Listen you potheads....THC (Cannabis) is a gateway drug[1] that leads to further addiction problems[2]. Have you read recent data about pot destroying your brain[3] and inducing schizophernia and psychotic disorders later in life[4]......
You's trollin' or just ignorant. Either way, since I'm sober and pretty bored, I'm going to deconstruct your post, piece by piece, though I doubt you'll be convinced anyway.
1.) The reason why cannabis is a gateway drug is because the current Prohibition puts cannabis in the same category as other (actually dangerous) substances like heroin, crack, methamphetamine, ect. ect. When you're going to go cop some buds, there's a chance that other drugs will be available, and one might be inclined to try them out if they're readily available. Saying that cannabis is a gateway makes little sense, does that mean that drinking Mountain Dew is a gateway to Mountain Dew and vodka? Or that drinking milk is a gateway to alcohol?
Even then, this gateway theory makes no sense whatsoever when you look at the numbers.
"(2008) More than 102 million Americans have tried marijuana; 15.2 million Americans are estimated to be "past-month" users. Yet there are only an estimated 1,855,000 "past-month" users of cocaine and 213,000 "past-month" users of heroin.)"
(
http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/nsduh/2k8nsduh/2k8Results.pdf )
This argument has been pretty much deconstructed almost a million times and I feel like I've already wasted a good deal in doing so myself.
2.) Further addiction problems...like what? I know for a fact that cannabis is non-addictive. I've been off the drug for a decent amount of time now, even though I'm strongly tempted to toke again, I haven't fallen yet to the temptation. If I wanted to, I could take a long, long break from buds without any kind of problem other than the occasional desire to toke up. Even then, it has not led to any other addictions whatsoever in my personal experience. I've been around cocaine, opiates, and other highly addictive substances just from being around the buds, but I was never once inclined to try them much less get addicted to them.
3.) Exactly how does your brain get "destroyed" from smoking marijuana? In fact, a study shows that marijuana in fact
actually helps to prevent brain injury.
"Marijuana is considered a psychoactive drug. It stimulates specific brain receptors, but
there is no published clinical evidence that marijuana destroys brain cells."
4.) I would give you this one, but the way you grossly generalized it invalidates your claim.
"We cannot be certain that the increased risk we saw is due to cannabis use, but it is the most likely explanation," psychiatrist and lead researcher Stanley Zammit tells WebMD. "It is important to point out that the risk is still quite small. If your lifetime risk of developing schizophrenia is 1% then frequent use of cannabis would increase that risk to 3%."
It does not absolutely guarantee that one will develop schizophrenia as a result of cannabis consumption. While it may be a factor, it's very difficult to determine whether that's actually true or not. However, you're spinning it like everyone that's ever smoked pot once will automatically be putting themselves at a huge risk for disastrous mental disorders later in life. That's simply not true.
Next time, make sure you do your homework before you parrot the propaganda you learned in D.A.R.E. back in the fourth grade. Almost all of what you said is completely factually untrue, and the tiny bit of truth you might have had in there was distorted and blown completely out of proportion. Also, on your last talking point, could you perhaps point me to the study that finds that marijuana consumption "destroys" the brain?