⚕️ » Two Word Explanation for Marijuana Prohibition: Bad Journalism – CBD Seniors


Fact is that in the United States, we have a free press that we rely on for fact-checking, and in the era of fake news, whatever that means, it implies that there is at least in that term, it implies there is an obligation to fact check a story. And of course, we’re told that, in fact, right now that White House said they have all sorts of facts. White House says that there is fake news. Well, how do you determine that? You do what is called fact checking. Now, there are, in fact, two organizations: The Washington Post and the other PolitiFact out of Florida that are basically dedicated to checking facts, primarily aimed at the President. Fair enough…

The whole concept of fact checking seems to be so fundamental to journalists that unless you’re writing a society column, that it seems that fact checking is really fundamental to your business. And now it is sort of assumed that there still remains one exception: marijuana. What it has really become (whatever you want to call it), a custom, a habit, an addiction to reefer madness that for decades the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), whose mission is the suppression of illegal drugs… illegal drugs. They say alcohol is a drug. Tobacco is a drug.

But if it’s not an illegal drug, then you aren’t dealing with drug abuse. And so NIDA doesn’t deal with that. But NIDA also operates under a law that prohibits any research that supports legalization of marijuana, so that all of the research that NIDA funded for cannabis was aimed at showing the harm that’s caused by cannabis, not any possible beneficial use, and not any criticism of the prohibition as policies such as completing marijuana and heroin as schedule one drugs. So there’s no difference between marijuana and heroin.

Did you hear that, kids? Heroin and marijuana are both schedule one drugs If you can’t find any weed, go get you some smack. Oh, yeah, and smoke it. Don’t shoot it up. I know that applies to marijuana, too.

You have this decades, and decades of the latest research, which could be breathlessly reported by The Washington Post, The New York Times and thereby all the rest of the country, because they are always right. So that whatever it was that was said about marijuana, as long as it was negative, was bound to, you know, be printed in all of the very best sources.

The other day, oh, a few months or so ago, Joe Biden quoted as saying, well, he was concerned that marijuana was a gateway drug.

It was really interesting that almost everybody laughed.

Yeah, Joe and Joe, you know, Joe. And so fact is, is that the former Vice President was a drug warrior. The former Vice President who potentially has big support in the African-American community has supported locking up huge numbers of African-Americans.

With friends like these…

But anyway, good old Joe says that he thinks marijuana is a gateway drug. And literally, you know, I don’t think the DEA is saying that anymore. But this is, you know, again, just one example of how out of touch a particularly prominent politician can be. The thing is about the gateway drug, they pick up a logic textbook. One of the basic concepts of logic is the difference between correlation and causality. The rooster crows, the sun comes up. Now, the rooster may be totally delusional, but I doubt if he even thinks that the sun is coming up. You know how. Come on, know that that is every day. Any fool can barely see. The rooster crows and the sun comes up.

There is a gateway effect that roosters growing in the logic textbook you might find that is in Latin of course post hoc ergo propter hoc: “After that, therefore because of that.”

And now decades later, somebody explain the joke to Joe Biden. This is still going on today.

Dories said the other day they gave a whole lot of THC to monkeys and the monkey’s kids were wacko. That proves folks don’t give your monkeys THC. The little monkeys of America are dependent on you to protect the next generation of monkeys coming up. Also, don’t let the monkeys have guns either!

Richard Cowan

CBDSeniors.com co-founder is long-time marijuana legalization advocate, Richard Cowan. Cowan’s December 1973 cover-article in the late William F. Buckley’s National Review magazine, calling for American Conservatives to support marijuana legalization drew international attention the absurdity of marijuana prohibition and was described as opening a new front in the drug war.

In The December 6, 1986 issue of National Review, Cowan’s cover article, How the Narcs Created Crack, is credited with introducing “the Iron Law of Prohibition” and became the subject of a book on the economics of contraband, the stronger the drugs.
From August 1992 to August 1995 Cowan served as executive director of NORML. Cowan decided to help found CBDSeniors.com because the remnants of marijuana prohibition continue to block access to CBD in many areas, and prohibition makes standardized testing more difficult. He also wants to de-stigmatize the cannabis plant to senior citizens who were fed lies and misinformation throughout their entire life. Cowan now lives in Europe where he works with marijuana legalization activists.

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Richard Cowan

CBDSeniors.com co-founder is long-time marijuana legalization advocate, Richard Cowan. Cowan’s December 1973 cover-article in the late William F. Buckley’s National Review magazine, calling for American Conservatives to support marijuana legalization drew international attention the absurdity of...