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Quoted:Lest they chase their wife around the neighborhood with a gun, then barricade themselves in their house from police, all because the wife messed with his pot plant.
But that would never happen. View Quote Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. |
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So in other words ... ban all guns huh? Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:Lest they chase their wife around the neighborhood with a gun, then barricade themselves in their house from police, all because the wife messed with his pot plant.
But that would never happen. Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. |
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While I agree it may not be a miracle drug or is being toted as something greater than it really is, your delivery makes you lose any credibility and is right out of the liberal playbook. In this and previous replies you try to classify anyone who supports legalizing pot or smokes it as stupid, lazy and "stoners". Trying to marginalize and minimize the legitimacy of what is counter to your own bias. By your classification anyone who has drank alcohol must be an alcoholic, or anyone who has taken prescription pills must be a pill head, and if you own guns you must be mental and possibly the next mass shooter. Just because these people may be the most vocal doesn't mean they are representative of the majority of people who use or support pot. Just like I am sure dumb fuck's like James Yeager or Dylan Roof don't represent you as a firearms enthusiast. If there is merit to your argument there is no need to attempt to marginalize the opposition is just weakens your own stance and makes you look desperate. View Quote I have terrible experiences with stoners. I think I have known 2 productive, semi normal pot smokers my whole life. Furthermore, I have experience with reformed pot smokers. Guys who did it. Were wastes of space, quite, and blossomed into incredibly productive members of society(one of my oldest closest friends being one of them). I am sure I am the ONLY person in the world who has objectively seen any of these things feel free to call me a liberal or flame me. I am only speaking from what I have seen. **and the rest of your post unaddressed, is just derp, and continues to go unaddressed. |
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Treatment with prescription meds is largely ineffective and with major side effects View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Treatment with prescription meds is largely ineffective and with major side effects One patient with a 38-year-old memory, who had been on regular atenolol for 14 years, reported no change in the intensity, frequency, integrity or distress associated with the traumatic memory. The other five patients, with memories ranging in age from 4 months to 31 years, all reported improvement. This included ‘fragmentation’ of the memory and difficulty accessing it, minimal or absent distress when thinking about it and a feeling of emotional detachment, as if it were a normal non-traumatic memory or had happened to someone else. Post-treatment, several of the patients requested propranolol treatment for other traumatic memories. Benefits have been maintained for up to 4 months, with no relapse to date. None of the patients reported any negative effects from retrieving the memory, even the patient who did not respond, and side-effects from propranolol (sedation, dry mouth) were mild and transient. Propranolol, post-traumatic stress disorder, and intensive care: incorporating new advances in psychiatry into the ICU This paper advocates for two interwoven advances in psychiatric care (specifically for PTSD) after ICU: (1) incorporate the monitoring and treating of psychiatric co-morbidities during extended patient follow-up, and (2) rapidly adopting the latest research to maximize its benefit. The discovery that memories were not fixed, but malleable to change, set off a sequence of experiments that have revolutionized the approach to treating PTSD. It is hoped that the phenomenon of reconsolidation can be exploited therapeutically. In the act of remembering and re-storing traumatic memories, propranolol can act to dissociate the state of sympathetic arousal from their recollection. Often, ICU patients have multiple physical co-morbidities that may be exacerbated, or their treatment disrupted, by such a pervasive psychological condition. The rapid uptake of new techniques, aimed at reducing PTSD after ICU admission, is necessary to maximize the quality of care given to patients. |
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So in other words ... ban all guns huh? Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:Lest they chase their wife around the neighborhood with a gun, then barricade themselves in their house from police, all because the wife messed with his pot plant.
But that would never happen. Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. But we still have people on here who quote "mellow" chapter and verse. |
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Got an uncle that grows it and sells. Was a Vietnam vet. It's a "family secret" that he grows, sells, and smokes it. LOL yea right. Dude hasn't had a job in 30 years. My aunt makes their living and has. Dunno where the money,if any, he makes goes from selling it. But I have watched that play out since the 70's.
