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Originally Posted by CliffFletcher
I expect pot use in Canada to climb from 15 to around 18 per cent of Canadian adults. How much do you expect it to increase?
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That seems like a reasonable estimate to me for, say, over the next three years. I think more than that will try, or take the odd puff while drinking, but wouldn't become regular users. I wasn't suggesting cannabis use was going to go through the roof or anything, but now those 18% can feel comfortable partaking at times and in places where they previously wouldn't have. Some of their friends and acquaintances may be surprised to discover they're cannabis users is all I'm saying. Prior to legalization, most users had a pretty good read on where it's cool and who it's cool around.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CliffFletcher
I just don't buy the notion that pot is some kind magic superdrug that affects everyone in any/every way they want. Like alcohol, coke, speed, acid, and ecstasy, cannabis has a typical effect. And the typical effect of pot is different from the typical effect of alcohol, so people tend to use it in different environments and for different reasons. I know people who smoke pot in any and all environments they're in. I also know people who drink in any and all environments they're in. I don't think either is typical.
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I don't think it's a super drug, either. People that suggest it'd a cure-all are wrong. But you're wrong to think the different strains don't have different effects. Pot doesn't have a 'typical effect'. Take out the strain differences if you don't want to concede that point, but surely you're not arguing the different THC percentages aren't going to give different highs. It's exactly back to my point of drinking 500 ml of beer versus 500 ml of vodka. One has 5% alcohol and one has 40% alcohol. Low percentage THC cannabis will not affect you in the same way high THC cannabis will.
And again, you say people don't use cannabis in the same situations they use alcohol. I can tell you you're wrong. That may be true in your group, but it's not in mine.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CliffFletcher
There's also the fact it involves smoking, which is socially reviled in most settings. I don't know about you, but people I know would be appalled if somebody lit a smoke at a kids birthday party. So I have a hard time seeing how someone sparking a joint while little Katie is opening her gifts would be more socially acceptable. And I know more people are moving to vaping pot, but there's only marginally less scorn out there for vapers.
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Yes, I would be appalled, too. I don't know anyone that would smoke cannabis around kids. When kids aren't present, cannabis users will remove themselves to a private area outside to smoke a joint if that's what they want to do. There is a social aspect to that, by the way, that you may not know about. It's a nice change from a party setting to go outside, form a little circle, meet some people and enjoy an experience together.
Also, beyond smoking and vaping there are other ways to consume. Before the Smashing Pumpkins concert last month, a friend pulled out some cannabis oil in the middle of a restaurant and gave everyone who wanted some a squirt in their beer. Nobody even noticed and it was not offensive to anyone around.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CliffFletcher
Unless Canadians prove themselves to be radically different from anywhere else in the world, legalization will mean a small increase in people smoking pot and a reduction in the stigma around it. In some demographics and settings it will be completely acceptable. In others it won't be.
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That's all fair.