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Caffeine vs THC: The Double Standards of Addiction

  I am addicted to this drug. If I don't get my daily morning dose of 44 ounces of Mountain Dew I go into withdraw symptoms.

I also used to be addicted to a far worse drug, tobacco. Some studies say tobacco is almost as addictive as heroin. I would doubt that. It was hell when I kicked my 3 and 1/2 pack a day habit of cigarettes.

Actually for an addictive substance to cause major problems in your life the addictive substance needs to be made illegal. Drugs don't cause problems, it's the laws against drugs cause the problems.

“for something to be considered an addiction, it needs to be truly disruptive - causing problems in personal relationships, for example, or interfering with the ability to work,” the story continued.
While some studies say tobacco is almost as addictive as heroin, tobacco doesn't cause people the problems that heroin does, because a tobacco addict can always walk into a Circle or 7/11 and buy a pack of cigarettes to get their tobacco fix.

Same is true for caffeine. Every morning I go to Circle K and pay 90 cents to get my caffeine fix with 44 ounces of Mountain Dew.


I can't see my marijuana is even mentioned in this article.

Marijuana is NOT a physically addictive drug like caffeine, tobacco or heroin.

A lot of government propaganda implies marijuana is an addictive drug like heroin, but when you question their logic they quickly admit that marijuana is not physically addictive like heroin.

They also admit that according to their claims only 10% of the people that use marijuana on a regular basis meet their definition of being addicts. That's opposed to 100% of the people that use heroin on a regular basis.


Source

Caffeine vs THC: The Double Standards of Addiction

by David Downs

March 07, 2014

About 1 percent of the population is addicted to a drug that gives them headaches if they quit, and may cause jitters, anxiety, insomnia, and ulcers if they don’t. It's lethal at high doses. About 90 percent of the US population takes this drug regularly, even though it has no medical use. It’s marketed to kids, sold in or near schools, and is on school playgrounds. A schedule 1 narcotic, you assume?

Nope - caffeine.

The San Francisco Chronicle looked at the emerging definition of “caffeine use disorder” this week, noting that roughly one in ten people meet key criteria for caffeine use disorder: they wanted to cut back but could not despite knowing that it was causing them harm, and they suffered withdrawal symptoms when they tried to quit.

“'I’ve tried to quit it, but I get headaches',” said one caffeine addict in the story.

“'I’ve seen people who have gone to great lengths to get caffeine when it was unavailable,'” a researcher added. “'I knew one woman who pretty much ruined her husband's tropical vacation because she spent half the day looking for caffeine.’”

Two cups of coffee can cause headaches, anxiety, and jittery hands. And higher doses - like six shots of espresso - can cause mania and psychosis and eventually death. Caffeine is a very addictive and is analogous to nicotine.

"'There are people who have chronic reflux, stomach acid pain, bleeding, hemorrhoids - all because of coffee. They're suffering a lot,'" said Keith Humphreys, a Stanford addiction expert quoted in the story. "'But they try and they fail to stop.'"

However: “for something to be considered an addiction, it needs to be truly disruptive - causing problems in personal relationships, for example, or interfering with the ability to work,” the story continued.

And herein lies the double standard:

— anxious, irritable caffeine addicts aren’t labeled as such and ostracized. Problems in a caffeine addict’s personal relationships aren’t immediately blamed on the ubiquitous, mind-altering drug. Businesses outright nurture the addiction with free caffeine to boost productivity.

— Conversely, any amount of marijuana use can cause “problems in personal relationships.” because half the country thinks any use at all is deviant, illegal behavior. "About half of Americans (51%) say they would feel uncomfortable if people around them used marijuana while 48% would not," Pew reported.

Even if marijuana is not interfering with one’s ability to work, off-hours use of pot is grounds for immediate employment termination.

Talk about "truly disruptive."

As Dr. Sunil Aggarwal noted, rates of purported marijuana addiction are probably lower than everyone believes, because several criteria for pot addiction have little to do with personal behavior, and everything to do with the social consequences of prohibition.

As Time Magazine keenly noted: "[I]t may be the social consequences of using marijuana that are more harmful than the physical ones. Peele notes that being convicted for marijuana possession can make a college student ineligible for federal student aid. 'No psychologist in the universe could possibly say that smoking marijuana is worse for you than being deprived of the opportunity to get an education,' says Peele."

 


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