Does Casual Pot-Smoking Cause Changes in the Brain?

Daily Stormer
April 16, 2014

To smoke pot or to not smoke pot?
To smoke pot or to not smoke pot?

From the Washington Post:

A study in The Journal of Neuroscience says even casual marijuana smokers showed significant abnormalities in two vital brain regions important in motivation and emotion.

“Some of these people only used marijuana to get high once or twice a week,” said co-author Hans Breiter, quoted in Northwestern University’s Science Newsline. Breiter hailed the study as the first to analyze the effects of light marijuana use. “People think a little recreational use shouldn’t cause a problem, if someone is doing OK with work or school,” he said. “Our data directly says this is not the case.”

“This study raises a strong challenge to the idea that casual marijuana use isn’t associated with bad consequences,” he added.

The study analyzed 20 pot smokers and 20 non-pot smokers between 18 and 25. Scientists asked them to estimate how much marijuana they smoked and how often they lit up over a three-month test period. Even those who smoked once a week showed brain abnormalities, while larger changes were seen in those who smoked more.

I know we have a few pot advocates who read and post here, and I don’t generally condemn this. At least not harshly. But it is a fact that the parasite Jew is heavily involved in pushing for the plant’s legalization, and is also prone to encouraging its use in his media.

Though many Jews see legalization as merely a means to get rich off the goyim, George Soros has poured millions into changing pot laws in America, which indicates he has a social-engineering reason for doing so, as that is why he generally does things.

Overall, I think pot-smoking has more negative than positive effects, whether or not the neurological implications are as this study claims.