COMMENTI
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5 settembre 2015 10:32 - ennius4531
Dopo la tua confessione involontaria di essere non credibile e idiota, non potresti prenderti qualche annetto sabbatico per effettuare la famosa scansione 3D al tuo comprendonio e, visti i danni, riaggiustarlo ?

Per memoria ....

Starfighter ha presentato il seguente studio cosí datato..

From “Marijuana in Medicine” by Tod H. Mikuriya M.D. (1969):
e che richiama altri studi di oltre 70 anni precedenti.

In passato , cosí aveva sentenziato......

19 agosto 2015 4:19 - Starfighter23
.....VOGLIAMO STUDI DEL 2015 SE NO NON SEI CREDIBILE IDIOTA.


Dal momento che sostiene che ci vogliono studi del 2015 altrimenti non si é credibili e anche idioti, ergo ...

Starfighter, presentando uno studio del 1969,
CONFESSA DI ESSERE NON CREDIBILE E IDIOTA.

Urge scansione 3D del suo comprendonio.....
5 settembre 2015 9:13 - Starfighter23
"Il nostro punto di partenza e' stato che le persone che fumano cannabis sono un po' strane comunque", ha spiegato il professor Robin Murray, "ma alla fine abbiamo scoperto un rapporto di causa-effetto tra l'uso di cannabis pesante e la malattia mentale".

Sir Robin Murray ANDATE A VEDERE CHE FACCIA HA SU GOOGLE IMAGES,POI LUI DICE CHE CHI FUMA CANNABIS E' UN PO STRANO,ENNESIMO PSICHIATRA DI MERDA ANTICANNABIS,SE PARLI DI SKUNK DEL MERCATO NERO NEL 2015 NON HAI CAPITO ANCORA UN CAZZO


TORNA A FARE LA PREDICA AI TOSSICI COGLIONE MUCCIOLENNIO
5 settembre 2015 9:08 - Starfighter23
ANCORA ALLA SKUNK ENNIO?SIETE A 30 ANNI FA,IO STO VAPORIZZANDO UN PO DI MK ULTRA DI THSEEDS SE TI PUO INTERESSARE,LA SKUNK LA LASCIO ALLE MERDE COME TE =))POI GLI INGLESI SONO ALCOLISTI NON SANNO UN CAZZO DI CANNABIS RICREAZIONALE,SKUNK VUOL DIRE ERBA DEL MERCATO NERO IN UK,ENNESIMO STUDIO FATTO SU CANNABIS SPAZZATURA.

TORNA A FARE LA PREDICA AI TOSSICI COGLIONE,ENNIO MUCCIOLI,TO VA QUINTO STUDIO DEL GIORNO,C'E' CHI NE POSTA 5 OGNI 4 ANNI COME TE E CHI 5 AL GIORNO,SE NE VUOI DI PIU HAI SOLO DA CHIEDERE.

IL MOVIMENTO PRO CANNABIS A LIVELLO POLITICO E SOCIALE STA CRESCENDO IN MANIERA INARRESTABILE E TU DA SOLO,NON PUOI FARE UN BEATO CAZZO,VAI A MANIFESTARE DAVANTI A MONTECITORIO CON I CARTELLI QUI NON TI SERVE A NIENTE,PIANIFICA UN IMPICCAGGIONE DAVANTI A UN CANNABIS SOCIAL CLUB


SENTI COME MAI DECISO DI OCCUPARTI DI DIPENDENZE E DI COMUNITA' TERAPEUTICHE?


Is Weed the Secret to Beating Opiate Addiction?
In the U.S., 46 people die each day from opioid overdose—and that number isn’t doing anything but growing. Could marijuana be what’s missing from addicts’ recovery?

Kevin had been addicted to heroin for six years when he used marijuana to complete his final detox 20 years ago.

Searing back pain, restless legs, nausea, and sleepless nights—the tortuous symptoms of an opiate withdrawal—had made detoxing off the drug nearly too painful for the native Midwesterner to bear. With the introduction of cannabis, things changed. “The headaches and body aches seemed lessened,” Kevin says of his experience. “Yes, I was still sick, but it made everything just a little more tolerable, and every little bit helps in that position.”