Pot hasn't helped him do anything but become a worse shit bag. If it was gonna help it would have years ago. I don't know his military pedigree, I just know he sat on a machine gun in the door of a helicopter. I don't know what all he got into or did. What I do know is pot is not his solution. Never has been. I have several similar experiences with people who aren't all necessarily vets. My point is my experience is I have NEVER, NOT ONCE, seen pot improve anybodies quality of life. ***ETA: I have seen several peoples lives improve when they dropped their pot habits. When my uncle and aunt got married in the early 70's, he seemed like a fairly normal guy back then. A shadow of what he used to be. |
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I want to see your fucking medical license first. Cannabis is the devil's lettuce. These guys suffering from combat related PTSD should be taking opioids and drinking alcohol instead. View Quote The best treatment is to reintroduce these guys into society and demonstrate their capability and usefulness, not turn them into baked coach potatoes. But I'll tell you straight up half the PTSD cases are bullshit and I'll bet the most vocal pot heads demanding this are the biggest bullshitters. |
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Show me the peer reviewed studies showing PTSD as a cure or treatment for PTSD. The best treatment is to reintroduce these guys into society and demonstrate their capability and usefulness, not turn them into baked coach potatoes. But I'll tell you straight up half the PTSD cases are bullshit and I'll bet the most vocal pot heads demanding this are the biggest bullshitters. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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I want to see your fucking medical license first. Cannabis is the devil's lettuce. These guys suffering from combat related PTSD should be taking opioids and drinking alcohol instead. The best treatment is to reintroduce these guys into society and demonstrate their capability and usefulness, not turn them into baked coach potatoes. But I'll tell you straight up half the PTSD cases are bullshit and I'll bet the most vocal pot heads demanding this are the biggest bullshitters. As far as peer reviewed studies, the federal government has only allowed research on it for 2-1/2 years which isn't enough time to do any sort of credible studies. Companies and doctors weren't going to do research on something with the fear of getting raided and thrown in jail. |
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Strongly agree. There is no test for determining pain. I function better on meds than without them. We know marijuana oil calms seizures in children. Let Vets use whatever helps them without punishment Our City and County recently decriminalized small amounts of pot. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Who provides the pot is an issue I will avoid. If a vet believes pot helps improve his quality of life while dealing with PTSD, I do not care if his improvement is real, or only "in his mind", because the PTSD is "in his mind" too. So if the help from pot use is real, or imagined, if the vet believes their quality of life has improved, I am fine with them using pot. They could do far worse things to their quality of life. There is no test for determining pain. I function better on meds than without them. We know marijuana oil calms seizures in children. Let Vets use whatever helps them without punishment Our City and County recently decriminalized small amounts of pot. |
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While I haven't stated it every time, what I have stated are my experiences. I can't speak for things I haven't seen. I am not classifying all. Just waiting for an example to come forth for me to see that refutes what I have said. I have terrible experiences with stoners. I think I have known 2 productive, semi normal pot smokers my whole life. Furthermore, I have experience with reformed pot smokers. Guys who did it. Were wastes of space, quite, and blossomed into incredibly productive members of society(one of my oldest closest friends being one of them). I am sure I am the ONLY person in the world who has objectively seen any of these things feel free to call me a liberal or flame me. I am only speaking from what I have seen. **and the rest of your post unaddressed, is just derp, and continues to go unaddressed. View Quote |
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I suspect you don't know how many pot smokers you know... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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While I haven't stated it every time, what I have stated are my experiences. I can't speak for things I haven't seen. I am not classifying all. Just waiting for an example to come forth for me to see that refutes what I have said. I have terrible experiences with stoners. I think I have known 2 productive, semi normal pot smokers my whole life. Furthermore, I have experience with reformed pot smokers. Guys who did it. Were wastes of space, quite, and blossomed into incredibly productive members of society(one of my oldest closest friends being one of them). I am sure I am the ONLY person in the world who has objectively seen any of these things feel free to call me a liberal or flame me. I am only speaking from what I have seen. **and the rest of your post unaddressed, is just derp, and continues to go unaddressed. |
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Show me the peer reviewed studies showing PTSD as a cure or treatment for PTSD. The best treatment is to reintroduce these guys into society and demonstrate their capability and usefulness, not turn them into baked coach potatoes. But I'll tell you straight up half the PTSD cases are bullshit and I'll bet the most vocal pot heads demanding this are the biggest bullshitters. View Quote PTSD and weed are both crutches for weak people who don't pack the gear to deal with their issues. I have never seen a trend among WW2 pacific theater vets needing weed to get over the stuff they did or saw, and I daresay they saw some stuff that'd do it. I know people who have been weedies for years and none of them have improved their life one bit as a result... in fact, the latter is true. They're all lazy, apathetic, paranoid slobs now. Their goal of the entire day is to first get stoned and then "deal" with life. People who smoke pot to "get through" something are weak... and I'm a cancer survivor who didn't need weed to get through horrible chemo. If you want to get stoned for fun, then more power to you, but don't try to sell it as something you "need" or should have in order to deal with life. Grow a pair and deal with life head on clean and sober like a man. |
