Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 Not pretentious. An assujmption only on your part. In fact, in my original post, i gave the translation, source of quote, and a bit of history. It appears the paragraph was deleted (an occasional problem with Eudora). Actually, as one with an abiding interest in drug policy I'd be interested in the deleted information. Could you please repost it? And I didn't say you were pretentious. I explained why I felt it was and thus did not *myself post in French, except on the very rare occasion. I believe thre last time I did so was in response to some egotistical jerk in a political debate forum who posted a paragraph of Nietszche, in German, without translation. I responded with: "La plume de ma tante est sur le bureau*." And attributed it to Berlitz. He got the point. *My aunt's pen is on the desk. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 Not pretentious. An assujmption only on your part. In fact, in my original post, i gave the translation, source of quote, and a bit of history. It appears the paragraph was deleted (an occasional problem with Eudora). Actually, as one with an abiding interest in drug policy I'd be interested in the deleted information. Could you please repost it? And I didn't say you were pretentious. I explained why I felt it was and thus did not *myself post in French, except on the very rare occasion. I believe thre last time I did so was in response to some egotistical jerk in a political debate forum who posted a paragraph of Nietszche, in German, without translation. I responded with: "La plume de ma tante est sur le bureau*." And attributed it to Berlitz. He got the point. *My aunt's pen is on the desk. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 You are confusing the the method of introduction (inhaling) with the substance. The substance, at some dose,is toxic No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. In my lengthy experience with online discussion and debate, I have learned that, as is true of life in general, to promptly admit it when one is wrong establishes credibility. To my annoyance with myself, my first posting on this elist concerened an area of civil law in which I have more than a nodding acquantance, but not a lot more. What I originally stated was largely incorrect. Not only did I admit it, I posted an authority demonstrating the extent of my error, thus confirming the validity of the authority relied upon by the party who correctly challenged my statements. Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. Further, when someone makes a fact claim, and then supports it with uncontradicted data, it is best to concede their position. It leaves one free to advocate credibly on another day. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 You are confusing the the method of introduction (inhaling) with the substance. The substance, at some dose,is toxic No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. In my lengthy experience with online discussion and debate, I have learned that, as is true of life in general, to promptly admit it when one is wrong establishes credibility. To my annoyance with myself, my first posting on this elist concerened an area of civil law in which I have more than a nodding acquantance, but not a lot more. What I originally stated was largely incorrect. Not only did I admit it, I posted an authority demonstrating the extent of my error, thus confirming the validity of the authority relied upon by the party who correctly challenged my statements. Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. Further, when someone makes a fact claim, and then supports it with uncontradicted data, it is best to concede their position. It leaves one free to advocate credibly on another day. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 You are confusing the the method of introduction (inhaling) with the substance. The substance, at some dose,is toxic No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. In my lengthy experience with online discussion and debate, I have learned that, as is true of life in general, to promptly admit it when one is wrong establishes credibility. To my annoyance with myself, my first posting on this elist concerened an area of civil law in which I have more than a nodding acquantance, but not a lot more. What I originally stated was largely incorrect. Not only did I admit it, I posted an authority demonstrating the extent of my error, thus confirming the validity of the authority relied upon by the party who correctly challenged my statements. Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. Further, when someone makes a fact claim, and then supports it with uncontradicted data, it is best to concede their position. It leaves one free to advocate credibly on another day. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. All right, that's it. It should now be clear to everyone that not only do you employ bait and switch, shifting sands (and stands) argumentation, you will deny someone said the "sky is blue" if what they literally wrote was "climactic variables result in the usual phenomenon of a blue sky." If that is how you commonly debate/discuss a topic, it simply isn't worth having an exchange with you. MJ cannot reach lethal levels of toxicity, which is the claim the ALJ's point was supporting. It is also almost impossible to reach ANY level of toxicity to produce morbidity. Are you ever going to concede that I demonstrated my claims about marijuana? Or are you going to continue to treat the list to increasingly petty and petulant, disingenuous nit-picking? --Mona-- --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. All right, that's it. It should now be clear to everyone that not only do you employ bait and switch, shifting sands (and stands) argumentation, you will deny someone said the "sky is blue" if what they literally wrote was "climactic variables result in the usual phenomenon of a blue sky." If that is how you commonly debate/discuss a topic, it simply isn't worth having an exchange with you. MJ cannot reach