So this statistics actually support the points of view of most everyone else. If marijuana had nothing at all to do with traffic fatalities, you would expect the rate of traffic fatalities to go up proportional to the number of people using marijuana. So there are three possibilities. Marijuana use has less than doubled, marijuana use has doubled, marijuana use has more than doubled.Spaced_Out wrote: ↑January 6th, 2018, 7:06 pmEvil is evil and you support evil you run into problems, cannabis usage will go up, drug dependency will go up, crime and usage of harder drugs will go up. Cannabis will be more affordable and available, the same happening with pain killers, same monkey just different name.PressingForward wrote: ↑January 6th, 2018, 6:22 pm So you simply could not back up your claim that “cities” that legalized marijuana(it’s actually states) are completely falling apart. You deflect to prescription drug pain killer use, and also tell me I’m living in denial. Actually Spaced, it is you who simply can not accept facts and see reality.
Who said anything about marijuana use in the millennium? Are you for banning all bad things that are against the Gospel?
I think we had another brother with the same idea and plan, it didn’t work out for him at all, another fact.
These things are already happening. I never listed any references as it is blatantly obvious, hear is a few for you to smoke.
THE UNEXPECTED SIDE EFFECTS OF LEGALIZING WEED
http://www.newsweek.com/unexpected-side ... eed-339931
Other symptoms of Colorado’s pot culture include increased use among teens, resulting in educational problems in middle schools and high schools, a spike in “edibles”-related emergency room visits, consumption by children and pets resulting in illness and death and regulatory confusion surrounding public consumption and enforcement.
Colorado’s addiction to cannabis revenue may prove to be the most harmful implication of all. Towns such as De Beque, where cannabis is replacing coal and cattle as a means of income, imperil themselves by staking the future on a substance that is still illegal in most states and that half of Americans still regard as a social evil.HomeUS News
Marijuana-related deaths, suspensions & problems spike in Colorado – report
https://www.rt.com/usa/316148-marijuana ... ies-study/
A new study of marijuana drug use in Colorado found increases in marijuana-related traffic deaths, hospital visits, school suspensions, lab explosions, and pet poisonings. The study was conducted by a federal government program.
The 166-page report released this month analyzed the effects of legalizing marijuana for medical and recreational use in Colorado spanning the time period from 2006 to the present. Along with the state of Washington, Colorado is considered as something of laboratory in which the effects of legalizing marijuana use can be studied.
The study showed that the number of drivers testing positive for marijuana increased 100 percent from 2007 to 2012, with marijuana-related fatalities doubling from 37 to 78. Traffic fatalities total around 500 a year in the state.
If marijuana use has less than doubled, then it means legalizing it hasn't increased popularity very much.
If marijuana use has doubled, it means that there is absolutely no correlation between marijuana use and traffic accidents.
If marijuana use has more than doubled, then it means there is either a negative correlation for marijuana use and traffic accidents OR the people who only started using it when it was legalized are more responsible with it, meaning they are probably not now living in the gutter.
And tent cities have been a thing since 2008, so that has nothing to do with the legalization of Marijuana.