Top 20 Myths About Marijuana BUSTED!!
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Myth: Marijuana Is More Potent Today Than In The Past. Adults who used marijuana in the 1960s and 1970s fail to realize that when today’s youth use marijuana they are using a much more dangerous drug.
Fact: When today’s youth use marijuana, they are using the same drug used by youth in the 1960s and 1970s. A small number of low-THC samples seized by the Drug Enforcement Administration are used to calculate a dramatic increase in potency. However, these samples were not representative of the marijuana generally available to users during this era. Potency data from the early 1980s to the present are more reliable, and they show no increase in the average THC content of marijuana. Even if marijuana potency were to increase, it would not necessarily make the drug more dangerous. Marijuana that varies quite substantially in potency produces similar psychoactive effects.
Myth: Marijuana Offenses Are Not Severely Punished. Few marijuana law violators are arrested and hardly anyone goes to prison. This lenient treatment is responsible for marijuana continued availability and use.
Fact: Marijuana arrests in the United States doubled between 1991 and 1995. In 1995, more than one-half-million people were arrested for marijuana offenses. Eighty-six percent of them were arrested for marijuana possession. Tens of thousands of people are now in prison for marijuana offenses. An even greater number are punished with probation, fines, and civil sanctions, including having their property seized, their driver’s license revoked, and their employment terminated. Despite these civil and criminal sanctions, marijuana continues to be readily available and widely used.
Myth: Marijuana is More Damaging to the Lungs Than Tobacco.Marijuana smokers are at a high risk of developing lung cancer, bronchitis, and emphysema.
Fact: Moderate smoking of marijuana appears to pose minimal danger to the lungs. Like tobacco smoke, marijuana smoke contains a number of irritants and carcinogens. But marijuana users typically smoke much less often than tobacco smokers, and over time, inhale much less smoke. As a result, the risk of serious lung damage should be lower in marijuana smokers. There have been no reports of lung cancer related solely to marijuana, and in a large study presented to the American Thoracic Society in 2006, even heavy users of smoked marijuana were found not to have any increased risk of lung cancer. Unlike heavy tobacco smokers, heavy marijuana smokers exhibit no obstruction of the lung’s small airway. That indicates that people will not develop emphysema from smoking marijuana.
Myth: Marijuana Has No Medicinal Value. Safer, more effective drugs are available. They include a synthetic version of THC, marijuana’s primary active ingredient, which is marketed in the United States under the name Marinol.
Fact: Marijuana has been shown to be effective in reducing the nausea induced by cancer chemotherapy, stimulating appetite in AIDS patients, and reducing intraocular pressure in people with glaucoma. There is also appreciable evidence that marijuana reduces muscle spasticity in patients with neurological disorders. A synthetic capsule is available by prescription, but it is not as effective as smoked marijuana for many patients. Pure THC may also produce more unpleasant psychoactive side effects than smoked marijuana. Many people use marijuana as a medicine today, despite its illegality. In doing so, they risk arrest and imprisonment.
Myth: Marijuana is a Gateway Drug. Even if marijuana itself causes minimal harm, it is a dangerous substance because it leads to the use of “harder drugs” like heroin, LSD, and cocaine.
Fact: Marijuana does not cause people to use hard drugs. What the gateway theory presents as a causal explanation is a statistic association between common and uncommon drugs, an association that changes over time as different drugs increase and decrease in prevalence. Marijuana is the most popular illegal drug in the United States today. Therefore, people who have used less popular drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and LSD, are likely to have also used marijuana. Most marijuana users never use any other illegal drug. Indeed, for the large majority of people, marijuana is a terminus rather than a gateway drug.
Myth: Marijuana’s Harms Have Been Proved Scientifically. In the 1960s and 1970s, many people believed that marijuana was harmless. Today we know that marijuana is much more dangerous than previously believed.
Fact: In 1972, after reviewing the scientific evidence, the National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse concluded that while marijuana was not entirely safe, its dangers had been grossly overstated. Since then, researchers have conducted thousands of studies of humans, animals, and cell cultures. None reveal any findings dramatically different from those described by the National Commission in 1972. In 1995, based on thirty years of scientific research editors of the British medical journal Lancet concluded that “the smoking of cannabis, even long term, is not harmful to health.”
