Devil’s lettuce
Oh dear, Takeo/Kirivong's Green Triangle has been hit again. This time a 3 square kilometer plant was destroyed by the authorities. The price for weed may soon go up if this continues.
https://cne.wtf/2021/08/12/kirivong-cop ... abis-crop/
https://cne.wtf/2021/08/12/kirivong-cop ... abis-crop/
Kirivong in the "Devil's Lettuce" news yet again.
Takeo: At 7 am on October 2, the police of Takeo Province destroyed 437 square meters of illegal cannabis plantations in Kirivong district.
According to the district police department, a team was sent to search for illegal crops and found 4 locations with cannabis and four water reservoirs. The police are currently tracking down illegal cannabis growers to bring them to justice.
source:https://cne.wtf/2021/10/03/ganja-grower ... lantation/
I am glad they haven't found any "chemical plants" producing crystal substance just yet.
Takeo: At 7 am on October 2, the police of Takeo Province destroyed 437 square meters of illegal cannabis plantations in Kirivong district.
According to the district police department, a team was sent to search for illegal crops and found 4 locations with cannabis and four water reservoirs. The police are currently tracking down illegal cannabis growers to bring them to justice.
source:https://cne.wtf/2021/10/03/ganja-grower ... lantation/
I am glad they haven't found any "chemical plants" producing crystal substance just yet.
- ផោមក្លិនស្អុយ
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Yeah we are definitely lucky there is no crystal meth labs in CambodiaExpatissimo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 11:18 amKirivong in the "Devil's Lettuce" news yet again.
Takeo: At 7 am on October 2, the police of Takeo Province destroyed 437 square meters of illegal cannabis plantations in Kirivong district.
According to the district police department, a team was sent to search for illegal crops and found 4 locations with cannabis and four water reservoirs. The police are currently tracking down illegal cannabis growers to bring them to justice.
source:https://cne.wtf/2021/10/03/ganja-grower ... lantation/
I am glad they haven't found any "chemical plants" producing crystal substance just yet.
The methamphetamine labs can afford to keep the district police departments on the payroll I guess, while crop growers cannot. But why can't all these low IQ countries follow the lead of the high IQ countries, Netherlands, Canada, and the US and just legalize and tax these crops?ផោមក្លិនស្អុយ wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 11:52 amYeah we are definitely lucky there is no crystal meth labs in CambodiaExpatissimo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 04, 2021 11:18 amKirivong in the "Devil's Lettuce" news yet again.
Takeo: At 7 am on October 2, the police of Takeo Province destroyed 437 square meters of illegal cannabis plantations in Kirivong district.
According to the district police department, a team was sent to search for illegal crops and found 4 locations with cannabis and four water reservoirs. The police are currently tracking down illegal cannabis growers to bring them to justice.
source:https://cne.wtf/2021/10/03/ganja-grower ... lantation/
I am glad they haven't found any "chemical plants" producing crystal substance just yet.
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@MartyB . Most countries simply don't want to have their citizens become a paranoid vegetable.
Brain Health
Marijuana's main psychoactive ingredient, delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), attaches to the brain's cannabinoid receptors. These receptors connect to nerves in the brain that influence pleasure, memory, thought, concentration, sensory and time perception, and coordinated movement.
Multiple studies have linked marijuana use with a higher risk of the following psychotic symptoms:2
Delusions
Disorganized thinking and speech
Hallucinations
Teen marijuana use is also linked to an increased risk of depression and suicidal behavior.3
Brain Health
Marijuana's main psychoactive ingredient, delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), attaches to the brain's cannabinoid receptors. These receptors connect to nerves in the brain that influence pleasure, memory, thought, concentration, sensory and time perception, and coordinated movement.
Multiple studies have linked marijuana use with a higher risk of the following psychotic symptoms:2
Delusions
Disorganized thinking and speech
Hallucinations
Teen marijuana use is also linked to an increased risk of depression and suicidal behavior.3
Must be destined for export as it does not seem to be a big market here.