At a time when America is searching for solutions to a burgeoning opiate problem that kills 46 Americans a day, a new tool for jumpstarting the fragile recovery process is emerging: medical cannabis. Proven to alleviate symptoms of serious medical conditions including cancer, AIDS, Crohn’s disease, and glaucoma, cannabis is beginning to gain notice as an effective alternative to synthetic painkillers.

In a study published last month in the Journal of the America Medical Association, access to medical cannabis was associated with significantly lower state-level opioid overdose mortality rates. States with medical marijuana laws showed almost 25 percent less average annual opioid overdose deaths than states without laws. While some addiction specialists argue that switching from opiates to marijuana is “like changing seats on the Titanic,” success stories of users like Kevin paint a picture of how impactful it can be.

“I had detoxed several times before I finally got off heroin for good in 1994,” he says, recalling years of Narcotics Anonymous meetings which required him to abstain from all drugs. “Each time I [detoxed], I used cannabis while I used heroin. It definitely helped with the process of withdrawal,” he says. “Once I stopped using heroin for good, I never used cannabis again.”

On top of providing relief from the physical pain associated with opioid withdrawal, Kevin says it helped his emotional state of mind as well. “Getting as stoned as I possibly could—which at times seemed difficult—was a way to cope with my situation. I think psychologically, just doing something gave me some sort of solace.”

While there are many stories like Kevin’s, little research has been done to explore the potential benefit of marijuana for opiate addicts. One study, funded by the National Institute for Health and published in May 2013’s American Journal of Addiction, found that those who consume cannabis during opiate withdrawal experience less severe withdrawal symptoms. The research also showed that once the patients stabilized on methadone, there was a decrease in their cannabis use. While this study was focused on methadone maintenance treatment, the results show promise for the larger opiate-using population—a group that’s been growing exponentially for years.

With an increase in opioid prescriptions starting in the early 2000s, overdoses in the U.S. began to skyrocket. From 1999-2008, the U.S. saw a 300 percent increase in overdose death from painkillers, with close to 15,000 deaths in 2008 alone. By 2010, an estimated 2 million Americans reported using painkillers for the first time non-medically—bringing the total number of those abusing painkillers in America to 12 million. In recent years, the problem has grown to epidemic proportions. In 2012 alone, health care workers wrote out an estimated 259 million prescriptions for painkillers—enough for each adult in America to have their own bottle. The CDC estimates that 46 Americans die each day from overdose on opioids.

Use and abuse of these drugs has reached an epidemic level as policy-makers, families, and users themselves scramble to find options that combat addiction. In a recent testimony, Dr. Daniel Sosin, the acting director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), stated that one of the department’s three main efforts is gathering data for evidence-based decision-making that improves public health. In the face of an epidemic that poses a lethal threat to 12 million individuals who use prescription painkillers, the government and the health care industry have all but ignored cannabis.

The stigma that still lingers around marijuana means the public has yet to fully get behind the concept, either. In an interview following the release of the JAMA study, Kevin Sabet, director of Project SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana), spoke out condemning the concept that marijuana could save the life of someone suffering from an opioid addiction. “There may be promise in marijuana-based medications but that's a lot different than ‘Here’s a joint for you to smoke,’” he said.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Amanda Reiman, director of the Drug Policy Alliance, shot back at Sabet’s jab. “That was a pretty callous thing to say. A lot of people have lost loved ones to opioids, and I bet they’d be willing to try just about anything to get their family member back,” says Reiman. “If we’re talking about saving people from an opiate overdose, I am pretty sure smoking a joint would be welcomed.”

Other success stories reflect a similar theme. Justin, a clean-cut 24-year-old with sweet Southern charm (“yes ma’am”) and a love for music, has come a long way since his days using heroin. Currently employed and housed, he used for five years before getting clean. “I was determined to change my life and stop letting that stuff rule me,” he says. “I hit rock bottom—losing most of my family, burning my bridges with them and everyone else. I knew it was time to change, and I was completely willing and ready for that to happen.”
5 settembre 2015 8:11 - ennius4531
Da Aduc

16 febbraio 2015

GRAN BRETAGNA: Cannabis potente aumenta rischio malattie mentali. Studio

Fumare cannabis potente, come la 'skunk', aumenta del 24% il rischio di malattie mentali, schizofrenia e disturbo bipolare, secondo uno studio del King's College di Londra condotto mettendo a confronto 410 pazienti di un ospedale psichiatrico tra i 18 e i 65 anni che presentavano i primi sintomi di psicosi con 370 persone sane.

