Based on my utterly non-scientific observation of those around me, I'm certain my driving skills 2 years post-mortem will rival those of most of the presumably sober morons I see on the roads, especially the ones that have a cell phone permanently attached to their body. That said, I think the law should address lousy driving, especially when it hurts someone or causes property damage, not some unscientific and overbroad calculation that "concentration x of thc metabolites = lousy driving" whether it really does or not in a given instance. As an aside, a couple hits of good "medicine," some good tunes, and a sportbike up in the canyons is pretty close to nirvana. Haven't wrecked yet in 30 years. Just lucky I guess, huh? Oh, by the way, hipop, maybe driving while stoned should just be illegal for you, eh?
senorx12562 Reviewed by senorx12562 on . Cars and Cannabis - Is it safe? Could it be legal? HB1024 will go before congress this year. With it comes discussion of finding a way to determine a legal limit to how medicated a patient may be while driving. Much the same way that patrol officers calculate blood alcohol levels for drivers who have been drinking. The only question is, how would they do that? If someone has medicated within the last 24 hours, significant amounts of THC and other cannabinoids will remain in the blood stream, so even a blood test wont be able to decisively Rating: 5