The addiction isn't physical, it's mental. One doesn't go through physical withdrawal when they stop smoking weed. They go through emotional withdrawal. Why? Because they are chasing that high, or running from something they can't confront in their life. Fact is, weed alters the way one thinks and it's not for the best.
The difference between physical and mental addiction is all but irrelevant: both are forms of addiction, and both cause
physical withdrawal symptoms (as well as mental). I freely admitted in one of my previous posts that cannabis is psychologically addictive; not "physically".
Regardless, this is irrelevant. I posted numerous scientific sources citing the addictiveness of cannabis as far lower than other substances that we do not consider sinful. It is absurd, then, to give addictiveness as a reason for sinfulness when other things that are more addictive are not considered sinful. They did not just take "physical" addictiveness into account, by the way.
Addiction is sinful. Participating in a behaviour that has the potential to become addictive is not.
Hogwash. Not only that, but bipolar is the new label just like ADHD was 20 years ago and is being mis-diagnosed over and over.
Can you provide any reliable evidence that it causes bipolar?
Here is [FONT=verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif]
the evidence to which I referred:
http://www.pendulum.org/bpnews/archive/001628.html
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15888515?dopt=Abstract
http://www.ukcia.org/research/TheUseofCannabisasaMoodStabilizerinBipolarDisorder.php
http://ehealthforum.com/health/cannabis-for-bipolar-treatment-t226236.html
http://psychcentral.com/news/2010/0...bipolar-and-schizophrenic-patients/15496.html
Essentially, there is hardly any evidence linking cannabis with bipolar at all. I've just thought about it, though, and I don't understand how that would make a difference to whether or not cannabis use is sinful?
[/FONT]
Hogwash. Why do you think kids who smoke weed get bad grades? It's because you can't think intelligently when your high.
Non-sequitur, I'm afraid. Firstly, I'm not even 100% sure the correlation is statistically significant and, secondly, it is simply false to infer cause and effect from a correlation only. There could be any number of reasons why there is a link between smoking cannabis and grades.
When I quit smoking weed, it was like a cloud was lifted off my brain and I could think. Ironically, my 21 year old daughter smoked weed for several years and last year she quite too. And you know what she said about 2 weeks after she quit? "Wow Dad, my mind is so much cleaner, I can think".
I told her she'll feel that brightness of free flowing thought come back in waves and the last one will be about a year out.
I don't know where your reading your smut, but you aint going to change what this old dog KNOWS from experience and has been recently affirmed by my own daughter.
As I mentioned above, anecdotal evidence is simply not reliable. Two personal cases, in which it appears that ceasing cannabis use makes a person think more clearly, is not anywhere
close to justification for the assertion that you
know that cannabis use makes people dumb.
Here are some studies that are very relevant to your claim:
http://brain.oxfordjournals.org/content/126/6/1252.short
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cne.903270406/abstract
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-s...es-growth-of-brain-cells-in-rats-510869.html; http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn8155-marijuana-might-cause-new-cell-growth-in-the-brain.html; http://www.jci.org/articles/view/25509
If you give a mouse a cookie, he's going to want a glass of milk. Listen, I don't have a problem putting it in pill form for some people that can use it responsibly for medicinal purposes. But we're not really talking about that.
I was mainly think of vaporisers here, actually, but pills would fit this perfectly well too. I wasn't talking about medicinal use, no; I was simply pointing out that smoke-associated disease is not a valid criticism of cannabis use.