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Nov 3, 2009
Nevertheless, one of the key arguments
The other paradox is that schizophrenia
seems to be disappearing (from the general population), even though
cannabis use has increased markedly in the last 30 years. So, even
though skunk has been around now for 10 years, there has been no
upswing in schizophrenia. In fact, where people have looked, they
haven*t found any evidence linking cannabis use in cultured freshwater pearl a population and schizophrenia. Nevertheless,
one of the key arguments in moving cannabis from class C to B was the
concern that skunk would cause more psychosis. What is very regularly
invoked in this debate is the precautionary principle, which is that,
if you*re not sure about a drug harm, rank it high, make all drugs
class A and get rid of the problem. In her statement to the
Commons, after receiving the ACMD*s report but rejecting its
recommendation to keep cannabis as a class C drug, Jacqui Smith, the
former home secretary, said: ※We must err on the side of caution and
protect the public.§ As this is protection from the known unknowns, at
first sight it might seem the obvious decision 每 why wouldn*t you take
the sterling silver jewelry precautionary principle? But
the precautionary principle is also an act of faith in deterrence, and
this is one of the key issues for lawyers. Does deterrence impact on
drug use? We don*t know. In fact, the outcome may be the opposite of
that predicted. It may be that if you move a drug up a class, it has a
greater cachet. I think we have to accept young people like to
experiment, and what we should be doing is to protect them from harm at
this stage of their lives. We therefore have to provide more accurate
and credible information. We have to tell them the truth, so that they
use us as their preferred source of information. If you think that
scaring kids will stop them using, you*re probably wrong. This article is based on a longer version published by the inflatable tent
Centre for Crime and Justice Studies at Kings College, London, which
itself was based on a lecture delivered by Professor Nutt earlier in
the year.
Posted at 10:18 pm by whoyg2279
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The Advisory Council on the Misuse
As the headlines this week alone
demonstrate, the whole process of determining drug classification has
become quite complex and highly politicised. I focus on cannabis partly
because it is the only drug that has been downgraded in the whole
history of the freswhater pearl necklace
1971 Misuse of Drugs Act, which established the present system of drug
classification, but also because the issues relating to cannabis pose a
challenge to whether the act is working as it was originally intended. The
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) was requested by the
home secretary in 2007 to review the status of cannabis because:
※Though statistics show that cannabis use has fallen significantly,
there is real public concern about the potential mental health effects
of cannabis use, in particular the use of stronger forms of the drug,
commonly known as skunk.§ So, there was a skunk scare. Cannabis had gone from pearl necklace style
class B to C, but, supposedly, skunk use had been increasing and it was
getting stronger, so we were asked to review whether the decision to go
from B to C was still appropriate. In what was the ACMD*s third
cannabis report (Rawlins et al, 2008), we came to several conclusions: Cannabis is a harmful drug and there are concerns about the widespread use of cannabis among young people. A concerted public health response is wholesale coral jewelry required to drastically reduce its use.
Posted at 10:18 pm by whoyg2279
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Tom Lloyd, a former chief constable
On Thursday, the Sun*s Jon Gaunt wrote
that Nutt 每 described inevitably as the ※Nutty Professor§ 每 ※must be
sacked immediately§ over a declaration that ecstasy is safer than
alcohol and tobacco. At the other end of the scale, voices calling for freshwater pearl strands an entirely new drugs policy on the basis that prohibition does not work have grown louder. ※It
is time to admit the obvious,§ wrote Fernando Henrique Cardoso, a
former president of Brazil, in the Observer last month. ※The &war on
drugs* has failed.§ Tom Lloyd, a former chief constable now
heavily involved in the global debate surrounding drugs policy, also
weighed in weeks later when he described police anti-drugs operations
as ※pointless§ and wrote approvingly of Swiss-style heroin prescription
programmes. Separately, the latest row is also a symptom of the
increasingly fraught role of government science advisors who are asked
to advise on freshwater pearl pendant politically sensitive issues. The
government*s chief scientist, Prof John Beddington, warned in August
that ministers risk alienating science advisers and squandering their
experience by dragging them into public rows. On that occasion, he was
referring to Jacqui Smith*s very public admoniton of Nutt for his
comments in an academic journal comparing the risks of ecstasy to
horseriding. However, the timing of today*s sacking is all the
more awkward given that it comes just a week after the government
responded to a report by the Science and Technology Select Committee by
giving a commitment that the independence of members of scientific
advisory committees would be respected. Reacting tonight to news
of the sacking, Dr Evan Harris, a Liberal Democrat MP on the committee,
said: ※This news will make it much less likely that the cultured pearl jewelry
Government will, in the future, receive the best advice 每 unfettered by
the fear of retribution of politicians who don*t like what they hear.§
Posted at 10:17 pm by whoyg2279
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The terrain on which the case for
The sacking of Professor David Nutt as the
government*s chief drugs adviser again underlines the sheer toxicity
surrounding even the very debate surround the sterling silver jewelry reclassification of illegal substances 每 an issue that has dogged Labour governments in particular. Policy
in the area has been a political battlefield since at least 1970 when a
special class B category was created for cannabis as a compromise
between the Labour home secretary, James Callaghan, and others in
cabinet who disagreed with his view that it was as dangerous as heroin. Another
Labour government later resisted recommendations from the Advisory
Council on Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) in 1978 that cannabis should be
further downgraded, before another Home Secretary, David Blunkett,
finally accepted the reclassification to class C in inflatable water games 2002 His
decision led to the resignation of the government*s former ※drugs
czar,§ Keith Hellawell, who quit his role as a government adviser,
claiming the move would damage communities and lead to more drug use. Last
year, the issue fizzled to life once again when Jacqui Smith rejected
ACMD advice, following a review, to keep cannabis in class C. The terrain on which the case for reclassifications 每 whether it be for single strand necklace
cannabis, ecastasy or any other substance 每 has been made all the
rockier by the relentless pressure directed at the government from
sections of the press.
Posted at 10:17 pm by whoyg2279
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That is quite a complicated thing
Current evidence suggests a probable, but
weak, causal link between psychotic illness and cannabis use. The harms
caused by cannabis are not considered to be as serious as drugs in
class B and therefore it should remain a class C drug. On that final point, there has been a lot of freshwater pearl bracelet
commentary and some research as to whether cannabis is associated with
schizophrenia, and the results are really quite difficult to interpret. What
we can say is that cannabis use is associated with an increased
experience of psychotic disorders. That is quite a complicated thing to
disentangle because, of course, the reason people take cannabis is that
it produces a change in their mental state. These changes are a bit
akin to being psychotic 每 they include distortions of perception,
especially in visual and auditory perception, as well as in the way one
thinks. So it can be quite hard to know whether, when you analyse the
incidence of single strand necklace
psychotic disorders with cannabis, you are simply looking at the acute
effects of cannabis, as opposed to some consequence of cannabis use. If
we look on the generous side, there is a likelihood that taking
cannabis, particularly if you use a lot of it, will make you more prone
to having psychotic experiences. That includes schizophrenia. But
schizophrenia is a relatively rare condition, so it*s very hard to be
sure about its causation. The analysis we came up with was that smokers
of cannabis are about 2.6 times more likely to have a psychotic-like
experience than non-smokers. To put that figure in proportion, you are freshwater pearl earrings 20 times more likely to get lung cancer if you smoke tobacco than if you don*t.
Posted at 10:16 pm by whoyg2279
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