lethal levels of toxicity, which is the claim the ALJ's point was supporting. It is also almost impossible to reach ANY level of toxicity to produce morbidity. Are you ever going to concede that I demonstrated my claims about marijuana? Or are you going to continue to treat the list to increasingly petty and petulant, disingenuous nit-picking? --Mona-- --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. All right, that's it. It should now be clear to everyone that not only do you employ bait and switch, shifting sands (and stands) argumentation, you will deny someone said the "sky is blue" if what they literally wrote was "climactic variables result in the usual phenomenon of a blue sky." If that is how you commonly debate/discuss a topic, it simply isn't worth having an exchange with you. MJ cannot reach lethal levels of toxicity, which is the claim the ALJ's point was supporting. It is also almost impossible to reach ANY level of toxicity to produce morbidity. Are you ever going to concede that I demonstrated my claims about marijuana? Or are you going to continue to treat the list to increasingly petty and petulant, disingenuous nit-picking? --Mona-- --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I was surprised to see Weil's name there as "expert" witness. And my clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly anecdotal). Are you also surprised that the World Health Organization cites him as a scientific authority on the effects of cannabis use? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I was surprised to see Weil's name there as "expert" witness. And my clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly anecdotal). Are you also surprised that the World Health Organization cites him as a scientific authority on the effects of cannabis use? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I was surprised to see Weil's name there as "expert" witness. And my clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly anecdotal). Are you also surprised that the World Health Organization cites him as a scientific authority on the effects of cannabis use? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. That suggests to me that ingesting a lethal dose would be humanly impossible. Why continue to assert that in principle it can be lethal when in practice it cannot? As to the legalization issue being a " straw man " : didn't this whole thread begin with your asking for evidence that MJ was " the most benign substance " that humans could ingest, which was coupled with an assertion that there was no reason it should not be legal? I have found what Mona posted very interesting, and yet you seem to be struggling to find reasons not to believe what she's posted. > > >Well, no, it is not true that everything is poison, nothing is poison, and > >it is all a matter of dose. It is humanly impossible to inhale a toxic dose > >of cannabis. Asprin certainly *can be lethal, and kills some 2000 Americans > >each year. > > You are confusing the the method of introduction (inhaling) with the > substance. The substance, at some dose,is toxic. > > " The dose makes the poison " remains a guiding principle of toxicology today. > > That aspirin can be lethal is true, but hardly supports the precedent > assertion. At a toxic dose, lethal yes; below a toxic dose, lethal no. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I certainly agree that lethal does not equal toxic nor toxic lethal. In fact, I was responding to your last statement, " That aspirin can be lethal is true, but hardly supports the precedent assertion. At a toxic dose, lethal yes; below a toxic dose, lethal no. " This suggests that you were in fact equating the two concepts, and morbidity and mortality. Hence my response. It seems to me, though I am certainly not a scientist, that judging when a " toxic " level of any substance has been reached is virtually impossible, hence the types of measurements of therapeutic value that the ALJ described. In effect, the use of any drug for medicinal purposes is based on a balance between the risk of some toxicity that will create side effects and the benefit that the patient may receive. Now don't say again that we're not talking about medical uses, because it is precisely when drugs are evaluated for medical uses that the kind of evidence you are asking for is generated. And by those standards, the toxicity of MJ is so low that it might as well not exist. You say that by manufacturing the active ingredient in MJ, a toxic level might be attainable. We have never been talking about anything but the plant, so far as I know, and I would be one of the first to concede that highly concentrating the active ingredient would probably make highly toxic, perhaps even lethal, doses possible. But we were not talking about THC. I am not going to wade through your posts trying to find statements contradictory to what you now assert, but I will point out that you should be a little more careful in your own communications, such as the aspirin comment cited above (a direct cut-and-paste) if you want a) to be taken seriously; to criticize others for their carelessness. I'm trying to be very courteous here, because I am trying to suppress my visceral response to your posts. > >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found > >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a > >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. > > The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for > every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are > beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. > > > > >That suggests to me that ingesting a lethal dose would be humanly > >impossible. Why continue to assert that in principle it can be lethal > >when in practice it cannot? > > I never asserted that. You have changed the words. Toxic does not equal lethal. > > With the manufacturing of the active ingredient, toxic levels may be possible. > > > >As to the legalization issue being a " straw man " : didn't this whole > >thread begin with your asking for evidence that MJ was " the most > >benign substance " that humans could ingest, which was coupled with an > >assertion that there was no reason it should not be legal? > > Not at all. It began with her comment that marijuana was safer than > alcohol. i asked for the evidence (which I clarified as the studies). That > is all I asked for..and all I was interested in. I never made any statement > about reasons for legalities; nor about marijuana being less safe than > alcohol. > > The " most benign " statement came later..is a different issue from the > above. Most benign is quite an assertion..I was skeptical (of MOST benign, > not marijuana being benign, quite a different meaning.) > > >I have found what Mona posted very interesting, and yet you seem to be > >struggling to find reasons not to believe what she's posted. > > Oh it was interesting. But I asked (and clarified in a pvt post) exactly > what I was looking for (studies..epidemiological, cohort; or double-blind > placebo). If she wa snot privy to any,fine. But that has never been stated. > What she posted did not fit what i was asking for. And most of the article > concerned medicinal use. Interesting, yes. I have no problem believing it. > It was of little use to me. > > I was surprised to see Weil's name there as " expert " witness. And my > clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly > anecdotal). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I certainly agree that lethal does not equal toxic nor toxic lethal. In fact, I was responding to your last statement, " That aspirin can be lethal is true, but hardly supports the precedent assertion. At a toxic dose, lethal yes; below a toxic dose, lethal no. " This suggests that you were in fact equating the two concepts, and morbidity and mortality. Hence my response. It seems to me, though I am certainly not a scientist, that judging when a " toxic " level of any substance has been reached is virtually impossible, hence the types of measurements of therapeutic value that the ALJ described. In effect, the use of any drug for medicinal purposes is based on a balance between the risk of some toxicity that will create side effects and the benefit that the patient may receive. Now don't say again that we're not talking about medical uses, because it is precisely when drugs are evaluated for medical uses that the kind of evidence you are asking for is generated. And by those standards, the toxicity of MJ is so low that it might as well not exist. You say that by manufacturing the active ingredient in MJ, a toxic level might be attainable. We have never been talking about anything but the plant, so far as I know, and I would be one of the first to concede that highly concentrating the active ingredient would probably make highly toxic, perhaps even lethal, doses possible. But we were not talking about THC. I am not going to wade through your posts trying to find statements contradictory to what you now assert, but I will point out that you should be a little more careful in your own communications, such as the aspirin comment cited above (a direct cut-and-paste) if you want a) to be taken seriously; to criticize others for their carelessness. I'm trying to be very courteous here, because I am trying to suppress my visceral response to your posts. > >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found > >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a > >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. > > The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for > every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are > beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. > > > > >That suggests to me that ingesting a lethal dose would be humanly > >impossible. Why continue to assert that in principle it can be lethal > >when in practice it cannot? > > I never asserted that. You have changed the words. Toxic does not equal lethal. > > With the manufacturing of the active ingredient, toxic levels may be possible. > > > >As to the legalization issue being a " straw man " : didn't this whole > >thread begin with your asking for evidence that MJ was " the most > >benign substance " that humans could ingest, which was coupled with an > >assertion that there was no reason it should not be legal? > > Not at all. It began with her comment that marijuana was safer than > alcohol. i asked for the evidence (which I clarified as the studies). That > is all I asked for..and all I was interested in. I never made any statement > about reasons for legalities; nor about marijuana being less safe than > alcohol. > > The " most benign " statement came later..is a different issue from the > above. Most benign is quite an assertion..I was skeptical (of MOST benign, > not marijuana being benign, quite a different meaning.) > > >I have found what Mona posted very interesting, and yet you seem to be > >struggling to find reasons not to believe what she's posted. > > Oh it was interesting. But I asked (and clarified in a pvt post) exactly > what I was looking for (studies..epidemiological, cohort; or double-blind > placebo). If she wa snot privy to any,fine. But that has never been stated. > What she posted did not fit what i was asking for. And most of the article > concerned medicinal use. Interesting, yes. I have no problem believing it. > It was of little use to me. > > I was surprised to see Weil's name there as " expert " witness. And my > clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly > anecdotal). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:56 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. I never asked for authorities. I never asked you, nor ever cared to have you defend (prove was your word..I never asked for proof) anything. i asked for evidence..then spelled out that request..citations to (may have used reference) studies (and then defined studies). THAT WAS IT. I never said marijuana should be legalized, or not. I never said it was more dangerous than alcohol, or not. Neither was ever my issue. My issue was a request for evidence (later qualified to specific kinds of studies, not reports of studies). You initiated the advocacy position by offering " proof " of your position on safety but not references to studies. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:56 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. I never asked for authorities. I never asked you, nor ever cared to have you defend (prove was your word..I never asked for proof) anything. i asked for evidence..then spelled out that request..citations to (may have used reference) studies (and then defined studies). THAT WAS IT. I never said marijuana should be legalized, or not. I never said it was more dangerous than alcohol, or not. Neither was ever my issue. My issue was a request for evidence (later qualified to specific kinds of studies, not reports of studies). You initiated the advocacy position by offering " proof " of your position on safety but not references to studies. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:56 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Credibility is not established by offering arbitrary , ad hominem, and poisoning the well attacks on supporting authorities. I never asked for authorities. I never asked you, nor ever cared to have you defend (prove was your word..I never asked for proof) anything. i asked for evidence..then spelled out that request..citations to (may have used reference) studies (and then defined studies). THAT WAS IT. I never said marijuana should be legalized, or not. I never said it was more dangerous than alcohol, or not. Neither was ever my issue. My issue was a request for evidence (later qualified to specific kinds of studies, not reports of studies). You initiated the advocacy position by offering " proof " of your position on safety but not references to studies. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 05:01 PM 4/26/01 +0000, you wrote: >You seem not to have been reading what Mona is posting. The ALJ found >that a person would have to ingest about 1,500 lbs. of MJ within a >fifteen minute period before toxicity could reach a lethal level. The operative word was toxic, not lethal. Reaching a toxic level. And for every substance there is a toxic level. PERIOD. Anyother implications are beyond the scope of the statement. Morbidity,not necessarily mortality. > >That suggests to me that ingesting a lethal dose would be humanly >impossible. Why continue to assert that in principle it can be lethal >when in practice it cannot? I never asserted that. You have changed the words. Toxic does not equal lethal. With the manufacturing of the active ingredient, toxic levels may be possible. >As to the legalization issue being a " straw man " : didn't this whole >thread begin with your asking for evidence that MJ was " the most >benign substance " that humans could ingest, which was coupled with an >assertion that there was no reason it should not be legal? Not at all. It began with her comment that marijuana was safer than alcohol. i asked for the evidence (which I clarified as the studies). That is all I asked for..and all I was interested in. I never made any statement about reasons for legalities; nor about marijuana being less safe than alcohol. The " most benign " statement came later..is a different issue from the above. Most benign is quite an assertion..I was skeptical (of MOST benign, not marijuana being benign, quite a different meaning.) >I have found what Mona posted very interesting, and yet you seem to be >struggling to find reasons not to believe what she's posted. Oh it was interesting. But I asked (and clarified in a pvt post) exactly what I was looking for (studies..epidemiological, cohort; or double-blind placebo). If she wa snot privy to any,fine. But that has never been stated. What she posted did not fit what i was asking for. And most of the article concerned medicinal use. Interesting, yes. I have no problem believing it. It was of little use to me. I was surprised to see Weil's name there as " expert " witness. And my clarification as to why: he has left EBM, is in the arena of CAM (mostly anecdotal). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:46 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Actually, as one with an abiding interest in drug policy I'd be interested in the deleted information. Could you please repost it? At your request: Here is a more descriptive definition of toxicology : " the study of the adverse effects of chemicals or physical agents on living organisms " . {fr. NIH] .. Noteworthy in this regard were the studies of Paracelsus (~1500AD) : Paracelsus determined that specific chemicals were actually responsible for the toxicity of a plant or animal poison. He also documented that the body's response to those chemicals depended on the dose received. His studies revealed that small doses of a substance might be harmless or beneficial whereas larger doses could be toxic. This is now known as the dose-response relationship, a major concept of toxicology. Paracelsus is often quoted for his statement: " All substances are poisons; there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy. " http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm " The dose makes the poison " remains a guiding principle of toxicology today. The French scientist of today, Claude Bernard (everything is poisonous, nothing is poisonous, it is all a matter of dose): " Tout est poison, rien n'est poison, tout est une question de dose " . (He wrote in French.) These adverse effects may occur in many forms, ranging from immediate death to subtle changes not realized until months or years later. They may occur at various levels within the body, such as an organ, a type of cell, or a specific biochemical. Knowledge of how toxic agents damage the body has progressed along with medical knowledge. It is now known that various observable changes in anatomy or body functions actually result from previously unrecognized changes in specific biochemicals in the body. http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. Here you are limiting toxic to overdose. Before it was lethal. Under those circumstances, and delivered by smoking, it