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This thread and some of the responses are why republicans are a joke. Such champions of personal choice , responsibility , freedom and liberty... unless I don't like it. Just like a group of fucking liberals. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
This thread and some of the responses are why republicans are a joke. Such champions of personal choice , responsibility , freedom and liberty... unless I don't like it. Just like a group of fucking liberals. I support the federal decriminalization of ALL drugs, except on people trying to bring them into the country. I still don't believe the divine benevolence of pot advocates, claiming they want to help the world instead of just getting high. There are fantastic arguments that can be had, mainly personal freedom, how the drug war has been ineffective, etc. However, I think the "THIS PLANT CURES EVERYTHING; FIND OUT WHAT SCIENTISTS DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW" line of reasoning is stupid. Quoted:
So in other words ... ban all guns huh? Jesus. When will people ever learn that making government policy on the actions of one lunatic isn't good. Did I imply that it should be banned because of that? Just because one person is careless with their recreational nuke, doesn't mean that we should make government policy on the actions of one lunatic... |
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I dont have much of a problem with it. Like what most have said its better than opiates or ETOH. If our vets feel smoking the weed helps their ptsd, who am I to tell them anything.
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I dont have much of a problem with it. Like what most have said its better than opiates or ETOH. If our vets feel smoking the weed helps their ptsd, who am I to tell them anything. View Quote |
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My group therapy circle had this conversation with our shrink. His response was that he is neither for or against medical marijuana, but at this time there is no clinical evidence (other than anecdotal) that marijuana is useful for treatment. He also restated VA policy, which is that it's illegal under federal law and therefore not a VA option. Myself I am on the fence about it. I doubt I'd use it even if it were legal and prescribed, for the same reason I avoid any medication if I can - I don't need anything messing with my body chemistry. View Quote |
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So we should tell that snorting a line of Drano will help and let them make up their own mind about it? I am all for helping them, experimental if necessary. From what I have seen, objectively, it is iffy whether it is good for them or makes them worse. Handing it out like candy is not the answer at this point. If we give them something to help, let's at least do our diligence to make sure it actually helps and not worsens it. View Quote |
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Ha, the ban all guns argument comes out.... From my experience it isn't just one person. I have seen quite a number of stoner jackwagons in my day. Almost batting a thousand. So while liberty and all that, yea I'm for it, dope isn't nearly as innocent as it gets made out on here. But we still have people on here who quote "mellow" chapter and verse. View Quote I've used this same argument at least 1000 times here. I call in the "do something" disease and it typically infects liberals. Making government policy on any fucking thing, based on one event or action by a crazy person isn't good use of the governments power. You'll never be able to manufacture enough foam rubber padding to protect everyone from every sharp object in life. I've learned long long ago that it's not government's job to protect us from everything because it means the loss of liberties and freedoms every single time. Dope is a good litmus test with some pretty good parallels with firearms. Anti-gun haters have irrational fear of guns and create irrational gun laws. The anti-gun efforts haven't stopped gang bangers from killing each other. The War on Drugs (TM) cost this nation tens of billions a year and hasn't had much of an impact on stopping the losers from losing. Both efforts cost us citizens countless liberties and freedoms and simply bolster government bureaucracies creating felons out of normal citizens whose only crime is wanting to defend themselves or find some relief from their demons. I argue two points - less government and more personal responsibility, liberty, and freedom. |
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In fairness to you it was a fuckin' lob serve by you and I couldn't resist charging the net and acing your serve. I've used this same argument at least 1000 times here. I call in the "do something" disease and it typically infects liberals. Making government policy on any fucking thing, based on one event or action by a crazy person isn't good use of the governments power. You'll never be able to manufacture enough foam rubber padding to protect everyone from every sharp object in life. I've learned long long ago that it's not government's job to protect us from everything because it means the loss of liberties and freedoms every single time. Dope is a good litmus test with some pretty good parallels with firearms. Anti-gun haters have irrational fear of guns and create irrational gun laws. The anti-gun efforts haven't stopped gang bangers from killing each other. The War on Drugs (TM) cost this nation tens of billions a year and hasn't had much of an impact on stopping the losers from losing. Both efforts cost us citizens countless liberties and freedoms and simply bolster government bureaucracies creating felons out of normal citizens whose only crime is wanting to defend themselves or find some relief from their demons. I argue two points - less government and more personal responsibility, liberty, and freedom. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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Ha, the ban all guns argument comes out.... From my experience it isn't just one person. I have seen quite a number of stoner jackwagons in my day. Almost batting a thousand. So while liberty and all that, yea I'm for it, dope isn't nearly as innocent as it gets made out on here. But we still have people on here who quote "mellow" chapter and verse. I've used this same argument at least 1000 times here. I call in the "do something" disease and it typically infects liberals. Making government policy on any fucking thing, based on one event or action by a crazy person isn't good use of the governments power. You'll never be able to manufacture enough foam rubber padding to protect everyone from every sharp object in life. I've learned long long ago that it's not government's job to protect us from everything because it means the loss of liberties and freedoms every single time. Dope is a good litmus test with some pretty good parallels with firearms. Anti-gun haters have irrational fear of guns and create irrational gun laws. The anti-gun efforts haven't stopped gang bangers from killing each other. The War on Drugs (TM) cost this nation tens of billions a year and hasn't had much of an impact on stopping the losers from losing. Both efforts cost us citizens countless liberties and freedoms and simply bolster government bureaucracies creating felons out of normal citizens whose only crime is wanting to defend themselves or find some relief from their demons. I argue two points - less government and more personal responsibility, liberty, and freedom. |
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So we should tell that snorting a line of Drano will help and let them make up their own mind about it? I am all for helping them, experimental if necessary. From what I have seen, objectively, it is iffy whether it is good for them or makes them worse. Handing it out like candy is not the answer at this point. If we give them something to help, let's at least do our diligence to make sure it actually helps and not worsens it. |
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Quoted:Show me the peer reviewed studies showing PTSD as a cure or treatment for PTSD. View Quote That just strikes me as completely irrational and total lunacy. |
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Doctor Sylvan you know that the government forbids such studies as cannabis joins heroin and LSD as schedule 1 controlled substance with no currently accepted medical use in the United States and a lack of accepted safety for use even under medical supervision. That just strikes me as completely irrational and total lunacy. View Quote |
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I want to see their fucking service record first. View Quote When I have a bad day I just relax and drink. No need to smoke pot Know a Vet, he was in desert storm as a Mech. one tour and is 100% ptsd and draws SSDI and smokes his medical pot all day and plays his drums. Not discounting his situation but years of drug use has caused his problems and not PTSD. |
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I suspect that you have no right to view anyone's record of any sort. Move the fuck along, angry old white man. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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You do all know, of course, that there are various strains/variations/types of medical marijuana that do not cause one to get high?
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I want it to be legal so I can grow and sell it.
What a great retirement job |
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Quoted:PTSD and weed are both crutches for weak people who don't pack the gear to deal with their issues. I have never seen a trend among WW2 pacific theater vets needing weed to get over the stuff they did or saw, and I daresay they saw some stuff that'd do it. View Quote I recommend a read Lt. Col. Dave Grossman's book On Killing and On Combat where he documents the improvements in PTSD treatment and prevention from the lessons learned from the American Civil War forward. In WWII the most common combat injury was "combat fatigue" where whole units were rendered nonfunctional due to the near continuous combat stress they suffered. One thing that Grossman cites that helped the WWII combat vets over say the Vietnam vets was the decompression that the WWII vets went through together as they sailed home on transport ships as whole units. Units also tended to be regional ones drafted and serving together from the same county. In Vietnam lots of lessons were learned the hard way. A soldier was dropped into a unit full of strangers, went into combat with them, and then following their tour they were plucked out on a Tuesday and dropped into their home town by the following Friday. Lots of wrong there and plenty of Vietnam vets still pay the price for those mistakes sadly. The prevention and treatment of the crazy levels of stress that killing another human being is an on-going several method effort. It involves subtle and small things like changing the shape of an Army practice target from a bullseye to a human silhouette to the recreation provided in the green zones in Iraq this afternoon. I've had the honor of listening to Col Grossman talk a couple of times and his arguments make a lot of sense. Anyone who has been in combat or had to kill ought to read his books. Those in the military or police service ought to read them before entering combat or having to take a life. |
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This gets me thinking, maybe if you are a combat veteran with at least a CIB, CFMB or a CAB you should be given permission to violate certain victimless crimes. You get to do drugs if you want (VA supplied of course), park anywhere you want, drive in the HOV lane all the time, anything you want basically, as long as no one else gets hurt physically or financially. It would do wonders for recruiting into combat arms. You'd just have to figure out how to keep commanders from giving CIB's, CFMB's and CAB's away to people who didn't earn them. View Quote |
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The uncomfortable fact that liberals and some here embrace is that life is dangerous. No amount of government protection will ever be enough to protect everyone from everything. Here we at least will argue that self defense involves a personally owned firearm where the liberals will say it involves dialing 9-1-1 and hoping the government arrives in time.