Myth: Marijuana Causes an Amotivational Syndrome. Marijuana makes users passive, apathetic, and uninterested in the future. Students who use marijuana become underachievers and workers who use marijuana become unproductive.
Fact: For twenty-five years, researchers have searched for a marijuana-induced amotivational syndrome and have failed to find it. People who are intoxicated constantly, regardless of the drug, are unlikely to be productive members of society. There is nothing about marijuana specifically that causes people to lose their drive and ambition. In laboratory studies, subjects given high doses of marijuana for several days or even several weeks exhibit no decrease in work motivation or productivity. Among working adults, marijuana users tend to earn higher wages than non-users. College students who use marijuana have the same grades as nonusers. Among high school students, heavy use is associated with school failure, but school failure usually comes first.
Myth: Marijuana Policy in the Netherlands is a Failure. Dutch law, which allows marijuana to be bought, sold, and used openly, has resulted in increasing rates of marijuana use, particularly in youth.
Fact: The Netherlands’ drug policy is the most nonpunitive in Europe. For more than twenty years, Dutch citizens over age eighteen have been permitted to buy and use cannabis (marijuana and hashish) in government-regulated coffee shops. This policy has not resulted in dramatically escalating cannabis use. For most age groups, rates of marijuana use in the Netherlands are similar to those in the United States. However, for young adolescents, rates of marijuana use are lower in the Netherlands than in the United States. The Dutch people overwhelmingly approve of current cannabis policy which seeks to normalize rather than dramatize cannabis use. The Dutch government occasionally revises existing policy, but it remains committed to decriminalization.
Myth: Marijuana Kills Brain Cells. Used over time, marijuana permanently alters brain structure and function, causing memory loss, cognitive impairment, personality deterioration, and reduced productivity.
Fact: None of the medical tests currently used to detect brain damage in humans have found harm from marijuana, even from long term high-dose use. An early study reported brain damage in rhesus monkeys after six months exposure to high concentrations of marijuana smoke. In a recent, more carefully conducted study, researchers found no evidence of brain abnormality in monkeys that were forced to inhale the equivalent of four to five marijuana cigarettes every day for a year. The claim that marijuana kills brain cells is based on a speculative report dating back a quarter of a century that has never been supported by any scientific study.
Myth: Marijuana Impairs Memory and Cognition. Under the influence of marijuana, people are unable to think rationally and intelligently. Chronic marijuana use causes permanent mental impairment.
Fact: Marijuana produces immediate, temporary changes in thoughts, perceptions, and information processing. The cognitive process most clearly affected by marijuana is short-term memory. In laboratory studies, subjects under the influence of marijuana have no trouble remembering things they learned previously. However, they display diminished capacity to learn and recall new information. This diminishment only lasts for the duration of the intoxication. There is no convincing evidence that heavy long-term marijuana use permanently impairs memory or other cognitive functions.
Myth: Marijuana Causes Crime. Marijuana users commit more property offenses than nonusers. Under the influence of marijuana, people become irrational, aggressive, and violent.
Fact: Every serious scholar and government commission examining the relationship between marijuana use and crime has reached the same conclusion: marijuana does not cause crime. The vast majority of marijuana users do not commit crimes other than the crime of possessing marijuana. Among marijuana users who do commit crimes, marijuana plays no causal role. Almost all human and animal studies show that marijuana decreases rather than increases aggression.
Myth: Marijuana Interferes With Male and Female Sex Hormones. In both men and women, marijuana can cause infertility. Marijuana retards sexual development in adolescents. It produces feminine characteristics in males and masculine characteristics in females.
Fact: There is no evidence that marijuana causes infertility in men or women. In animal studies, high doses of THC diminish the production of some sex hormones and can impair reproduction. However, most studies of humans have found that marijuana has no impact of sex hormones. In those studies showing an impact, it is modest, temporary, and of no apparent consequence for reproduction. There is no scientific evidence that marijuana delays adolescent sexual development, has feminizing effect on males, or a masculinizing effect on females.
Myth: Marijuana Use During Pregnancy Damages the Fetus. Prenatal marijuana exposure causes birth defects in babies, and, as they grow older, developmental problems. The health and well being of the next generation is threatened by marijuana use by pregnant women.