is not lethal or is sufficient for overdose. Those are but two examples. Toxic embraces far more: Adverse effect, to include subtle changes not realized for years. Your list of what it not toxic does not in any way prove there is no toxicity. One study claims, " Marijuana (MJ) smoking produces inflammation, edema, and cell injury in the tracheobronchial mucosa .. " . (fr. a peer reviewed medical journal ) Cell injury is an adverse effect. This speaks to an adverse effect, or injury cause by chemicals, that is toxic.What the implications are (mainly for lung cancer) is unknown (from anything I have read). .. Thus at some attainable level as above, marijuana (or chemicals derived from the plant) may evidence toxicity. People are unlikely to die from subtle changes, but nevertheless evidence exists of the injury. The real unknown seems to be the long term implication of the toxic effects known to exist. There may not be any. The injury (but injury nonetheless) might be minor, might lead to unknown serious conditions. I do not know, and take no position on the issue. I am simply interested in reading what is in the literature (peer reviewed studies). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:46 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Actually, as one with an abiding interest in drug policy I'd be interested in the deleted information. Could you please repost it? At your request: Here is a more descriptive definition of toxicology : " the study of the adverse effects of chemicals or physical agents on living organisms " . {fr. NIH] .. Noteworthy in this regard were the studies of Paracelsus (~1500AD) : Paracelsus determined that specific chemicals were actually responsible for the toxicity of a plant or animal poison. He also documented that the body's response to those chemicals depended on the dose received. His studies revealed that small doses of a substance might be harmless or beneficial whereas larger doses could be toxic. This is now known as the dose-response relationship, a major concept of toxicology. Paracelsus is often quoted for his statement: " All substances are poisons; there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy. " http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm " The dose makes the poison " remains a guiding principle of toxicology today. The French scientist of today, Claude Bernard (everything is poisonous, nothing is poisonous, it is all a matter of dose): " Tout est poison, rien n'est poison, tout est une question de dose " . (He wrote in French.) These adverse effects may occur in many forms, ranging from immediate death to subtle changes not realized until months or years later. They may occur at various levels within the body, such as an organ, a type of cell, or a specific biochemical. Knowledge of how toxic agents damage the body has progressed along with medical knowledge. It is now known that various observable changes in anatomy or body functions actually result from previously unrecognized changes in specific biochemicals in the body. http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. Here you are limiting toxic to overdose. Before it was lethal. Under those circumstances, and delivered by smoking, it is not lethal or is sufficient for overdose. Those are but two examples. Toxic embraces far more: Adverse effect, to include subtle changes not realized for years. Your list of what it not toxic does not in any way prove there is no toxicity. One study claims, " Marijuana (MJ) smoking produces inflammation, edema, and cell injury in the tracheobronchial mucosa .. " . (fr. a peer reviewed medical journal ) Cell injury is an adverse effect. This speaks to an adverse effect, or injury cause by chemicals, that is toxic.What the implications are (mainly for lung cancer) is unknown (from anything I have read). .. Thus at some attainable level as above, marijuana (or chemicals derived from the plant) may evidence toxicity. People are unlikely to die from subtle changes, but nevertheless evidence exists of the injury. The real unknown seems to be the long term implication of the toxic effects known to exist. There may not be any. The injury (but injury nonetheless) might be minor, might lead to unknown serious conditions. I do not know, and take no position on the issue. I am simply interested in reading what is in the literature (peer reviewed studies). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 At 11:46 AM 4/26/01 -0400, you wrote: Actually, as one with an abiding interest in drug policy I'd be interested in the deleted information. Could you please repost it? At your request: Here is a more descriptive definition of toxicology : " the study of the adverse effects of chemicals or physical agents on living organisms " . {fr. NIH] .. Noteworthy in this regard were the studies of Paracelsus (~1500AD) : Paracelsus determined that specific chemicals were actually responsible for the toxicity of a plant or animal poison. He also documented that the body's response to those chemicals depended on the dose received. His studies revealed that small doses of a substance might be harmless or beneficial whereas larger doses could be toxic. This is now known as the dose-response relationship, a major concept of toxicology. Paracelsus is often quoted for his statement: " All substances are poisons; there is none which is not a poison. The right dose differentiates a poison and a remedy. " http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm " The dose makes the poison " remains a guiding principle of toxicology today. The French scientist of today, Claude Bernard (everything is poisonous, nothing is poisonous, it is all a matter of dose): " Tout est poison, rien n'est poison, tout est une question de dose " . (He wrote in French.) These adverse effects may occur in many forms, ranging from immediate death to subtle changes not realized until months or years later. They may occur at various levels within the body, such as an organ, a type of cell, or a specific biochemical. Knowledge of how toxic agents damage the body has progressed along with