SonSzu
Member
I didn't read the entire published study, so I won't support or reject it, but a quick skim of the linked webpage shows that increased population doesn't seem to be the cause of the effect, here. They are measuring frequency "per insured vehicle year", not total frequency, and also they attempted to control for several other extraneous variables.
It's really not that hard to believe that an increase in Cannabis availability could lead to more people driving under the influence, which can be a major issue, especially when it comes to those who don't have high tolerances.
In fact, I find it much harder to believe that being stoned has absolutely no negative effect on the driving ability of at least some people.
I'm still not arguing for the study here, but I don't find the results to be so shocking, especially when you consider the fact that they are covering the whole population, and not just very experienced Cannabis users with high tolerances and many hours on the road.
Do you have any scientific studies that support this claim, or is it just your assumption?
Those """studies""" are only show a vague correlation, there is no causation. These aren't even direct correlations.
Insurance companies have been manipulating basic statistics to increase premiums on targeted demographics since the beginning. These are pretty easily debunked by anyone who has studied science or has taken statistics 101.
Anyone who has studied science understands that even the most comprehensive studies are only a "snapshot" of a much bigger picture. Data is often & easily manipulated to skew in the favor of whomever is funding the study. To legislate so harshly over such superficial findings is lunacy.
You would need a double blind randomized control trial with many different individuals to say decisively one way or another. I'm not aware if this has been done.
I'm not advocating driving after dabbing but lets stop pretending driving under the influence of cannabis is anything like driving under the influence of alcohol. Most heavy tolerance, decade + tokers have been driving high for decades.
Let's not even get into the fact that these legislated legal limits don't take into account different methods of ingestion and how cannabis stays in the body.
I believe that science...rather than what we want to believe...says this is not so.
Cannabis effects reaction times and coordination.
I'm not getting an argument over this as people tend to see what they want to see and hear what they want to hear.
I'm not advocating dabbing then driving.
To equate a teenager taking his first tokes and then driving to a high tolerance, decade plus user is false equivalency. The problem is that the law treats both these individuals the same.
Anecdotal but noteworthy:
Note: After getting them to toke almost a gram... they instructed the drivers to drive faster along the course but edited that out of the video. The few mistakes the drivers made was of course highlighted.
I'm also not interested in arguing or anyone's opinion for that matter.
I'm only interested in experience and facts. It's next to impossible to generalize while speaking factually on a huge demographic like cannabis users.
We'd require double blind randomized trials with a large sample groups.