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Edited on Sun Apr-25-10 10:03 PM by BakedAtAMileHigh
For chrissakes, do a little research before you post this shite. Your "brain scan" graph is garbage: it is now common knowledge the the Partnership for a Drug Free America used a fake brain scan to create that image.
I'm not sure you even read your own posted articles: you really do not have very much of an argument. How exactly does all this justify spending millions of dollars to lock away innocent plant users?
On Edit:
One famous example of the PDFA's fraudulence was reported circa Sept. 27, 1990 by The Hartford Courant in an article titled "Untruths, unreliable data create obstacles in war on drugs." The report states:
It is a stark message designed to persuade youths to stay away from marijuana.
And it is a lie.
The narrator tells television viewers they are watching the brain waves of a normal 14-year-old. As he speaks, squiggly lines with high peaks show an obviously active brain. The picture changes: The lines flatten. "These," the narrator says, "are the brain waves of a 14-year-old on marijuana."
The problem with this national television advertisement is that the flatter "brain waves" are not those of a teenager on dope; they are not brain waves at all. The electroencephalograph was not hooked up to anyone.
It is not just brain waves that are being manipulated in the war against drugs. Truth has been a casualty in other areas as well...
Theresa Grant, public information director for the nonprofit organization, said she doesn't see any problem with the ad.
"The marijuana brain-wave commercial was one of the ads that we used as a fact, rather than a fear-inducing ad," Grant said. Later, she acknowledged: "It was a simulation. They manipulated the machine. It was not attached to any person. It was not scientific. At the time we created it in 1987, we were told that it was an appropriate representation" by the government's National Institute on Drug Abuse ... She emphasized that the partnership has not conceded that the brain-wave representation was inaccurate ...
"It's a flat lie," said Grinspoon . "Marijuana has no clinically significant effect on the electroencephalograph." ... Citing a Harvard Medical School study, he said, "Nobody has been able to demonstrate one iota of brain damage from smoking marijuana."
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