medical knowledge. It is now known that various observable changes in anatomy or body functions actually result from previously unrecognized changes in specific biochemicals in the body. http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/toxtutor1/a11.htm No, I am not. It would also be virtually impossible to consume enough pot brownies to overdose. One would puke from the sugar, first. But since inhalation is far and away the most common delivery vehicle, I adressed that route of intake. Here you are limiting toxic to overdose. Before it was lethal. Under those circumstances, and delivered by smoking, it is not lethal or is sufficient for overdose. Those are but two examples. Toxic embraces far more: Adverse effect, to include subtle changes not realized for years. Your list of what it not toxic does not in any way prove there is no toxicity. One study claims, " Marijuana (MJ) smoking produces inflammation, edema, and cell injury in the tracheobronchial mucosa .. " . (fr. a peer reviewed medical journal ) Cell injury is an adverse effect. This speaks to an adverse effect, or injury cause by chemicals, that is toxic.What the implications are (mainly for lung cancer) is unknown (from anything I have read). .. Thus at some attainable level as above, marijuana (or chemicals derived from the plant) may evidence toxicity. People are unlikely to die from subtle changes, but nevertheless evidence exists of the injury. The real unknown seems to be the long term implication of the toxic effects known to exist. There may not be any. The injury (but injury nonetheless) might be minor, might lead to unknown serious conditions. I do not know, and take no position on the issue. I am simply interested in reading what is in the literature (peer reviewed studies). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I feel that my original assertion, that marijuana should be legalized and that it is less harmful than our legal drugs alcohol and tobacco, is validated, on even more grounds than I originally claimed. Truly, I do not have the time now, but the analysis of alcohol in this same text shows that it has much more harmful effects and does have correlations with voilent crimes such as murder and rape. Thank you, ! Your sociology text is spot on. In addition to the racist propaganda that lead to the criminalization of cannabis, cocaine was criminalized in the wake of headlines such as "Cocaine-Crazed Niggers Raping White Women." Law enforcement in the 1920s and '30s took this seriously, and suspected black males of becoming homicidal maniacs and rapists due to cocaine. Somewhat amusingly, Henry Anslinger, the head of the Bureau of Narcotics in the 1930s, claimed the sorts of things you posted from your textbook, i.e., pot makes people deranged and sends them into homicidal frenzies. Well, this SAME Henry Anslinger testified to congress in the 1950s that cannabis was being promoted in the U.S. as part of a communist plot to turn the U.S. into a nation of pacifists. In two decades cannabis apparently mutated from an agent that sends people into uncontrollable, insane rages, to a drug that so mellows people that it is intended to make us passive in the face of the Red Menace. Drug warriors lie. Always have, and still do. Finally -- and this really burns my butt -- the DEA has published a manual and conducts workshops on how to debate against anti-prohibitionists, aka "legalizers." Think about that: your tax dollars are being spent by a federal agency to advocate a particular political point of view in the public square. How would people feel if HHS funded publications and seminars on how to make abortion illegal? Or if the Dept of Education published tracts against charter schools or school vouchers? What the DEA is doing is absolutely outrageous. They are spending our money to advise people as to how to defeat and argue against our political views. There oughta be a law....Actually, there is. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I feel that my original assertion, that marijuana should be legalized and that it is less harmful than our legal drugs alcohol and tobacco, is validated, on even more grounds than I originally claimed. Truly, I do not have the time now, but the analysis of alcohol in this same text shows that it has much more harmful effects and does have correlations with voilent crimes such as murder and rape. Thank you, ! Your sociology text is spot on. In addition to the racist propaganda that lead to the criminalization of cannabis, cocaine was criminalized in the wake of headlines such as "Cocaine-Crazed Niggers Raping White Women." Law enforcement in the 1920s and '30s took this seriously, and suspected black males of becoming homicidal maniacs and rapists due to cocaine. Somewhat amusingly, Henry Anslinger, the head of the Bureau of Narcotics in the 1930s, claimed the sorts of things you posted from your textbook, i.e., pot makes people deranged and sends them into homicidal frenzies. Well, this SAME Henry Anslinger testified to congress in the 1950s that cannabis was being promoted in the U.S. as part of a communist plot to turn the U.S. into a nation of pacifists. In two decades cannabis apparently mutated from an agent that sends people into uncontrollable, insane rages, to a drug that so mellows people that it is intended to make us passive in the face of the Red Menace. Drug warriors lie. Always have, and still do. Finally -- and this really burns my butt -- the DEA has published a manual and conducts workshops on how to debate against anti-prohibitionists, aka "legalizers." Think about that: your tax dollars are being spent by a federal agency to advocate a particular political point of view in the public square. How would people feel if HHS funded publications and seminars on how to make abortion illegal? Or if the Dept of Education published tracts against charter schools or school vouchers? What the DEA is doing is absolutely outrageous. They are spending our money to advise people as to how to defeat and argue against our political views. There oughta be a law....Actually, there is. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 I feel that my original assertion, that marijuana should be legalized and that it is less harmful than our legal drugs alcohol and tobacco, is validated, on even more grounds than I originally claimed. Truly, I do not have the time now, but the analysis of alcohol in this same text shows that it has much more harmful effects and does have correlations with voilent crimes such as murder and rape. Thank you, ! Your sociology text is spot on. In addition to the racist propaganda that lead to the criminalization of cannabis, cocaine was criminalized in the wake of headlines such as "Cocaine-Crazed Niggers Raping White Women." Law enforcement in the 1920s and '30s took this seriously, and suspected black males of becoming homicidal maniacs and rapists due to cocaine. Somewhat amusingly, Henry Anslinger, the head of the Bureau of Narcotics in the 1930s, claimed the sorts of things you posted from your textbook, i.e., pot makes people deranged and sends them into homicidal frenzies. Well, this SAME Henry Anslinger testified to congress in the 1950s that cannabis was being promoted in the U.S. as part of a communist plot to turn the U.S. into a nation of pacifists. In two decades cannabis apparently mutated from an agent that sends people into uncontrollable, insane rages, to a drug that so mellows people that it is intended to make us passive in the face of the Red Menace. Drug warriors lie. Always have, and still do. Finally -- and this really burns my butt -- the DEA has published a manual and conducts workshops on how to debate against anti-prohibitionists, aka "legalizers." Think about that: your tax dollars are being spent by a federal agency to advocate a particular political point of view in the public square. How would people feel if HHS funded publications and seminars on how to make abortion illegal? Or if the Dept of Education published tracts against charter schools or school vouchers? What the DEA is doing is absolutely outrageous. They are spending our money to advise people as to how to defeat and argue against our political views. There oughta be a law....Actually, there is. --Mona-- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 27, 2001 Report Share Posted April 27, 2001 > > H. said, > > >In my mind marijuana certainly should be legal. It is much less > > >harmful any way you look at it than alcohol. > > Anne said, > > And the evidence for this? The following evidence is not in the form of a study, but the conclusions reached in my Sociology text, " Deviant Behavior: Crime, Conflict and Interest Groups, " by H. McCaghy, A. Capron and J.D. son. This is a source I trust and if anyone is interested in the footnoted information I will provide it. p. 317. " The long-term impact of marijuana use on the human system is yet unknown. The Institute of Medicine assembled a committee to analyze the existing evidence about its health hazards. Although committee members concluded that the drug's use " justifies serious national concern, " they also pointed out great areas of ignorance about its effects. In any case, most negative effects were linked to long-term, heavy use. Among the committee's findings were the following: 1. There is no conclusive evidence that prolonged marijuana use causes permanent changes in the nervous system or in brain functions. 2. While there is evidence that heavy usage is linked with mental disorders, it is unknown whether the usage is a cause or a result of the disorders. 3. While there is evidence that smoking marijuana causes acute changes in the heart and in circulation, there is no evidence of long-term effects on the system. 4. There is evidence that heavy smoking of marijuana, like heavy tobacco smoking, may be linked with cancer of the lungs and respiratory tract. 5. There is no conclusive evidence that a mother's use of marijuana can harm the human fetus. 6. There is no conclusive evidence that using the drug impairs the body's immunity system. 7. The body does build tolerance for marijuana and mild withdrawal symptoms do occur: restlessness, irritability, mild agitation, and insomnia. But there is no evidence of " compulsive behavior to acquire the drug " or of other indicators of " addictions. " Thus, despite the committee's concern, one must conclude from its report that marijuana is less dangerous to the user than are the legal drugs of alcohol and tobacco. <snip to next secion> Marijuana Use and Deviance From what we have said about marijuana, it appears that, at worst, its known physiological hazards rank lower than do those of alcohol and tobacco. Of course, there are hazards from the drug: driving an automobile under its influence is dangerous because it impairs coordination and reaction time. We also know that regular users--20 or more times in 30 days--tend to do poorly in school because they are absent more frequently than are irregular users or nonusers.120 The cause-effect relationship is not clear, however. Perhaps those who skip class are more likely to be frequent users rather than vice versa. Do these kinds of problems warrant making the drug illegal? Or are we missing something? For example, is marijuana linked to other crimes: homicide, rape, and so on? According to the National Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, * " The only crimes which can be directly attributed to marihuana-using behavior are those resulting from the use, possession or transfer of an illegal substance " * [emphasis in the text]121 In short, the crimes stemming from marijuana are the same crimes that would stem from butter it if were made illegal. But marijuana leads to the use of heroin and other dangerous drugs, doesn't it? The Bureau of Narcotics certainly thought so. In its 1965 publication, subtly entitled 'Living Death: The Truth About Drug Addiction,' it claimed that 'it cannot be too strongly emphasized that the smoking of the marijuana cigarette is a dangerous first step on the road which usually leads to enslavement by heroin...*Most* teenaged addicts started smoking marijuana cigarettes. *Never let anyone persuade you to smoke even one marijuana cigarette. It is pure poison.