Put this in your pipe and smoke it.

Newguro

Member
Today at work i decided to bring up prop 19. One of my co-worker comments that prop 19 is a bad thing. When asked why she thought it was such a bad thing she said, from what i can remember, that if it became legal it would lead to worse "drugs". She explains more that if cannabis is legal then people would want to lace it with stronger drugs, "chasing a greater high". She goes on to say stuff like marijuana is a "gateway drug." Now, I know this person out of work and have worked with him/her for years but is surprises me how little a person uneducated can think weed is a, "gate way drug".
 

brandon.

Well-Known Member
if you poll all marijuana users, I bet a majority of us have tried milk.

holy shit, wait a minute... MILK IS A GATEWAY DRUG!
 

TruenoAE86coupe

Moderator
Most rapists have kissed someone before, so kissing leads to rape, lets outlaw kissing, then no more rape. Sounds about the same as the gateway drug argument to me.....
 

vtatvrider

Active Member
oh shit i love whole milk,drink about a half gallon a day.should i seek help for my addiction.i guess the first step is admitting i have a problem lol.
 

newatit2010

Well-Known Member
I am not in California but it seems to me if it is legalized the big companies will come in and take control of all growing and the little man will be put out. They have more money than most small growers and can buy more cops to look into what you are growing. good luck
 

kemickels

Active Member
no no no its not milk its SUGAR the first substance in our lives that gives a rush or high and also has a crash the true gateway drug
 

BobBanana

Member
Remembered this thread while reading wiki about trichomes....

Gateway drug theory

Further information: Gateway drug theory
Some claim that trying cannabis increases the probability that users will eventually use "harder" drugs. This hypothesis has been one of the central pillars of anti-cannabis drug policy in the United States,[95] though the validity and implications of these hypotheses are highly debated.[96] Studies have shown that tobacco smoking is a better predictor of concurrent illicit hard drug use than smoking cannabis.[97]
No widely accepted study has ever demonstrated a cause-and-effect relationship between the use of cannabis and the later use of harder drugs like heroin and cocaine. However, the prevalence of tobacco cigarette advertising and the practice of mixing tobacco and cannabis together in a single large joint, common in Europe, are believed to be cofactors in promoting nicotine dependency among young persons investigating cannabis.[98]
A 2005 comprehensive review of the literature on the cannabis gateway hypothesis found that pre-existing traits may predispose users to addiction in general, the availability of multiple drugs in a given setting confounds predictive patterns in their usage, and drug sub-cultures are more influential than cannabis itself. The study called for further research on "social context, individual characteristics, and drug effects" to discover the actual relationships between cannabis and the use of other drugs.[99]
A new user of cannabis who feels there is a difference between anti-drug information and their own experiences will apply this distrust to public information about other, more powerful drugs. Some studies state that while there is no proof for this gateway hypothesis, young cannabis users should still be considered as a risk group for intervention programs.[100] Other findings indicate that hard drug users are likely to be "poly-drug" users, and that interventions must address the use of multiple drugs instead of a single hard drug.[101]
Another gateway hypothesis is that while cannabis is not as harmful or addictive as other drugs, a gateway effect may be detected as a result of the "common factors" involved with using any illegal drug. Because of its illegal status, cannabis users are more likely to be in situations which allow them to become acquainted with people who use and sell other illegal drugs.[102][103] By this argument, some studies have shown that alcohol and tobacco may be regarded as gateway drugs.[97] However, a more parsimonious explanation could be that cannabis is simply more readily available (and at an earlier age) than illegal hard drugs, and alcohol/tobacco are in turn easier to obtain earlier than cannabis (though the reverse may be true in some areas), thus leading to the "gateway sequence" in those people who are most likely to experiment with any drug offered.[96]
A 2010 study published in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior found that the main factors in users moving on to other drugs were age, wealth, unemployment status, and psychological stress. The study found there is no "gateway theory" and that drug use is more closely tied to a person's life situation, although marijuana users are more likely to use other drugs.[104]
 
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