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- Canada - Toronto & Southern Ont.
-- Anyone here addicted to weed?
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| quote: |
| Originally posted by bobbybrasz ummm...sorry to interrupt...but.... Does anyone have any papers? |

legalize!
shrooms are great too.
Leagalize!
Everyone around the world uses it, It comes from the earth, so therefore god or whatever divine being has a control over us wishes it to be, and if everyone smoked it, there would be no war.
so I ask you, why is it illegal?
1. It's free to make.
2. I will (and does, and has in the past) promote peace
3. It doesn't Promote today's gov't hencefor, why it is illegal.
Does the Gov't want one of these in every household? smiling away! I THINK NOT!
HAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAAH
Mr Happy!
HAHA, 404, U know what we're talkin about 
dont know if this has been posted, but lawd this is funny:
First tokers of Health Canada cannabis call it disgusting, want money back
Updated at 17:52 on September 15, 2003, EST.
Medicinal marijuana user Christine Lowe lights a pipe containing marijuana during a protest in Ottawa on July 9. (CP/Chris Wattie)
OTTAWA (CP) - Some of the first patients to smoke Health Canada's government-approved marijuana say it's "disgusting" and want their money back.
"It's totally unsuitable for human consumption," said Jim Wakeford, 58, an AIDS patient in Gibsons, B.C. "It gave me a slight buzziness for about three to five minutes, and that was it. I got no other effect from it."
Barrie Dalley, a 52-year-old Toronto man who uses marijuana to combat the nausea associated with AIDS, said the Health Canada dope actually made him sick to his stomach.
"I threw up," Dalley said Monday. "It made me nauseous because I had to use so much of it. It was so weak in potency that I really threw up."
Both men are returning their 30-gram bags, and Dalley is demanding his money back - $150 plus taxes. Wakeford is returning his unpaid bill for two of the bags with a letter of complaint.
A third AIDS patient says he's also unhappy with the product, which is supposed to contain 10.2 per cent THC, the main active ingredient.
"I'm still smoking it - I would prefer better, but it's all I've got," said Jari Dvorak, 62, in Toronto. "I think Health Canada certainly should do better with the quality."
All three are among 10 patients who have registered with Health Canada to buy dope directly from the government to alleviate their medical symptoms. Another 39 applications are pending.
The department was compelled to begin direct distribution in July, following an Ontario court order this year that said needy patients should not be forced to get their cannabis on the streets or from authorized growers, who themselves obtain seeds or cuttings illegally.
The marijuana is being grown for Health Canada deep underground in a vacant mine section in Flin Flon, Man., by Prairie Plant Systems on a $5.75-million contract. The department originally intended that the product go first to accredited researchers to demonstrate whether or not cannabis is medically effective.
Health Minister Anne McLellan has said she opposes the direct distribution of government cannabis to patients and that the program will end if the department wins its appeal of the Ontario court decision.
The government dope also came under fire Monday from Canadians for Safe Access, a patients' rights group that is pressing for supplies of safe, effective marijuana.
Laboratory tests indicate the Health Canada product has only about three per cent THC - not the 10.2 per cent advertised - and contains contaminants such as lead and arsenic, said spokesman Philippe Lucas of Victoria.
"This particular product wouldn't hold a candle to street level cannabis," he said in an interview.
But Lucas declined to identify the three labs that did the testing, other than to indicate they're in Vancouver, saying he fears the facilities might suffer repercussions from Health Canada because they were not authorized to possess the cannabis.
He also would not say how the group obtained the sample of government dope.
A spokeswoman for Health Canada said the department can't accept laboratory findings from anonymous facilities.
"We question the validity of the test results because Canadians for Safe Access has been unwilling to reveal who did the testing, and when the testing was done, and under what conditions," said Krista Apse.
She said the Flin Flon cannabis had to meet exacting production standards and was thoroughly tested for its quality.
No patients have complained directly to Health Canada so far, Apse said, and the department will not accept returns or provide refunds.
Lucas, who smokes marijuana to cope with his hepatitis C infection, said the lab results also showed that the cannabis provided at a Victoria compassion club for patients registers at more than 12 per cent and is freer from contaminants.
He said the government cannabis was too finely ground up with stems and leaves, calling it "shwag" or "bunk," street terminology for the lowest grade of marijuana.
� The Canadian Press, 2003
| quote: |
| Originally posted by jdjd He said the government cannabis was too finely ground up with stems and leaves, calling it "shwag" or "bunk," street terminology for the lowest grade of marijuana. |
There's nothing like coming home after a stressul day and smoking a bowl...
There's no physical addiction (as defined by there being withdrawl once use stops), but tolerance can build up, just as it can with most other drugs.
THC itself may not be super harmful (our brain has receptors that almost seem pre-made to receive it, if I remember a psysiological psyc class correctly, lol)...but it's not exactly good for your lungs
Isn't the tar content way higher than cigs? minus the gajillion chemicals that are in tobacco though.
And I agree that alcohol is a FAR more dangerous and abused drug...the reason weed isn't legal is because the gov't hasn't figured out a way to control distribution, and thereby be able to tax the shit out of it.
It's about social acceptance too...alcohol has been around and legal for a LONG time...pot has never really been widely socially accepted here and any gov't that tries to fully legalize it will face a huge backlash from society in general.
I smoke a bowl maybe every other day, sometimes daily, sometimes I'll go a week without any at all...no biggie, but me likes 
Oh my....
tis that season though now....
you know what I'm know what I'm talking about
"stoner's christmas"
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