Fact: Studies of newborns, infants, and children show no consistent physical, developmental, or cognitive deficits related to prenatal marijuana exposure. Marijuana had no reliable impact on birth size, length of gestation, neurological development, or the occurrence of physical abnormalities. The administration of hundreds of tests to older children has revealed only minor differences between offspring of marijuana users and nonusers, and some are positive rather than negative. Two unconfirmed case-control studies identified prenatal marijuana exposure as one of many factors statistically associated with childhood cancer. Given other available evidence, it is highly unlikely that marijuana causes cancer in children.
Myth: Marijuana Use Impairs the Immune System. Marijuana users are at increased risk of infection, including HIV. AIDS patients are particularly vulnerable to marijuana’s immunopathic effects because their immune systems are already suppressed.
Fact: There is no evidence that marijuana users are more susceptible to infections than nonusers. Nor is there evidence that marijuana lowers users’ resistance to sexually transmitted diseases. Early studies which showed decreased immune function in cells taken from marijuana users have since been disproved. Animals given extremely large doses of THC and exposed to a virus have higher rates of infection. Such studies have little relevance to humans. Even among people with existing immune disorders, such as AIDS, marijuana use appears to be relatively safe. However, the recent finding of an association between tobacco smoking and lung infection in AIDS patients warrants further research into possible harm from marijuana smoking in immune suppressed persons.
Myth: Marijuana’s Active Ingredient, THC, Gets Trapped in Body Fat. Because THC is released from fat cells slowly, psychoactive effects may last for days or weeks following use. THC’s long persistence in the body damages organs that are high in fat content, the brain in particular.
Fact: Many active drugs enter the body’s fat cells. What is different (but not unique) about THC is that it exits fat cells slowly. As a result, traces of marijuana can be found in the body for days or weeks following ingestion. However, within a few hours of smoking marijuana, the amount of THC in the brain falls below the concentration required for detectable psychoactivity. The fat cells in which THC lingers are not harmed by the drug’s presence, nor is the brain or other organs. The most important consequence of marijuana’s slow excretion is that it can be detected in blood, urine, and tissue long after it is used, and long after its psychoactivity has ended.
Myth: Marijuana Use is a Major Cause Of Highway Accidents. Like alcohol, marijuana impairs psychomotor function and decreases driving ability. If marijuana use increases, an increase in of traffic fatalities is inevitable.
Fact: There is no compelling evidence that marijuana contributes substantially to traffic accidents and fatalities. At some doses, marijuana affects perception and psychomotor performances- changes which could impair driving ability. However, in driving studies, marijuana produces little or no car-handling impairment- consistently less than produced by low moderate doses of alcohol and many legal medications. In contrast to alcohol, which tends to increase risky driving practices, marijuana tends to make subjects more cautious. Surveys of fatally injured drivers show that when THC is detected in the blood, alcohol is almost always detected as well. For some individuals, marijuana may play a role in bad driving. The overall rate of highway accidents appears not to be significantly affected by marijuana’s widespread use in society.
Myth: Marijuana Related Hospital Emergencies Are Increasing, Particularly Among Youth. This is evidence that marijuana is much more harmful than most people previously believed.
Fact: Marijuana does not cause overdose deaths. The number of people in hospital emergency rooms who say they have used marijuana has increased. On this basis, the visit may be recorded as marijuana-related even if marijuana had nothing to do with the medical condition preceding the hospital visit. Many more teenagers use marijuana than use drugs such as heroin and cocaine. As a result, when teenagers visit hospital emergency rooms, they report marijuana much more frequently than they report heroin and cocaine. In the large majority of cases when marijuana is mentioned, other drugs are mentioned as well. In 1994, fewer than 2% of drug related emergency room visits involved the use of marijuana.
Myth: Marijuana Use Can Be Prevented. Drug education and prevention programs reduced marijuana use during the 1980s. Since then, our commitment has slackened, and marijuana use has been rising. By expanding and intensifying current anti-marijuana messages, we can stop youthful experimentation.