A heavy symbolic charge surrounds the consumption of psychoactive substances, for reasons which are discussed. Psychoactive substances can be prestige products, but certain aspects of their use seem to attract almost universal stigma and marginalization. Stigma processes include an intimate process of social control within family and friends; decisions of social and health agencies; and government policy decisions. What is negatively moralized usually includes health issues, accidents, or social issues, which even other heavy users disagree with; drunkenness itself; the addiction or dependence and loss of control that these terms describe; and in some circumstances, use per se. Two independent literatures on stigma operate on different premises: Studies focusing on mental illness and disability examine the negative effects of stigma on people with stigma and how stigma can be neutralized, while studies of crime generally consider stigma in a more benign way, as a form of social control. . The literature on alcohol and drugs overlaps the two topical areas and includes examples from both directions. Total poverty and excessive substance use are not necessarily linked; poverty often increases the damage for a given level of consumption. Marginalization and stigma usually add to this effect. People in treatment for alcohol or drug problems are frequently and disproportionately marginalized. Studies on social inequalities and substance abuse problems also need to pay attention to the processes of stigma and marginalization and their effects on negative outcomes.
So that's what being stoned does? Never mind, this low IQ nation shouldn't follow the high IQ nations.
Substance abuse occurs in a variety of settings and influences distinct people from all walks of life. But how did the stereotype that all drug addicts are uneducated, homeless and unemployed (people considered to have lower economic status) come about? To build on this notion, many people naturally conclude that addiction is a condition that only affects the lazy or the weak. 23.1 million people addicted to drugs or alcohol tell a different story.
WHO defines drug addiction as the repeated use of one or more psychoactive substances to the point that the patient (attributed to an addict) is periodically or continuously elevated, feels an urge to take the desired substance (s), experiences considerable difficulty to voluntarily stop or modify his substance use, and has a strong desire to obtain psychoactive substances in almost every way. The amount of money you have or the economic status you belong to also has a very low impact on your propensity for addiction. These myths stem from the fact that drug abuse is more prevalent among people who live in such poverty or who have lower socio-economic status; however, the two are not causally related, and this does not demonstrate cause and effect.
Drug addiction, on the other hand, is somehow the natural outcome of the lifestyles of those with insufficient financial capital, i.e. those with lower economic status. The indirect relationship is typically spread across a number of underlying risk factors rather than being limited to a single source. A neglectful mother who left home and stayed in social housing with all of her children, for example, may subconsciously pass on the daily habit of burying her pain and grief in alcohol. It is a product of environmental and genetic factors.
Popular links between drug addiction and economic status are as follows:
Level of education
Abuse and neglect
Genetic
State of mental health
Individual race
Parental drug and alcohol use
Level of economic status: wealth vs poverty
It is not that a wealthy person of higher economic status cannot experience exactly the same kind of trauma; it's just that there is a lesser tendency for that to happen in non-poor households. In other words, the many risk factors that can lead people to addiction and drug abuse are more common in households and areas with low economic status than in areas and families with high economic status. .
WHO defines drug addiction as the repeated use of one or more psychoactive substances to the point that the patient (attributed to an addict) is periodically or continuously elevated, feels an urge to take the desired substance (s), experiences considerable difficulty to voluntarily stop or modify his substance use, and has a strong desire to obtain psychoactive substances in almost every way. The amount of money you have or the economic status you belong to also has a very low impact on your propensity for addiction. These myths stem from the fact that drug abuse is more prevalent among people who live in such poverty or who have lower socio-economic status; however, the two are not causally related, and this does not demonstrate cause and effect.
Drug addiction, on the other hand, is somehow the natural outcome of the lifestyles of those with insufficient financial capital, i.e. those with lower economic status. The indirect relationship is typically spread across a number of underlying risk factors rather than being limited to a single source. A neglectful mother who left home and stayed in social housing with all of her children, for example, may subconsciously pass on the daily habit of burying her pain and grief in alcohol. It is a product of environmental and genetic factors.
Popular links between drug addiction and economic status are as follows:
Level of education
Abuse and neglect
Genetic
State of mental health
Individual race
Parental drug and alcohol use
Level of economic status: wealth vs poverty
It is not that a wealthy person of higher economic status cannot experience exactly the same kind of trauma; it's just that there is a lesser tendency for that to happen in non-poor households. In other words, the many risk factors that can lead people to addiction and drug abuse are more common in households and areas with low economic status than in areas and families with high economic status. .
Why are you bringing up IQ? Recreational marijuana use is illegal in some of the highest IQ countries like Singapore and South Korea. There are strict drug laws in the supposedly progressive Scandinavian countries.
Yes that makes me wonder about their supposed high IQ. Federally illegal, yet available for "medical" purposes in most states and available for "recreation" in several states.
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