Weed is anything but harmless, it's associated with stunted intellectual development and other maladies. If anything it makes people lazy, sensual, and addicted to pleasure which makes them degenerate and unable to do any hard work. Good times make weak men etc.
The younger you start the greater the negative effects. It's probably like alcohol, some can handle it better than others. Never met a long term user with no negative effects in health, physical and mental, and in quality of life. Seems you are an anomaly. You don't say when you stopped or for how long you stopped. The stuff today is not the same as the stuff in the 70s and 80s - the negative effects are even more profound and show almost immediately.
I don't believe anyone under 25 should do it. Unless they are treating a medical issue such as epilepsy like my friends son. He couldn't function at 12 years old. Now at 22 he's a licensed plumber and productive. The stereotypical statement you made is false.
Not so fast. Well aware some medical conditions are served well with marijuana under the care of a health practitioner. Never spoke against it. Don't know your reasoning for your belief for under 25, but you are right. The body's organs and the brain are not fully developed until into the 20s - that is why the younger you start, the greater the negative effects. Same with smoking cigarettes or drinking alcohol.
Weed is anything but harmless, it's associated with stunted intellectual development and other maladies. If anything it makes people lazy, sensual, and addicted to pleasure which makes them degenerate and unable to do any hard work. Good times make weak men etc.
The younger you start the greater the negative effects. It's probably like alcohol, some can handle it better than others. Never met a long term user with no negative effects in health, physical and mental, and in quality of life. Seems you are an anomaly. You don't say when you stopped or for how long you stopped. The stuff today is not the same as the stuff in the 70s and 80s - the negative effects are even more profound and show almost immediately.
I don't believe anyone under 25 should do it. Unless they are treating a medical issue such as epilepsy like my friends son. He couldn't function at 12 years old. Now at 22 he's a licensed plumber and productive. The stereotypical statement you made is false.
Not so fast. Well aware some medical conditions are served well with marijuana under the care of a health practitioner. Never spoke against it. Don't know your reasoning for your belief for under 25, but you are right. The body's organs and the brain are not fully developed until into the 20s - that is why the younger you start, the greater the negative effects. Same with smoking cigarettes or drinking alcohol.