Artificial Emotion
Bluelighter
You cited the DSM because you thought it would add weight to your argument (otherwise why else mention it?). It's not 1973 but this just shows how vulnerable the DSM is to political influence. It's written by a bunch of psychiatrists who vote what should and shouldn't become an illness behind closed doors away from scrutiny and with little transparency. If our understanding of mental health can change as you say, surely you must see that at one point it may have been thought that cannabis could be major cause of schizophrenia but when reviewing all the evidence our understanding about the link between cannabis and schizophrenia can change?I didn't say it validates anything, I said it mentions marijuana with what I believe is good reasoning.
At the very least, it is worth the mentioning... there is no need to ignore it.
As far as mental health, a lot of things really aren't understood.
When it comes to drugs, we still don't understand everything either.
You combine the two, we have a lot of understanding to do.
A debate is alright, coming off sarcastically and insulting people isn't...there is no need to get that overly defensive.
This was not first intended to be a battle of sides and presenting evidence and facts arguing causes and so and so forth.
Obviously, it took that turn.
I didn't intend for thing to get this heated, lets take it down a notch.
It was meant to shine light on people's personal experiences both good and bad, and there is no need to try discredit anyone's view of how it effects them and prove them wrong.
As for our current understanding of cannabis as a risk factor for psychosis, if you review the current literature and look at various meta-analyses you will see there is no causal link between cannabis use and psychosis.
Extrapolating experiments where volunteers are injected intravenously and subjected to various questions on their mental state to the smoking or vaporization of herbal cannabis or hashish is if you don't mind me saying, idiotic and at the very least, defies common sense. Above you were quite clearly asserting that cannabis does cause psychosis, using this sort pseudoscientific claptrap as evidence to support the theory. I'll make it clear again - experiencing transient anxiety or paranoia when smoking is not the same as someone experiencing a prolonged acute psychotic episode or someone suffering from schizophrenia. Nor is someone freaking out after being injected with pure THC evidence that cannabis can cause psychosis. You're adding one plus one and coming out with five i.e. jumping to conclusions.
At the end of the day, even if you accept that smoking cannabis does lead to psychosis, the chances of it happening are so small it's not worth worrying about. This is why I made the point about alcohol. You're far more likely to suffer from psychosis from alcohol abuse than cannabis abuse. I make this point because it gets things into perspective, not because I am trying to make the discussion about alcohol as was claimed earlier in the thread by i against i. When you take into consideration that 60% of adults in the US are drinkers, the type of rhetoric we see from the likes of the DEA depicting cannabis as a threat to public mental health is at best misguided and at worst, disingenuous. The lifetime incidence of schizophrenia is about 1% but this doesn't appear different amongst countries with high rates of cannabis use and countries where cannabis use is incredibly rare.
You need to have a thicker skin. I don't see a problem with arguing something passionately as long as I'm not being vitriolic or abusive. I feel strongly about the subject and so will vigorously argue my point unashamedly.
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