Un rischio che e' cinque volte piu' alto per chi fa uso di cannabis ogni giorno.

La ricerca, pubblicata su Lancet Psychiatry, e' stata realizzata dal 2005 al 2011 in quartiere del sud di Londra, dove il consumo di droga e' molto diffuso.

"Il nostro punto di partenza e' stato che le persone che fumano cannabis sono un po' strane comunque", ha spiegato il professor Robin Murray, "ma alla fine abbiamo scoperto un rapporto di causa-effetto tra l'uso di cannabis pesante e la malattia mentale".
5 settembre 2015 5:35 - Starfighter23
UEI PICCOLO MUCCI LEGGI CHE TI FA BENE VA,ALTRO CHE I TUOI STUDI DEL CAZZO CHE SI RIPETONO DA ANNI

Is Weed the Secret to Beating Opiate Addiction?


In the U.S., 46 people die each day from opioid overdose—and that number isn’t doing anything but growing. Could marijuana be what’s missing from addicts’ recovery?

Kevin had been addicted to heroin for six years when he used marijuana to complete his final detox 20 years ago.

Searing back pain, restless legs, nausea, and sleepless nights—the tortuous symptoms of an opiate withdrawal—had made detoxing off the drug nearly too painful for the native Midwesterner to bear. With the introduction of cannabis, things changed. “The headaches and body aches seemed lessened,” Kevin says of his experience. “Yes, I was still sick, but it made everything just a little more tolerable, and every little bit helps in that position.”

At a time when America is searching for solutions to a burgeoning opiate problem that kills 46 Americans a day, a new tool for jumpstarting the fragile recovery process is emerging: medical cannabis. Proven to alleviate symptoms of serious medical conditions including cancer, AIDS, Crohn’s disease, and glaucoma, cannabis is beginning to gain notice as an effective alternative to synthetic painkillers.

In a study published last month in the Journal of the America Medical Association, access to medical cannabis was associated with significantly lower state-level opioid overdose mortality rates. States with medical marijuana laws showed almost 25 percent less average annual opioid overdose deaths than states without laws. While some addiction specialists argue that switching from opiates to marijuana is “like changing seats on the Titanic,” success stories of users like Kevin paint a picture of how impactful it can be.

“I had detoxed several times before I finally got off heroin for good in 1994,” he says, recalling years of Narcotics Anonymous meetings which required him to abstain from all drugs. “Each time I [detoxed], I used cannabis while I used heroin. It definitely helped with the process of withdrawal,” he says. “Once I stopped using heroin for good, I never used cannabis again.”

On top of providing relief from the physical pain associated with opioid withdrawal, Kevin says it helped his emotional state of mind as well. “Getting as stoned as I possibly could—which at times seemed difficult—was a way to cope with my situation. I think psychologically, just doing something gave me some sort of solace.”

While there are many stories like Kevin’s, little research has been done to explore the potential benefit of marijuana for opiate addicts. One study, funded by the National Institute for Health and published in May 2013’s American Journal of Addiction, found that those who consume cannabis during opiate withdrawal experience less severe withdrawal symptoms. The research also showed that once the patients stabilized on methadone, there was a decrease in their cannabis use. While this study was focused on methadone maintenance treatment, the results show promise for the larger opiate-using population—a group that’s been growing exponentially for years.

With an increase in opioid prescriptions starting in the early 2000s, overdoses in the U.S. began to skyrocket. From 1999-2008, the U.S. saw a 300 percent increase in overdose death from painkillers, with close to 15,000 deaths in 2008 alone. By 2010, an estimated 2 million Americans reported using painkillers for the first time non-medically—bringing the total number of those abusing painkillers in America to 12 million. In recent years, the problem has grown to epidemic proportions. In 2012 alone, health care workers wrote out an estimated 259 million prescriptions for painkillers—enough for each adult in America to have their own bottle. The CDC estimates that 46 Americans die each day from overdose on opioids.

Use and abuse of these drugs has reached an epidemic level as policy-makers, families, and users themselves scramble to find options that combat addiction. In a recent testimony, Dr. Daniel Sosin, the acting director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), stated that one of the department’s three main efforts is gathering data for evidence-based decision-making that improves public health. In the face of an epidemic that poses a lethal threat to 12 million individuals who use prescription painkillers, the government and the health care industry have all but ignored cannabis.