My argument is that the juice isn't worth the squeeze when it comes to weed. I will gladly defend the argument that alcohol is a better drug to outlaw and make a schedule 1 drug rather and marijuana. Is there any known medically accepted use of booze? Some of the doctors involved in this thread might provide some common medical treatments with the drug alcohol. Yeah, let's do tobacco next ... |
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I recommend a read Lt. Col. Dave Grossman's book On Killing and On Combat where he documents the improvements in PTSD treatment and prevention from the lessons learned from the American Civil War forward. In WWII the most common combat injury was "combat fatigue" where whole units were rendered nonfunctional due to the near continuous combat stress they suffered. One thing that Grossman cites that helped the WWII combat vets over say the Vietnam vets was the decompression that the WWII vets went through together as they sailed home on transport ships as whole units. Units also tended to be regional ones drafted and serving together from the same county. In Vietnam lots of lessons were learned the hard way. A soldier was dropped into a unit full of strangers, went into combat with them, and then following their tour they were plucked out on a Tuesday and dropped into their home town by the following Friday. Lots of wrong there and plenty of Vietnam vets still pay the price for those mistakes sadly. The prevention and treatment of the crazy levels of stress that killing another human being is an on-going several method effort. It involves subtle and small things like changing the shape of an Army practice target from a bullseye to a human silhouette to the recreation provided in the green zones in Iraq this afternoon. I've had the honor of listening to Col Grossman talk a couple of times and his arguments make a lot of sense. Anyone who has been in combat or had to kill ought to read his books. Those in the military or police service ought to read them before entering combat or having to take a life. View Quote he was never in combat and based his ideas based upon Marshall's made up bullshit. I killed and my men killed. A lot. They aren't the ones with PTSD demanding free pot. |
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We need to go to a V.A. Regional Med Center and take a poll with a group of those being treated for P.T.S.D.-but I won't tell you that a lot of them will say pot has helped them more than prescription meds including opiods that the Drs. have them on-just sayin View Quote Problem is I see this becoming a way to keep them from owning guns in the future and be abused. Stupid kids will use this as a excuse for free pot and I honestly believe many will get hooked and ruin their lives. If your honestly 100% disabled from PTSD with no hopes of getting better without pot smoke all you want. Thing is that will not be the case and the one term ETS kids will get out smoke pot and never make anything out of themselves. |
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Quoted:The problem is the government has too much control. Way too much. Put it up to a national vote View Quote |
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The uncomfortable fact that liberals and some here embrace is that life is dangerous. No amount of government protection will ever be enough to protect everyone from everything. Here we at least will argue that self defense involves a personally owned firearm where the liberals will say it involves dialing 9-1-1 and hoping the government arrives in time. My argument is that the juice isn't worth the squeeze when it comes to weed. I will gladly defend the argument that alcohol is a better drug to outlaw and make a schedule 1 drug rather and marijuana. Is there any known medically accepted use of booze? Some of the doctors involved in this thread might provide some common medical treatments with the drug alcohol. Yeah, let's do tobacco next ... View Quote Until we get rid of the welfare state that allows stoners to be full time drug users, then we have the right and obligation to restrict the use of drugs as much as possible. Heroin addicts dying in the streets literally means nothing to me but a reduction in democratic voters. |
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are we demanding government provided alcohol to treat PTSD? Probably a better argument could be made than for pot. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Contrary to what you heard-V.A. Drs in states where it is legal,can discuss with vets the possibility of using med marijuana for treatment.But they cannot prescribe it-but they can tell vets they might get it on their own and try it. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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My group therapy circle had this conversation with our shrink. His response was that he is neither for or against medical marijuana, but at this time there is no clinical evidence (other than anecdotal) that marijuana is useful for treatment. He also restated VA policy, which is that it's illegal under federal law and therefore not a VA option. Myself I am on the fence about it. I doubt I'd use it even if it were legal and prescribed, for the same reason I avoid any medication if I can - I don't need anything messing with my body chemistry. |