* " 122' There is no question that studies comparing marijuana users with nonusers find that users are more likely to use heroin. But it is one thing to say that persons who use marijuana are more likely to try heroin; it is quite another thing to say that marijuana use leads to heroin use. It must be recognized that coffee drinkers, aspirin takers, tobacco smokers, and alcohol drinkers are all more likely to use illegal drugs than are noncoffee drinkers, nonaspirin takers, and so on. In fact, any user of any drug, legal or illegal, is more likely than a nonuser to use any other drug.123 As h Goode puts it, 'individuals who use drugs tend to be selectively recruited from segments of the population tha tare already oriented toward the use of drugs. In this sense, there is a kind of drug-taking " disposition. " Thus, even before we examine whether the effects of marijuana per se have anything to do with " causing " the use of more dangerous drugs, it is necessary to start with the question of whether the population characteristics of those who use marijuana might be correlated with those of individuals who use other drugs, to see whether dangerous drug users might not be selectively recruited out of the larger marijuana-using group.'124 Goode also points out that the criminal status of marijuana also isolates users to some degree from conventional society and incorporates them into a drug-taking subculture with its own particular norms and verbalized motives supporting all kinds of drug-taking. It is possible, he suggests, that removing the illegal status of marijuana might decrease the number of persons turning to heroin because it would neutralize the influence of the criminal drug-taking subculture. " ========== There is another section called " Marijuana and Conflict " but I will summarize, rather than typing verbatim. Marijuana was not included in the on Act of 1914 which put opiates and cocaine under strict control. The pharmaceutical industry objected because it was used in animal medicines and corn plasters. However, fears about it did build, especially because of Mexican migrant laborers that were coming to California. " The problem of marijuana and the problem of Mexican immigration became one. " [ok, typing verbatim again...this is really interesting!] " Political pressure for the federal prohibition of marijuana grew as its presumed link with race and crime was increasingly publicized. The racial element is illustrated by this excerpt from a 1936 letter from a Colorado newspaper editor to the Bureau of Narcotics: 'Is there any assistance your Bureau can give us in handling this drug?...I wish I could show you what a small marijuana cigarette can do to one of our degenerate Spanish-speaking residents. That's why our problem is so great: The greatest percentage of our population is composed of Spanish-speaking persons, most of whom are low mentally, because of social and racial conditions. While marijuana has figured in the greatest number of crimes in the past few years, officials fear it, not for what it has done, but for what it is capable of doing. They want to check it before an outbreak occurs.'127 In addition to marijuana's association with a powerless minority group, myths about the drug causing violent and perverted crimes were considerably elaborated. By 1936, for example, 68 percent of all crimes committed in New Orleans were attributed to marijuana users. A propaganda campaign was launched with the support of the Bureau of Narcotics to warn the public about the 'Marijuana Menace' and its role as a 'Killer Drug.' An illustrated poster was prepared for trains, buses, and streetcars: 'BEWARE! Young and old people in all walks of life! This marihuana cigarette may be handed to YOU by the *friendly stranger.* It contains the Killer Drug Marihuana in which lurks MURDER! INSANITY! DEATH!--WARNING! Dope Peddlers are shrewd! They may put some of this drug in the teapot or in the cocktail or in the tobacco cigarette.' The stream of misinformation about the drug is exemplified by this excerpt froma pamphlet issued by the International Narcotic Education Association: 'Prolonged use of marihuana frequently develops a delirious rage which sometimes leads to high crimes, such as assult and murder. Hence marihuana has been called the 'killer drug.' The habitual use of this narcotic poison always causes a very marked mental deterioration and sometimes produces insanity...While the marihuana habit leads to physical wreckage and mental decay, its effects upon character and morality are even more devastation. The victim frequently undergoes such degeneracy that he will lie and steal without scruple; he becomes utterly untrustworthy...Marihuana sometimes gives man the lust to kill unreasonably and without motive. Many cases of assualt, rape, robbey and murder are traced to the use of marihuana.'128 The evil dimensions of this drug were becoming clear: once used only by Mexicans, it was now spreading to black and lower-class whites and turning them into drug-crazed criminals. In 1937 another revenue bill, the Marihuana Tax Act, became law. This placed an extremely high tax on the drug, and responsibility for the law's enforcement was assigned to the Bureau of Narcotics. Another class of criminal was created. " ============ Woah, I thought this was very interesting...the process by which marijuana and those who use it became demonized and criminalized. Note the racial overtones. This seems to be a theme with other drugs as well, but that will have to be another post. I feel that my original assertion, that marijuana should be legalized and that it is less harmful than our legal drugs alcohol and tobacco, is validated, on even more grounds than I originally claimed. Truly, I do not have the time now, but the analysis of alcohol in this same text shows that it has much more harmful effects and does have correlations with voilent crimes such as murder and rape. Later, Hicks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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