The stigma that still lingers around marijuana means the public has yet to fully get behind the concept, either. In an interview following the release of the JAMA study, Kevin Sabet, director of Project SAM (Smart Approaches to Marijuana), spoke out condemning the concept that marijuana could save the life of someone suffering from an opioid addiction. “There may be promise in marijuana-based medications but that's a lot different than ‘Here’s a joint for you to smoke,’” he said.

In an interview with The Daily Beast, Amanda Reiman, director of the Drug Policy Alliance, shot back at Sabet’s jab. “That was a pretty callous thing to say. A lot of people have lost loved ones to opioids, and I bet they’d be willing to try just about anything to get their family member back,” says Reiman. “If we’re talking about saving people from an opiate overdose, I am pretty sure smoking a joint would be welcomed.”

Other success stories reflect a similar theme. Justin, a clean-cut 24-year-old with sweet Southern charm (“yes ma’am”) and a love for music, has come a long way since his days using heroin. Currently employed and housed, he used for five years before getting clean. “I was determined to change my life and stop letting that stuff rule me,” he says. “I hit rock bottom—losing most of my family, burning my bridges with them and everyone else. I knew it was time to change, and I was completely willing and ready for that to happen.”
5 settembre 2015 5:32 - Starfighter23
DI FRONTE ALLE SVARIATE EVIDENZE SCIENTIFICHE CHE AFFERMANO L'EFFICACIA DELLA CANNABIS MEDICA PER CURARE LE DIPENZE TRA CUI QUELLA DI EROINA,VOI DELLE COMUNITA CHE CURATE CON BENZODIAZEPINE E ALTRA MERDA COSA NE PENSATE DI QUESTO PERICOLO CANNABIS MEDICA?? AVETE GIA PENSATO A UNA RADICALE DIMINUZIONE DELLA VOSTRA CLIENTELA SE CI FOSSE UN EVENTUALE LEGALIZZAZIONE?
5 settembre 2015 5:01 - Starfighter23
VISTO CHE CONTESTAVI LE DATE DEGLI STUDI A CUI IL MIO ARTICOLO FACEVA RIFERIMENTO,DICENDO SEMPLICEMNTER CHE SI SA DA UN SECOLO CHE LA CANNABIS E' UTILE PER COMBATTERE LE DIPENDENZE ECCOTI ACCONTENTATO CON QUALCOSA DI FRESCO DA VICE

Can Weed Really Help Addicts Recover from Alcoholism and Hard Drug Use?

Weed is having something of a moment. It seems all of my friends who used to spend their weekends drowning themselves at the bar have given up the bottle for the kush. And although the renaissance may have started out west, it's rapidly spreading to the east coast. Jersey already has a medical marijuana program, and New York just released regulations for its own slated to start next year. With pot's rising popularity, many people are wondering if we will see a corresponding decline in binge drinking and hard drug use.

A study published last fall in JAMA Internal Medicine showed that states with legal medical marijuana had a 25 percent reduction in opiate overdose deaths. As a strong proponent of alternative recovery methods, I was eager to investigate. The internet is rife with blog posts and message boards about those who benefit from marijuana as an alternative to alcohol, or credit medical cannabis in their recovery from hard drugs and alcoholism. But despite legalization becoming an increasingly mainstream idea, stigmas have stuck around, and saying you're getting clean by toking up can catch people off guard as much as announcing you've gotten sober through Satanism.

To learn more about weed's use in recovery I spoke with Amanda Reiman, PhD MSW, author of the 2009 study "Cannabis as a Substitute for Alcohol and Other Drugs" in Harm Reduction Journal and manager of Marijuana Law and Policy at the Drug Policy Alliance. After completing fellowships with the National Institute for Health, Reiman now continues her research on the effectiveness of pot as a replacement for hard drugs and alcohol.

VICE: What did you find during your research when looking at cannabis as a replacement for alcohol and other drugs?
Amanda Reiman: I started looking at the medical cannabis patient population. Anecdotally we had heard from patients that they were using cannabis primarily because they didn't want to use certain prescription drugs; they were looking for medicine that had fewer side effects. But we also found there were groups of people that were using cannabis because they had hazardous use of other substances, like alcohol or opiates. I did a large survey study in Berkeley of 350 patients. We asked them if they were, in fact, substituting: "Are you choosing to use cannabis instead of something else?" What we found was that about 75 percent of them were using cannabis as a substitute for prescription drugs, about half of them said they were using cannabis as a substitute for alcohol, and about 20 percent said they were using it as a replacement for illicit substances. That study was replicated with an additional 400 patients in Canada and we found the same thing. Then it was replicated a third time in Canada with about 1,000 patients, and we found the same thing.