Fact: There is no evidence that anti-drug messages diminish young people’s interest in drugs. Anti-drug campaigns in the schools and the media may even make drugs more attractive. Marijuana use among youth declined throughout the 1980s, and began increasing in the 1990s. This increase occurred despite young people’s exposure to the most massive anti-marijuana campaign in American history. In a number of other countries, drug education programs are based on a “harm reduction” model, which seeks to reduce the drug-related harm among those young people who do experiment with drugs.


They need to read some real empirical evidence.
Too bad it is a gateway drug. You can’t argue against that. That’s the only reason why it would be considered dangerous.
To links to the studies or statistics? nreliable and questionable, though still an interesting read.
This is total bullshit man. “In laboratory studies” What lab studies? And yes, it is a gateway drug, know any stoner who hasn’t tried salvia, shrooms, cigarettes, yet? And how can they say it doesn’t alter brain chemistry? I’m not against marijuana or anything, but all you have to be is in psychology and/or biology class to know that this is way off man..
Hi, I’m a stoner that tried salvia and cigarettes before weed. So does that mean that cigarettes and salvia are gateway drugs to weed?
Btw most people have tried alcohol or nicotine before marijuana, so if anything these two are the gateway drugs.
How is it a gateway drug? I smoke green every day and I am not tempted by pills, powders, etc. I don’t think it is any more of a gateway drug than alcohol, that’s for sure! As for brain chemistry, all they have managed to prove is that ANY drug [excluding cigarettes] has the potential to flare up underlying psychological conditions, equally stressful life events also trigger mental health relapses. Get your facts right ‘Gif’. You sound quite angry about the whole thing to be fair, maybe you need a joint?!
.. you can’t say that weed isn’t a gateway drug.
once you try it, you realise how un-dangerous it is. so you feel other drugs won’t be too dangerous either..
although, alcohol doesn’t have this, even though it’s legal.
if weed were legal it wouldn’t be nearly so much of a gateway drug.
@Gif
what’s salvia??
that was all bs. anyone who believes that marijuana doesn’t impair your driving is probably so stoned they cant think straight. the point of marijuana is that it makes you hallucinate and impairs your judgment, it obviously screws with your driving.
You’re actually retarded.
Marijuana doesn’t make you hallucinate you fucktard.
Every summer trip to the beach my parents light up on the highway not once in their 58 years of living has Marijuana effected anything.
It’s all about personal choice and how one self controls the road.@Anonymous
@may Salvia is legal and can be bought at corner stores. It is a “drug” that you smoke through a pipe or bong and it gives you a 5ish minute long trip. nothing big. Mostly a hallucinogen, you should do this “drug” inside and have people you trust around because everyones reactions are different. Also you should record what you feel and have people ask you questions while your on your trip. it helps.
So, how can you guess that some pothead made this? Probably from their ignoring facts from unbiased sources, and using their own faked research.
@Right…
Yes, obviously. Further to that, everyone who has ever said anything you don’t agree with is clearly wrong and a bad person
@Gif
I’ve been a user for well over a year now, and I have not yet moved on to any other drug bar marijuana. I doubt that it is a ‘gateway’ drug – it depends entirely on the person’s character. Those who enjoy the experience and search for other states akin to smoking cannabis will move on to harder drugs.
alright, name ONE person in the entire world that has died from marijuana use. go read the FACTS, look at both sides, and get back to me. These “pot heads” you talk about make up about half of the U.S. population and includes a number of incredible scientists, writers, mathematicians, etc. Stop being a bias fuck. all im asking is look at both sides and get your own opinion.
yeah although its classified under a hallucinogen, its very minor and barely affects driving. Hell ive driven stoned so many times its become just as easy as driving normally.
Those who talk about gateway drugs and all other fake theories made up to back up their bullshit opinions are silly moralfags shouting out their emotions.
Gateway theory has been tested with rats, and it only suggests that potheads (HEAVY USERS, Not some sunday smokers) have higher tolerance for heroin than those who have never used cannabis products, (For retards: They need more to get high) but it also clearly shows that potheads have no more interest towards heroin than those who have not used any cannabis in their whole life. If you need a source for this, use google or library.
And the labtests mentioned in the main writing, they are for real and made by real scientists, some even of those who oppose cannabis and try to prove it’s dangerous and whatnot. You can find all of them by simply looking around a little.
