Quote:
Originally Posted by throatstick
Unless you are a child, there is nothing to brag about there mate!
And with our gov't as broken as it is being Dem. or Rep. are both useless, but you still have to get out and vote!
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Quote:
Originally Posted by throatstick
Unless you are a child, there is nothing to brag about there mate!
And with our gov't as broken as it is being Dem. or Rep. are both useless, but you still have to get out and vote!
And you ass-u-me I was addressing you.Quote:
Originally Posted by throatstick
being that i was talking about libs then your comment was right after mine addressing the same thing.yup you are right...Quote:
Originally Posted by Zedleppelin
lmao im the child lmao thats funny,,no whats funny is you really think all that shit like "rock the vote"and shit really helps LMAO I BET YOU FEEL PROUD WHEN YOU VOTE HUH LMAO.Quote:
Originally Posted by sittingone
this is how i feel about it too...
YouTube - George Carlin Doesn't vote
i bet you are one of those people that believe well you have to vote for someone even if they are both no good for america.atleast pick 1 of the lesser evils huh lmao.....
God, that is built on fallacy after fallacy.
Joycelyn Elders:
"That fear [that medical marijuana laws will increase teen use of marijuana], raised in 1996, when California passed the first effective medical-marijuana law, has not come true.
According to the official California Student Survey teen marijuana use in California rose steadily from 1990 to 1996, but began falling immediately after the medical-marijuana law was passed.
Among ninth graders, marijuana use in the last six months fell by more than 40 percent from 1995-96 to 2001-02 (the most recent available figures)."
Mitch Earleywine:
""Nine years after the passage of the nation's first state medical marijuana law, California's Prop. 215, a considerable body of data shows that no state with a medical marijuana law has experienced an increase in youth marijuana use since their law's enactment. All have reported overall decreases of more than the national average decreases -- exceeding 50% in some age groups -- strongly suggesting that enactment of state medical marijuana laws does not increase teen marijuana use....
When states consider proposals to allow the medical use of marijuana under state law, the concern often arises that such laws might 'send the wrong message' and therefore cause an increase in marijuana use among young people.
The available evidence strongly suggests that this hypothesis is incorrect and that enactment of state medical marijuana laws has not increased adolescent marijuana use.""