And how does it work as a substitute?
We started to look at the mechanisms. I conducted a very small study a few years ago in San Francisco where we had eight individuals who were methamphetamine users looking to practice harm reduction. They were using [marijuana] to stay within a bound of methamphetamine use. And we tried to figure out what it was about the cannabis that was helping them stay within their boundaries of methamphetamine use. What was really interesting was that when we talked to the participants and asked them, "How is cannabis helping you not use methamphetamine?," they all said pretty much the same thing, which is that one of their issues in trying to keep their boundaries is that they didn't have the mindfulness. They would get the urge to use methamphetamine and just act on that urge without really thinking. Cannabis gave them mindfulness. They were able to slow down and really think about what they were doing, and what their body was saying to them. They were able to think about whether they really wanted to engage in methamphetamine use, or if they'd rather smoke some pot and go to sleep.

That makes sense.
The obvious thing is that [cannabis] acts as a psychoactive substitute. You want to get high on substance A, but instead you're getting high on substance B. That's a pretty simplistic way to look at it. When you take a little further look what you're seeing is that there are actual properties of the cannabis plant that can aid in getting off of other substances. When you look at the withdrawal symptoms of drugs like opiates and alcohol—things like nausea, tremors, trouble sleeping—these are all conditions which cannabis is really good at fixing.

So for someone who's trying to wean themselves off opiates or alcohol, having access to cannabis actually may make it less likely that they're going to relapse, because the withdrawal symptoms won't be as severe. One of the reasons people relapse is that the withdrawals get so bad. So if they can use cannabis to help with the withdrawal symptoms, it's less likely that they're going to return to that drug that was giving them problems.

If I told people I wasn't drinking but was fine with smoking weed, some would say I've simply switched one addiction for another. What's your response to that?
That is one very specific framework of recovery: abstinence-based recovery. But that's only one framework when it comes to recovery. There's a whole other framework around harm reduction where folks would say, "Look, as long as life is where you want it, and you're not getting into trouble with the law, and you're able to keep a job, and your family situation is going well and you're happy, then that's the most important thing." The goal of substance treatment isn't necessarily to demand abstinence as much as it is to help someone manage their life in a manner where substances are no longer interfering in a negative way.

Follow Sophie St. Thomas on Twitter.
5 settembre 2015 0:28 - Starfighter23
PROMETTO APPENA LE LEGGI CAMBIANO DI FAR PARTIRE DELLE INIZIATIVE NO PROFIT PER LA CURA DEI TOSSICODIPENDENTI CON CANNABIS AD ALTO CONTENUTO DI CBD,SFIDANDO TUTTI QUEI LADRI DI MERDA DELLE
COMUNITA' LEGGITI QUALCOSA QUI SOTTO PICCOLO MUCCIOLI

recent study might change this policy. Comparing states with and without legalized medical marijuana, it found a substantial decrease in opioid (heroin and prescription pill) overdose death rates in states that had enacted medical marijuana laws. In their conclusions, the researchers suggested that medical marijuana should be part of policy aimed to prevent opioid overdose.

Outside marijuana’s harms and benefits, missing in this discussion is the social environment of drug use. Drug use is social in nature. Where and with whom drugs are used influences why and how they are used. Socially acceptable or moderate use of drugs can be learned through social rituals in socially controlled settings.

Studies in the Netherlands found that using marijuana in Amsterdam coffeehouses encouraged a “stepping-off” hard drug use. These studies also found that when young people used marijuana in a controlled coffeehouse setting instead of a polydrug-using environment, they learned to use marijuana moderately without combining with other drugs. Along with providing access to marijuana, it’s important to instruct users on safe and effective medical marijuana consumption.

Since Massachusetts has not yet opened its medical marijuana dispensaries, it is too early to see if medical marijuana legislation will help reduce opiate addiction in the Commonwealth. Using recent research findings, Massachusetts policymakers have a unique opportunity to implement medical marijuana policies that address its contemporary opiate overdose. Medical marijuana could be part of drug treatment for heroin and opiates.

