Pot heads and C-Dory?

It doesn't really work that way. If you leave your boat out in public, and visible by someone who is not trespassing, pics of your boat are fair game for everyone. If you don't want pics of your boat around, cover it, put it in a boathouse, or put it in a garage.

IMO, the more of a fuss you make about these things, the more publicity and exposure you provide those whose sentiments differ from yours, and whose actions you seem to oppose. Truly, if you want something that is being publicized to go away, the last thing you want to do is share a link and point a spotlight on it.

It's far more likely that your online protest sent business their way, and made numerous people interested in such things aware of this vendor and is therefore counterproductive.
 
Maybe the boats name is Sea-Weed, or C# Weed, or C-Dope, C-Stoner, C-Smoke C-Roach C-Chronic C-Grass. I thought you guys legalized the stuff. I heard there going to be selling weed at the boat show. :lol: Let see a show of hands how many C-Brats are weed smokers? :xnaughty
D.D.
 
I like that I can get a cup of beer if I want to at the boat show..... hoping they don't have weed vendors at the show now too.

In what seems like a different life, I used to smoke weed. I thought I didn't have much of an opinion, or even a positive one of the legalization initiative until a couple weeks ago. We stopped at a McDonalds in Tacoma so my 2 year old daughter could use the can. My wife and kid had to walk through a giant cloud of weed smoke going into the restaurant and coming back out, because some A-hole thought its cool to smoke a giant blunt right outside the entrance door.

Not sure what the investigation is, but I wouldn't bee surprised LE is starting to crack down on unlicensed or under taxed dispenserys. These damn things seem to be popping up on every single corner. Theyre more common than espresso stands anymore.
 
PaulNBriannaLynn":j9kpz246 said:
These damn things seem to be popping up on every single corner. Theyre more common than espresso stands anymore.

I was on a ski trip in Colorado a few weeks ago and if you think there are a lot of dispensaries in Washington, you wouldn't believe Colorado. They seemed to be on every corner in Denver and they have big banners advertising recreational marijuana. Even tiny Crested Butte had one...

Honestly I haven't noticed much change in Washington since the law passed. It seemed there were already a gazillion medical dispensaries and I can't say I've noticed any place marketing recreational marijuana.

And like someone said above, if your boat is at a marina or on a road and someone gets a picture, the photographer owns the rights to the photo, not the subject.
 
I smoked two or maybe a thousand times I can't remember now :) I was in Vietnam on a gumit job for a while is how it started. I was unsure if I would make home. But like Billy Bob Clinton I never inhaled. :mrgreen: That crap is all over now. I'm sure my cardiologist would frown on it. What a stink everything smells like Chinese food. What was I saying?
 
For every anti marijuana ad you read in the paper or see a government commercial on television, this what I want you to do. Delete the word "marijuana" and insert the word "alcohol". The meaning of the message remains the same. Except one word is far more dangerous than the other.
Martin.
 
I've used the same argument for years when this issue has come up, and those wishing for continued pot prohibition never wish to take me up on my challenge. That is, if you're against legal pot - proclaim loudly and publicly to all, you are also against legal alcohol. It's beyond debate the use of alcohol causes more societal problems than the use of marijuana. So, you either oppose legal alcohol - or you're a hypocrite.

This so isn't the place to have this discussion, but what the heck - our local C-Brat cop has pushed my buttons one too many times on this topic and I've always bitten my lip.

The voters of WA have spoken, and those opposed to legalization LOST. Get over it. Prohibition didn't work for alcohol, and it didn't work for pot - for the very same reasons. It's no longer necessary for pot proponents to prove legalization is the right answer - rather, the onus is on those opposed to defend the undeniable problems prohibition has caused. Explain how it's good to have organized crime fill the demand. Give us the stats that show how prohibition has reduced demand and usage. Tell us why our tax dollars should be spent investigating, enforcing, prosecuting and jailing offenders when we've so many more important things that get ignored or go unfunded. Those of us who voted "Yes" don't need to explain ourselves - those voting "No" need to defend the previous status quo that failed in dramatic fashion.