There’s a reason it’s only used for Chemotherapy patients, they’re going to die anyway, so Marijuana isn’t going to hurt them anymore than they already are. Marijuana is a controlled narcotic/substance for a reason, it harms a person. It is true that those who don’t smoke it on a regular basis generally won’t have many long-term effects, but for those who smoke it two or three times a week will start to experience the negatives of the drug. If Marijuana didn’t have severe effects, then why are we trying to keep it out of the hands of those who don’t need it? If it has no effect on a person, then the stimulation a person gets from it would none. Marijuana impinges on the central nervous system by attaching to brain’s neurons and interfering with normal communication between the neurons. These nerves respond by altering their initial behavior. For example, if a nerve is suppose to assist one in retrieving short-term memory, cannabinoids receptors make them do the opposite. So if one has to remember what he did five minutes ago, after smoking a high dose of marijuana, he has trouble. Marijuana plant contains 400 chemicals and 60 of them are cannabinoids, which are psychoactive compounds that are produced inside the body after cannabis is metabolized or is extorted from the cannabis plant.There are two types of memory behavior that is affected by marijuana, recognition memory and free cells. Recognition memory is the ability to recognize correct words. Users can usually recognize words that they previous saw before smoking but claim to recognize words that they did not previously see before smoking. This mistake is known as memory intrusions. Memory intrusions are also the consequence of THC affecting the free cell of the brain.
Wow there is so much i want to say on this.. So many people are being cunts in these comments.
I highly recommend everyone watch the documentary “The Union: The Business Behind Getting High”. Its great and explains why it isn’t legalised or decriminalised, why it should be, how the marijuana industry works, and all this other stuff that would be interesting to anyone.
all this says is pretty much, “all this shit hasn’t been proven.”
Right. So, basically this person poses as an authority and talks about vague “studies” that may not have actually happened… Besides, this stuff isn’t explicitly disproven. Mostly it’s just saying “We haven’t proven it yet.” Proving that something definitely happens is much more difficult than saying “It might… I don’t know…” which is what these so-called “studies” are saying.
@SGdrummer
HALF the U.S. population? LOL. Yeah, half the people that I know definitely do not do that stuff. You’re an idiot, stop exaggerating and making up statistics to look like you know what you are talking about.
this argument is hilarious LMFAO
a lot more people than you expect actually have tried marijuana. according to the NIDA (National Institute of Drug Abuse) a study done in 2008 shows that 42.6% of 12th graders have used marijuana in their lifetime. That’s etremely close to being half.
I live in New Zealand, one of the highest marijuana smoking populations in the world. ‘studies’ (conducted by the university of auckland, listed as one of the worlds top 50 universities) showed that 53% of new zealanders have smoked it (including many members of parliament and the former prime minister), and 18% still do on a regular basis. thats 1 in 5 people…a whole shitload.
regardless, auckland is continually listed as one of the top 10 ‘happiest’ cities in the world, alongside cities in sweden and switzerland etc. CLEARLY, im not implying that marijuana has ANYTHING to do with this, but what im saying is that this country is one of the best in the world, by far, and the fact that 1 in 5 people smoke is not detrimental to that fact whatsoever. doctors, lawyers, politicians, an array of university professors and researchers, upstanding businessmen and entrepreneurs are all pot smokers.
I myself am 26, have smoked just about every single day since i was 18. i run my own company managing up to 80 people at times, study full time, was former president of the New zealand contingent of a multimilltion dollar student run company, am a student politician, and have a social life i could write a book about. NOTHING about marijuana indicates that im hallucinating, unproductive, unmotivated, unintellegent, or anything else.
Marijuana is one of THE MOST studied drugs in the history of human existence, and the facts are out there for all to see. it is not a gateway drug because there is no causation between its use and the use of anything else, merely correlation. this will never be proven because it cant be proven. people take other drugs because they grow up and with growing, comes new experiences. you cannot say “sex with a girl is a gateway to cheating” because some people will cheat, and some people wont. and sex is not necessary, its just loved by many, just like marijuana. its all in the personality of the individual.
PS. more MDMA is needed in this world. but thats a discussion for another time…
i bet the person who wrote this was fucking stoned. its not a gateway drug my ass. you obviously dont know the meaning of gateway drug then dumbass…