For homeless people, however, getting a marijuana card is expensive and buying medical marijuana from a dispensary is beyond their economic means. Street drugs are more prevalent in their social setting, easier to obtain, and can be much cheaper. From a policy perspective, addressing the alarming rates of overdose deaths among the homeless in Boston could mean distributing medical marijuana cards to homeless addicts for free and providing reduced cost medical marijuana.


DICE CHE DOVE HANNO CONSENTITO LA CANNABIS,L'USO DI EROINA SI E' DIMEZZATO CON CONSEGUIENTI MENO CLIENTI PER LE COMUNITA CHE RAPPRESENTI,ECCO IL MOTIVO DEL TUO LOTTARE PERCHE LA CANNABIS RESTI PROBITA,VOI DELLE COMUNITA VERRESTE DURAMENTE DANNEGGIATI

Formerly demonized and later legislated as a Schedule 1 substance, marijuana could diminish the damage wrought by harder drugs, like heroin. While opioid use is a nationwide epidemic, Massachusettes – long at the forefront of developing scientifically based public policy – has the opportunity to be at the forefront of cutting-edge, socially-informed drug policy.
4 settembre 2015 23:49 - ennius4531
Pubblica il tuo indirizzo per ospitarli e farli uscire dalla loro dipendenza .. pifferaio ...
4 settembre 2015 22:05 - Starfighter23
SPIEGHIAMO QUANTI SOLDI CHIEDETE ALLE FAMIGLIE PER LIBERARE I RAGAZZI DALLA TERRIBILE CANNABIS GRAZIE ALLE BENZODIAZEPINE,QUESTO ARGOMENTO MI INTERESSA PARECCHIO
4 settembre 2015 20:33 - ennius4531
....Sistematico, poi, era il comportamento dei sodali di bisboccia nei confronti di chi voleva liberarsi dalle erbe magiche : scomparivano con le scuse piú fantasiose... mai visto , l'ho visto solo una volta, ci trovavamo per bere un caffè.... .

Falsi e codardi ...
4 settembre 2015 19:20 - Starfighter23
ENNIO 4531 OVVERO IL CLONE DI ANDREA MUCCIOLI

ENNIO = MUCCIOLI
4 settembre 2015 16:43 - Starfighter23
E LI CHE TI SEI ROVINATO,E' LI IN COMUNITA' CHE HAI DEVIATO,RACCONTACI QUALCOSALTRO,COME UNO PSICHIATRA FALLITO VA A FARE VOLONTARIATO IN COMUNITA'? E' LI CHE SEI DIVENTATO ENNIO4531 IL RE DEI PISCIATURI


... costava molto in termini umani sia agli .. ospiti, vittime dei pifferai della tua specie, che ai famigliari .


Tranquillo che non promuovo l'uso dell'eroina come fa il tuo amico Ducci,SICURAMENTE COSTA UN SACCO DI SOLDI CHE RUBATE ALLE FAMIGLIE

cosa ci dici del cbd per uscire dalla tossicodipendenza? vuoi che ti posto 40 studi di seguito idiota?

COSA CI DICI DEL DANNO ECONOMICO CHE AVREBBERO I TUOI AMCI LADRI DELLE COMUNITA IN CASO DI LEGALIZZAZIONE?



PURTROPPO COME DICE VERONESI PER COLPA DELLA PROIBIZIONE DELLA CANNABIS TANTA GENTE RIPIEGA SU ALTRE DROGHE,FINENDO POI A REGALARE I SOLDI ALLE COMUNITA DI ASSASSINI DOVE TU FACEVI IL VOLONTARIATO


SE VUOI CHE POSTO LE PUNTATE SUI SEGRETI DI SAN PATRINIANO HAI SOLO DA DIRMELO


TORNA IN COMUNITA CON I TOSSICI A FARTI LINCIARE,COME MAI SOLO 2 ANNI SEI STATO TI HANNO PICCHIATO CHE TE NE SEI ANDATO?
PERCHE' TE NE SEI ANDATO?
4 settembre 2015 11:22 - ennius4531
... costava molto in termini umani sia agli .. ospiti, vittime dei pifferai della tua specie, che ai famigliari .

Sistematico, poi, era il comportamento dei sodali di bisboccia nei confronti di chi voleva liberarsi dalle erbe magiche : scomparivano con le scuse piú fantasiose... mai visto , l'ho visto solo una volta, ci trovavamo per bere un caffè.... .