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Quoted:Not discounting his situation but years of drug use has caused his problems and not PTSD. View Quote I was prescribed a hydrocodone bitartrate pill to control a service related injury (USN, 1981-2005, NEC codes 4747, 4746 and a few others). On day one I was shown the side effects and through the tears I read and signed off. 40 minutes later I was functional again. I took those sons of bitches like candy for seven years fearing the return of the pain. That opioid took the mind-numbing crippling pain down to the point that I was able learn to walk (nearly normally!) and function in life again. The dope was part of my daily routine, wake up pill, before and after lunch pills, before and after dinner pills, before sleep pills. I knew that the pain was there, it just didn't trigger pain, only a sort of constant state of mild anger. Shit just writing about this has my leg trembling and my heart racing ... that's awesome. One night at a party a friend's wife who is an RN saw me pop a pill. The bottle is marked as a controlled narcotic will a bunch of bright orange warning labels. She asked me if she could see the bottle and how long I had been taking them. At that point it was seven years. Her eyes about popped out of her head and she wanted to know why in God's name I was on them for that long. The Navy and VA doctors following issued them to control the pain. She recommended that I consult with my doctor and to stop taking them and get on something less damaging to my liver. Over the next two weeks I stopped taking the pills cutting down my daily dose looking for that pain to return. Eventually I went a whole day without a pill. The pain returned but instead of being the 1000 watt tower of speakers in-your-mother-fucking-face screaming loud pain it was a 10 watt speaker in a living room pain. When my regular VA appointment came up the doctor asked me about my prescription. I told him I had quit. His eyes about fell out of his face! You can just quit cold turkey ... I stopped him and explained that how over a couple of weeks I weaned myself off. He gave me advice to keep the pills and to take one as needed. He cut me from 5mg to 2.5mg pills. My personality returned. A veil lifted. I was a better me in every single sense of the word off the opioid analgesic and antitussive dope. I had pain days and occasionally took a half a pill now-and-then as I over worked my legs and back. I haven't taken a pill in about five years now. Oddly yesterday I had an attack of pain in my knee that hit about a level 9. I was still able to talk and think but couldn't walk at all. I suffered for about 2 minutes crying out in pain and shedding tears. The pain was about driving a 3" nail though your knee cap and into the bone level. Crazy. After two minutes the event stopped and the pain just reduced to a say, staple in your knee pain. I could walk again but all twisted up like I walked 17 years ago when first injured. Within a couple of hours the event ended. I was able to finish my day job and did four hours on podium last night teaching at the university. The military and VA doctors were setting me up for liver failure in an attempt to control my pain and make my life better. That's life and the trade-off serious dope carries with it. If medical cannabis has even the smallest amount of chance of treating pain or other condition with fewer side effects than that which is in current use then we ought to be rational (that's a thing, look it up) and study it at least as hard as we have studied the poison of the clostridium botulinum. From what little I know of the history of marijuana that was once legal for a majority of this nation's history and that for some pretty irrational reasons was made illegal. |
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I had PTSD for awhile after my last deployment. I saw one of my best friends get killed right in front of me. It did fuck me up a little. I tried to deal with it on my own, but it didn't help. I talked to a shrink and that didn't help. What helped me was time. Then, my brother died and I reverted back. I drank more than anyone could. The pain was so bad. I refused to take meds and just drank. I can tell anyone what works more than drugs, pot or drinking, it is a network/group of veteran friends who care about you. Guys you can talk to that will go through the depths of hell and rape the devil for you. I found those friends at the American Legion. I know a bar it is ironic. Those fuckers are guys who would do anything for you. There is nothing they wouldn't do for a brother.
If vets find that pot helps with PTSD, depression and anxiety go for it. I am all for that. It is not a cure though. It is an aid that helps with the symptoms. |
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