CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 2024 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“POT
LOUNGES? WHY EXPAND A DESTRUCTIVE BUSINESS?”
Since California voters legalized
cannabis via a 2016 ballot initiative, the weed has evolved into something like
a normal business. It’s complete with webcasts on how to operate efficiently,
disputes over where to place stores and gripes about black marketeers siphoning
off too much of the multi-billion-dollar take.
Now the state Assembly has decided the
marijuana trade, with retail outlets in almost every corner of the state, is
not yet big enough. The lower legislative house voted by a huge margin (49-4,
with almost half its members not voting) to expand the business even farther by
allowing Amsterdam-style lounges that could serve food and drinks along with
varieties of the weed.
The large number of non-voters (more
than one-third of Assembly members) was a clear sign that many did not wish to
make an enemy of the powerful pot lobby, but also did not want to go on the
record favoring expanded cannabis use.
Perhaps that was because polls taken as
recently as last year indicate about one third of voters here believe the pot
industry has grown too large and ubiquitous.
The Assembly majority, however, wasn’t
worried about that, nor is it likely the state Senate will pause very long,
either. An almost identical bill passed both houses last year, only to be
vetoed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, who cited state laws requiring smoke-free
workplaces.
But there are stronger reasons than that
for questioning expanded pot use in California.
For one thing, while laws control the
purity of alcoholic beverages, nothing ensures the quality of marijuana. The
ill effects of cannabis use have been well known for generations: spaced-out
behavior, impaired judgment, both clouded and heightened senses depending on
your personal biology, a distorted sense of time, slower reactions, lower motor
skills, reduced inhibitions, less mental focus and memory. On the positive
side, there’s pain reduction and better tolerance for some prescription
medications and their side effects, especially among anti-cancer drugs.
But just last year, a peer-reviewed
report in a journal of the American Psychiatric Association made it definite
that if you want to be mentally sharp in middle age and beyond, don’t smoke pot
regularly.
Concluded the report: “At age 45, people
who (said they used) cannabis weekly or more frequently over the past year
showed greater cognitive decline than those who never used cannabis.”
In short, if you want to avoid dementia
as you age, forget the weed.
Now there’s even more bad news for
frequent cannabis users, also tied to advancing age.
This time, it’s the Journal of the
American Medical Assn. publishing a peer-reviewed Canadian study
showing use of dried marijuana flowers
and edible pot products by those aged 65 and up could lead to acute cannabis toxicity, causing coordination
problems, muscle weakness and unsteady hands, lethargy, decreased
concentration, slowed reaction time and slurred speech. Large doses of cannabis
extracts often produced confusion, amnesia, delusions, hallucinations, anxiety
and agitation.
The good news is that
most episodes reported by the Sinai Health and University Health Network in
Toronto were short. But long-term pot users also experienced paranoia, panic
disorder and generalized fear.
That’s what you’d risk
by going to a newly-legalized pot lounge if they were authorized in California,
as the majority of legislators appears to want.
Which leads to a
logical question: What are those so-called state leaders on?
The same for
union leaders who moved the United Food and Commercial Workers Union Western
States Council (UFCW) to back this legislation, known as AB 1775, sponsored by
Democratic Assemblyman Matthew Haney of San Francisco.
Said John Frahm,
president of UFCW’s Hayward-based Local 5, which covers most of Northern
California, “We need to be doing all we can to strengthen California’s legal
cannabis industry while it battles high taxation, restrictive regulations and
competition from the illicit cannabis market.”
He did now
explain why that’s needed, but it’s safe to say he’d like to unionize any new
pot lounges legalized by AB 1775.
That might be
good for the UFCW, but plainly not for the mental or physical health of pot
users.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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