Falsi e codardi .....
4 settembre 2015 8:43 - Starfighter23
LA SCANSIONE 3D LA FACEVATE AI TOSSICI? AVEVATE L'APPARECCHIATURA IN SEDE?

QUANTO COSTA AL MESE LA TUA COMUNITA?

E VIA CON GLI SCHELETRI FUORI DALL'ARMADIO

"Di nullità invece ne ho frequentate parecchie per circa due anni in una comunità di recupero come volontario."


EHEHEH3EHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEH

TI HANNO CACCIATO ANCHE DALLA COMUNITA'ERI TROPPO DEFICENTE ANCHE PER LORO

EHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHH

MUAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHA
4 settembre 2015 4:26 - Starfighter23
CONTINUA A NON RISPONDERE PROVA DEL FATTO CHE TU NEL CAMPO MEDICO CI HAI LAVORATO E COME VERO ENNIO?VERO CHE RAPPRESENTI QUEI 4 COGLIONI DELLE COMUNITA CRESIUTI SULL'EROINA?
3 settembre 2015 23:14 - ennius4531
... starfighter, le tue domande così ficcanti e determinate come:

MAI LAVORATO NEL AMBITO MEDICO ?SICURO?

E' ORA DI TIRARE FUORI GLI SCHELETRI DALL'ARMADIO AMICO MIO,E' ORA DI SCOPRIRE GLI ALTARINI,MOLTO SEMPLICEMENTE:

CHI RAPPRESENTI E PER CHI LOTTI?LAVORI O LAVORAVI NEL AMBITO MEDICO?

mi lasciano senza fiato e senza via di scampo.

Diavolo d'un segugio!
Hai superato il tuo maestro... l'ispettore Clouseau!
3 settembre 2015 20:58 - Starfighter23
MAI LAVORATO NEL AMBITO MEDICO ?SICURO?
3 settembre 2015 20:55 - Starfighter23
E' ORA DI TIRARE FUORI GLI SCHELETRI DALL'ARMADIO AMICO MIO,E' ORA DI SCOPRIRE GLI ALTARINI,MOLTO SEMPLICEMENTE:

CHI RAPPRESENTI E PER CHI LOTTI?LAVORI O LAVORAVI NEL AMBITO MEDICO?

CHI RAPPRESENTI E PER CHI LOTTI?LAVORI O LAVORAVI NEL AMBITO MEDICO?
3 settembre 2015 17:29 - ennius4531
... rappresento solo me stesso e lotto contro i pifferai e bugiardi del par tuo : antiproibizionisti d'accatto e proibizionisti sul pensiero diverso altrui.

Il tuo stato precario psicotico ti fa scambiare le contestazioni per persecuzioni ( ... povera vittima !! ) e il tuo vantarti:

'.. ho un pallone di Abusive Kush x Sour Diesel x Stardawg da spupazzarmi ..' ,

prova quanto tu nel ... pallone ci sia andato da tempo .

Urge una scansione 3D dettagliata del tuo comprendonio.

Tanti auguri ...
3 settembre 2015 11:20 - Starfighter23
E' ORA DI TIRARE FUORI GLI SCHELETRI DALL'ARMADIO AMICO MIO,E' ORA DI SCOPRIRE GLI ALTARINI,MOLTO SEMPLICEMENTE:

CHI RAPPRESENTI E PER CHI LOTTI?LAVORI O LAVORAVI NEL AMBITO MEDICO?

CHI RAPPRESENTI E PER CHI LOTTI?LAVORI O LAVORAVI NEL AMBITO MEDICO?
3 settembre 2015 10:26 - Starfighter23
IO NON PROMUOVO UN CAZZO,SE MI CHIEDI DEI CONSIGLI TE LI DO,HO AIUTATO MIGLIAIA DI PERSONE,NEGLI ANNI,PERCHE USO CANNABIS A SCOPO MEDICO,NON FACCIO PROPAGANDA COME TE,NON PRATICO IL PORTA A PORTA E SE FUMI LE CANNE TI DICO DI BUTTARE VIA TABACCO,CARTINE E ACCENDINO,SONO CONTRO LA MAGGIORPARTE DEL USO LUDICO PERCHE' FATTO SENZA RISPETTO PER LA PROPRIA SALUTE,PER VIA DELLA COMBUSTIONE

IO HO LA PRESCRIZONE IN ITALIA PER 5 GRAMMI DI BEDROCAN AL GIORNO,CHE SONO INFIORESCENZE SECCHE DI CANNABIS,NON PASTICCHE COME PENSI,QUINDI NON SONO SOSTANZE ILLECITE,VISTO CHE SI ORDINA IL FARMACO TRAMITE ASL,E HO UNA PATOLOGIA CHE PARLA DA SOLA AMICO MIO,QUINDI VERAMENTE PUOI SOLO SUCCHIARMELO!!!

