Drugs and you

Which do you partake of?


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tommyg4uk

All-American
Aug 20, 2003
2,542
9,650
0
Another serious note, a poster on this forum said he used to freeze his cocaine boogers, then would chop them up and snort them when he was low on cash.
 

MegaBlue05

Heisman
Mar 8, 2014
10,164
19,225
66
Caffeine is my only real addiction currently. I get headaches without it.

I used to have a Copenhagen addiction but that ended when I had to have a chunk cut out of my cheek.

Alcohol is enjoyable but in no way an addiction, same as pain meds. Weed has been useless to me. I never got more than a couple drinks worth of high, so I quit trying( it was crap stuff even then). I bought a big jar of delta 8 gummies and tried them. I started with one, then worked my way up to eating them like the fat kid from Willy Wonka and pretty much nothing.

D8 is weak IMO, but I’m essentially a 5-7 days a week cannabis user.

I tried a D8 cartridge and some gummies. The gummies did nothing for me and I got a teenie tiny head change off the cart. Gave the gunmies to my father in law and he said they helped with inflammation in his joints, so he’s a regular user now.

I threw the cart away and rolled a joint. Much better.
 

Ukbrassowtipin

Heisman
Aug 12, 2011
82,109
89,931
0
That sums it up for me. I recognize that I'm compulsive, plus Len Bias' death made an impression on me that stuck.
The Len Bias death was and still is bizarre. I've never since heard of anyone dying of a cocaine overdose when it was cocaine alone.
 
Jul 28, 2006
11,296
16,072
113
The Len Bias death was and still is bizarre. I've never since heard of anyone dying of a cocaine overdose when it was cocaine alone.
I remember his death; such a good player. I recall the coke obviously, but didn't they also find that he had a heart issue that was affected by the coke? Or am I thinking of someone else?

Myself, I use cannabis daily now. I was diagnosed with kidney cancer in September......3 weeks after total knee replacement. I'd been losing weight even before my knee surgery but didn't think a lot of it at the time. I just wasn't hungry, thus I didn't eat.

Once I was given the cancer diagnosis I began smoking herb. I've gotten my appetite back and have at least stopped losing weight. I had surgery one week a go today, so now I'm recovering from that. I keep 3 or 4 rolled all the time; nothing else works quite as well for so many symptoms/ailments/, pain, etc, etc.
 

JDHoss

Heisman
Jan 1, 2003
16,470
40,054
113
If you’re buying from the black market, I offer the following advice backed with almost 30 years of experience:

Always buy from someone you know and trust; no random strangers

If you can get in good with a grower or someone who is supplied directly by a grower, you’re golden

Always avoid buying brick weed; dank nugs only. The low price point isn’t worth the bad smoke and the cartels benefit the most from cheap bricks (Kids these days don’t know the struggle). That’s the kind that’s the most likely to be laced with dangerous drugs or sprayed with chemicals.

Luckily, the market for brick aka press aka schwagg aka Reggie aka Pedro is virtually nil because nobody ever really wanted to smoke that stuff. It used to be all that was available.
Last week there was an obituary for a 17 year old kid. A friend of mine who knew his family said he smoked some weed that was laced with something. If we had legalized pot that you could buy in a store, that kid is probably still alive. Yeah, the kid couldn't buy it himself, but like we did with booze back in high school, we had some older connections to buy for us.

All drugs need to be legalized. Have them produced to strict specifications and distributed by authorized distributors, much like some states have ABC stores. Use the profits to fund REAL rehab opportunities for people who want to get clean. Make the unauthorized manufacture and distribution of drugs punishable by death, excluding the low level dealer who is selling to support their habit. They will be entered into mandatory rehab. The benefits? You take a lot of the criminal element out of it. You stop people from dying due to inferior products laced with **** like fentanyl. You could cut down on a large chunk of the prison population by decriminalizing drugs. We need to stop the ridiculous War On Drugs and go in a different direction.
 
May 22, 2002
18,316
15,646
113
Last week there was an obituary for a 17 year old kid. A friend of mine who knew his family said he smoked some weed that was laced with something. If we had legalized pot that you could buy in a store, that kid is probably still alive. Yeah, the kid couldn't buy it himself, but like we did with booze back in high school, we had some older connections to buy for us.

All drugs need to be legalized. Have them produced to strict specifications and distributed by authorized distributors, much like some states have ABC stores. Use the profits to fund REAL rehab opportunities for people who want to get clean. Make the unauthorized manufacture and distribution of drugs punishable by death, excluding the low level dealer who is selling to support their habit. They will be entered into mandatory rehab. The benefits? You take a lot of the criminal element out of it. You stop people from dying due to inferior products laced with **** like fentanyl. You could cut down on a large chunk of the prison population by decriminalizing drugs. We need to stop the ridiculous War On Drugs and go in a different direction.

I’m in agreement with MOST of what you’ve said here. We’ll part ways on the death penalty for illegal manufacturing. I think we have a very good model to go by with how we handle the manufacturing, distribution and sales of alcohol, and we don’t execute moonshiners or homebrewers.

Having said that, you are 100% right that in The War On Drugs, Drugs has come out the clear victor. It would be best for everyone if we admit defeat, have the troops (cops and DEA) stand down, and try a new and reasonable approach.
 
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JDHoss

Heisman
Jan 1, 2003
16,470
40,054
113
I’m in agreement with MOST of what you’ve said here. We’ll part ways on the death penalty for illegal manufacturing. I think we have a very good model to go by with how we handle the manufacturing, distribution and sales of alcohol, and we don’t execute moonshiners or homebrewers.

Having said that, you are 100% right that in The War On Drugs, Drugs has come out the clear victor. It would be best for everyone if we admit defeat, have the troops (cops and DEA) stand down, and try a new and reasonable approach.
If you are manufacturing/growing for your own consumption, that would be different. For this to work, there has to be a draconian penalty that makes the risk/reward for manufacturing to sell/distribute extremely unfavorable.