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BlueWolf: News for profit PDF Print E-mail
Written by James BlueWolf   
Monday, 06 August 2007
I am constantly reminded of the importance of reading critically and not giving too much importance to headlines. In the context of the discussion of "what we know" to be true, I offer this to support my contention that a sizable amount of the information we base our opinions and beliefs upon these days can easily be called into question.


Take, for example, the recent headline that marijuana can lead to psychosis. While I don't dispute that use of any medicine may have side effects, we should have become inured to the seemingly endless litany of the potentially harmful use of almost any drug or ingested substance. A critical reading of this article illuminates why it received headlines and who stood to profit from its "scare" value.


First, the propaganda.


"Using marijuana seems to increase the chance of becoming psychotic, researchers report in an analysis of past research that reignites the issue of whether pot is dangerous. The new review suggests that even infrequent use could raise the small but real risk of this serious mental illness by 40 percent."


Then the caveat.


The researchers said they couldn't prove that marijuana use itself increases the risk of psychosis. There could be something else about marijuana users, "like their tendency to use other drugs or certain personality traits, that could be causing the psychoses," Zammit said. The overall risk remains very low.


Then, the real truth. (The study isn't conclusive at all.)


Scientists cannot rule out that pre-existing conditions could have led to both marijuana use and later psychoses, Dr. Wilson Compton, a senior scientist at the National Institute on Drug Abuse in Washington said.


Finally, the most interesting information.


Two of the authors of the study were invited experts on the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs Cannabis Review in 2005 (and were probably compensated handsomely for their participation).


Several authors reported being paid to attend drug company-sponsored meetings related to marijuana, and one received consulting fees from companies that make antipsychotic medications … (Ahhh, pharmaceutical reps and we consider these to be unbiased scientists?)


Even the scientist who led the effort to discover the human genetic code has written extensively about the landslide of corruption in the scientific industry, paid by corporate drug pushers to influence public opinion.


I'm not sure that the interests of William Randolph Hearst are not being represented. He was the man responsible for getting marijuana declared a dangerous drug to precipitate its being made illegal to eliminate the rapidly burgeoning commercial hemp industry from effectively capsizing his timber industry profits. To wipe out the vast and cheap multitude of hemp products threatening his empire, he initiated the attack by focusing on the accepted medical use of marijuana at the time and generated the brainwashing of generations to its dangers.


Certainly the pharmaceutical companies consider medical marijuana a threat to their profits, and the misuse of science for commercial gain is increasing exponentially.


As I said at the beginning, I'm not questioning the findings so much as why the study was conducted at all. Who stood to gain financially that's always the first question to ask. Perhaps a study is in order to determine whether or not people who hate their jobs are at increased risk of psychosis, or whether people stressed by being unable to meet healthcare bills or day to day economic realities might be more apt to suffer psychosis.


I haven't seen these studies. Why not? Because it isn't really about protecting the public it's about influencing public opinion for economic gain. Read critically, the fine print often unintentionally reverses the impact of the lead line.


James BlueWolf lives in Nice.


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the news story
written by patsy, August 06, 2007
The Associated Press story is online at
http://www.statesman.com/news/...juana.html

The British study which is quoted is in The Lancet medical journal, available online to subscribers only.

Blue Wolf, as usual, you make some excellent points. Sometimes it seems that what the medical establishment calls psychosis is the natural result of being born into conditions of despair.
Reefer madness..
written by Kruk Ed Strait, August 06, 2007
Here we go again...another druggie justifying getting high on dope. Next, we'll hear orange juice is the real problem. No doubt, BW impresses the counter-culture drug traffickers and groupie girls that follow them around. Everybody should chip in and get BW into rehab. DW
As A Whole
written by purplegirl, August 07, 2007
I look at this article not so much being about drugs as much as it being an example of how media/marketing works. It is true, most of what you get from mainstream media and mainstream science is propaganda and/or a marketing tactic. Yet, most people don't even realize it. They assume that reporters and scientists tell the truth, a dangerous assumption. What they don't realize is that mainstream scientists and reporters don't answer as often to the public as they do answer to their "higher ups" which usually are more concerned with profit than the truth. If anything, that is what I believe you should get from this article.
2 plants, many uses
written by jjensen, August 07, 2007
It is a fact that the mainstream media is about selling products and ideas to the public. Any Journalism 1A teacher can tell you that 80% of the mainstream news is 'placed' by PR organizations.

So it should be no great leap of faith to understand how a harmless plant with a rich industrial history in the US would become the target of industrialists bent on having only their products used.

An interesting development in North Dakota is the movement of conservative farmers who want to grow the stuff to create US jobs and provide the thousands of tons of the stuff used each year by the automotive industry.

Hardly a bunch of druggies.

"Its legislature has passed a bill allowing farmers to grow industrial hemp and created an official licensing process to fingerprint such farmers and a global positioning system to track their fields. This year, Mr. Monson and another North Dakota farmer, with the support of the state’s agriculture commissioner, applied to the Drug Enforcement Administration for permission to plant fields of hemp immediately." http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07...&partner=r

In spite of the well documented difference between the two plants, the mainstream media has generally sold the 'killer weed' argument to the public and legislators to such a degree that we are at the mercy of big Pharma, big Tobacco and the liquor, paper, textile and timber industries among a host of others... including oil.

Go figure. Our founding documents were written on hemp paper.
weed or killer?
written by Kruk Ed Strait, August 07, 2007
Weed is an interesting name for dope. Weed grows wild ten ft tall in Nebraska's (and many other states) creek and river beds. Once upon a time, in America, a long time ago, people got high on reading books, going to church, playing football, basketball, and base ball...now they cut down weeds, roll them into cigarettes and halucinate. That's why they call it reefer madness. BW is not talking about newspapers or hemp. He's trying to say weed doesn't make one psychotic. He's trying to say dope is ok. Apparently, some people can't read anymore because they spend too much time enjoying reefer madness. Nancy Reagan had it right. Just say no to dope and dopers. DW
So sad
written by jjensen, August 07, 2007
You really don't understand that the article is about a flawed study that was presented with a misleading headline?
You don't get the writer's point that some industry paid for the study and that clever PR had it placed in the news with full knowlege that so many readers, like you, won't understand anything but the headline?
If you looked around without your blinders you'd find that the psychosis they discuss in the study is more likely a result of social conditions as Patsy comments.
flawed character..
written by Kruk Ed Strait, August 07, 2007
BW's comment about a "flawed study" is really a commentary on flawed character....his own. BW had a good opportunity to tell dopers to get off dope. He didn't. He didn't say dope was bad in any way. He didn't say anything about pot head carpenters who fell of the roof and broke their necks because dope made them clumsy. A blind man can see he's trying to protect dopers and dope trafficers by attacking writers who disagree. His argument is to legalize cannabis. Read his comments critically and know from where the writer is coming. Rehab might help. DW
Flawed character? Psychosis?
written by George J. Dorner, August 09, 2007
Odd remarks coming from one who is incapable of a logical train of thought, obsessed by knee-jerk religiosity, and who tends to invent others' responses (i.e., lying). All of which are hallmarks of psychotic behavior.
A scientific study can be replicated; that is the bedrock of science. Unfortunately, some subjects somehow are considered unworthy of this minimal requirement. Marijuana is one of them. I know of few objective repeatable studies concerning marijuana effects.
I am not taking a stance for or against pot here. I am pointing out that junk science and reflexive stupidity govern most peoples' attitudes toward the herb. You are a prime example.

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