Also, last time localboy brought this up, he opined how the medical use of pot is a joke. That almost got me to bite. Snarky thoughts like "Oh, they teach medicine now in cop school" came to mind, but no such smart-assedness is necessary. There's not even need for me to point towards countless studies and first-hand accounts of the people it has helped - not only with their ailments, but in saving them physical side-effects and huge amounts of money compared to prescription meds. Nope - I know of it's phenomenal efficacy first hand.

I've suffered migraines since I was a young teenager in the 70's. My mom was a nurse and suffered from them as well, and at the time pain meds were the only solution. Later in life, I was fortunate to meet one of the premier migraine doctors in the country - a widely respected neurologist with numerous published studies who has since retired. Over the many years I visited him, we tried every migraine medication used in the field - preventative and for pain after onset. I kept meticulous records of physical behavior and diet to try and find a correlation to migraine episodes. Nothing worked. Basically, when one hit - I'd break out the Vicodin and go to bed until the episode ended. The pain was still there, just dampened - and the Vicodin side-effects were significant. Nausea while taking it was bad enough, but what I really hated was the 24 hour Vicodin hangover afterwards.

Several years back, I saw reference online to marijuana helping migraine sufferers. I had my doubts...suffice it to say, I did inhale when younger and the thought of doing so when my head was exploding seemed like tossing gasoline on fire. During a particularly nasty episode, I thought WTF - called up a high school buddy I knew still used recreationally, and had him bring over a doob.

As was typical with my worst migraines, I could barely stand up or keep my eyes open - light sensitivity being a huge issue. He fired it up, I took a couple deep tokes - and in under one minute the pain was GONE. Not masked, not dull - GONE. The only downside, if one wishes to call it one - the relief was relatively short. I had to keep smoking every 2-3 hours until the episode passed. In addition to the pain relief, there is no nausea, and no hangover - something no other drug came close to matching. Somewhat hesitantly, I contacted my neurologist with my findings...he'd never suggested it, and I'd no idea how he would respond. He was thrilled - and after I'd documented the results on several more occasions, he mentioned he'd share the info with other patients for whom more traditional treatments had also failed.

I'm not suggesting pot's a cure-all, nor that the above results are typical for migraine sufferers (some readily admit it makes them worse), nor that some people abuse medical usage simply to obtain it for recreational means. However...so what? How are any of these points different from any other drug?

Thankfully, the tide has changed - and it's getting easier to battle all the ignorance. Not really surprising...time has a way of letting truths percolate to the top.
 
Bill, I think the problem is, there are too many "stoners" that don't know how to act responsibly.... And yes, I say the same thing about Drunks. Otherwise, in honesty, I'm not sure where I stand on it's legalization. If it helps you, great. Use it appropriately and responsibly. Like many "drugs", it can be abused. Colby
 
Da Nag,
appreciated your informative post. I am glad you have discovered an alternative option for your migraines that works better for you. It surprised me in the 80's to hear that there is a suicide rate associated with these types of headaches. Most can not imagine.

I agree, labeling/name calling is not useful. Folks do not want to be called cocktail heads at happy hour by those that appreciate weed and visa versa.

I have always liked the C-Brats motto.
 
In my field I occasionally worked with parents whose children or siblings were addicted to drugs (other than alcohol), I always asked if they found the law helpful in dealing with the problem. They never did. Laws and the legal system really was a hindrance.
 
I saw the boat...try the link again if it matters.

I like a FB post, albeit in a little different context, that went something like this:

You incessant posting of your political views has made me see the error of my beliefs...said nobody, ever!

But I hope we can all get on board with Da Nag's statement that this forum is NOT an appropriate place to attack Washington voters' decision to legalize recreational MJ. True whichever side of this issue you want to take. As out of line as religion or politics here!
 
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