pain.
Here's the link to the full story. I obviously only quoted the part I agree with lol

https://www.ohscanada.com/features/weed-at-work/
 
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