NEGLI STATI UNITI IDEM HO PERMESSO PER USARE CANNABIS A VOLONTA'

L'UNICA PERSONA ILLECITA QUELLA SEI TU,GIA' LA TUA NASCITA FU ILLECITA
2 settembre 2015 20:49 - ennius4531
... non solo promuovi, magnificandole, il consumo di sostanze illecite in Italia, ma ti sei ridotto anche a fare ... il delatore a mio danno all'Aduc .

Ma che .... vergogna !!!
2 settembre 2015 17:29 - Starfighter23
io ho denunciato uno stato di illegalita ad ADUC riguardo la tua vergognosa permanenza questo si che per me e' illegale,non mi risulta che fare spam come fai tu,sia legale
2 settembre 2015 14:17 - ennius4531
Sí, hai detto bene .

...questo é Starfighter dopo aver caldeggiato le pozioni magiche .....
2 settembre 2015 8:27 - rouge
E l'infame sorrise
1 settembre 2015 18:53 - ennius4531
Ah.. denunciare stati di illegalità significa delazione ?

Ma allora un sacco di inchieste, per esempio giornalistiche, che smascherano situazioni contra legem sono delatori ?

E, allora, W i delatori ....
1 settembre 2015 5:28 - Starfighter23
@Ananda

ti faccio i miei migliori auguri,cerca di bere degli estratti di succo da foglia fresca,ricetta del dott. Courtney e simili,e di mangiare belle dosi di olio di cannabis o burro di cannabis,possibilmente fatto da genetiche ad alto conteunto di cbd e medio di thc,potrebbe fare la differenza sul risultato finale,viste le potenti proprieta antitumorali,inoltre ti dara un sacco di sostegno,non so che uso ne fai,ma fumare non ti serve tantissimo,rispetto all'enorme potere medico che avviene mangiando,fatti donare un po di outdoor adesso che arriva il periodo e processala senza pieta =)

prova a sentire cbd crew e project cbd e vedi se puoi aderire a qualche programma di cura gratuito per i pazienti,da parte di associazioni spagnole e simili,e' possibile trovare degli ottimi oli in Spagna e ho sentito parlare di programmi del genere,prova a sentire ACT in Italia che ne sanno di brutto anche di ste cose http://www.medicalcannabis.it/
31 agosto 2015 22:19 - anandamide1972
ennio, mi costringe a seguirla coi copiaincolla, ma non risponde mai alle mie domande, per esempio quelle sulla delazione del padre e figlio denunciati...vabbè...

Ennio, facevo per lei, dato che mi è parso di vederla affine al Magico Verbo...un canale di comunicazione, dando ancora una volta per acquisito che lei sia in buonafede.
W le erbe magiche.

...e comunque adoro le contaminazioni, ha presente il concetto del Tao ? Non si impressioni se le cose a volte non le tornano, e non pensi che necessariamente il fallo sia nel suo interlocutore...magari le sfuggono i concetti più articolati, sa, il Mondo è tuttora complesso, per quanto globalizzato. Pensi un po' che per gli induisti Gesù stesso è un illuminato, al pari di mohamed o altri...
Enniooo, guardi che anche se è sangue di Cristo, resta sempre vino...e torbo offusca come dieci canne pese.
31 agosto 2015 22:09 - ennius4531
' Non quello che entra per la bocca contamina l'uomo, ma quello che esce dalla bocca contamina l'uomo ( Matteo, 15,11)' .

Ne convengo .

Ecco, prendiamo ad esempio i pifferai dell'erba magica dalla cui bocca escono lodi su quanto esse siano paradisiache.

Dal momento che, invece, fanno buchi nel comprendonio, ecco che dalla loro bocca escono velenositá che contaminano i propri simili.
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