Sunday, December 10, 2017

193 220 | Roadshow: Smoking pot in a car will soon be illegal, December 9, 2017


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has provided statistics, however accurate they may or may not be.
This article is about smoking Cannabis / Marijuana / Weed / Pot in a car.


What about the new saliva test that is coming supposedly? False positives are going to be reflected in the thousands and the local government agencies will be cashing in on all that money that can potentially be stripped through the legal litigations among others. THC is well known to stay in the body for a while. This is not an accurate method of determining the recent and accuracy of an individual who has inhaled / ingested THC. You can name hundreds upon thousands who fatally meet their end due to alcohol and driving. Name one where Cannabis is involved. Also, the medicinal values gained from Cannabis are unrivaled as well compared to other “drugs” out there but the government officials in power and the powers that should not be will never acknowledge that.

Think about it. Why does the government allow alcohol, a drug which is worse by a large margin in general as opposed to Cannabis? The reason is because Cannabis carries medicinal value and that would put an end to the “War on Drugs,” catalyze change in the governmental official authority positions (1 way to reverse fleecing money illegally, immorally through false accusations / charges, a start on breaking down the broken prison industrial complex, as well as the big-pharmaceutical companies, the cartels, mafia running in drugs. Well perhaps not all of those things listed would be absolved but most likely would but a start to putting a dent into the drug runners and mafia crime families.

Unfortunately, not everybody is capable of critical thinking and / or is indoctrinated into this world wide “War on Drugs” complex mindset.

"Colorado transportation and public safety officials, however, say the rising number of pot-related traffic fatalities cannot be definitively linked to legalized marijuana." "Positive test results reflected in the NHTSA data do not indicate whether a driver was high at the time of the crash since traces of marijuana use from weeks earlier also can appear as a positive result."


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