WildWestDesigns
Active Member
Although I hope my 3 year old thinks the way you do you are comparing apples and oranges. Water intoxication is a real thing, it is over hydration. We had a incident a few years ago with a radio contest. There has NEVER to my knowledge been a marijuana overdose causing death.
Contests and athletes are the ones in "harms way" for this more then any other demographic.
This isn't a common scenario either. What typically happens is that someone is so far gone from being in control of their body that something happens. Whenever you do anything to the extreme that you are no longer in control of your body there is a danger. I had one relative that was a heavy drinker all his life and died of unrelated causes when he was 95, genes plays a role, some can handle more then others.
I just don't get what causes people to go to the extreme that they don't want to be in control of their body. There must just be something horrible in their life. I just don't get it.
And that other statistic I saw in here about DUI deaths is either freakishly high or more likely there was more than just marijuana in their system. IE the dead guy was x3 drunk, had prescription drugs and oh yeah marijuana.
Statistical without knowing the origins of how they were determined are sketchy at best.
I'm not pro weed guy (obviously I'm up @ 7:30am on a Sat) far from it but weed is FAR FAR less harmful than alcohol or texting on a cell phone.
You know, I would have considered water even less harmful then any of those and yet we can still OD off of that. Go figure.
It is not "good for you" in general. A lifetime of puffing is very harmful to the lungs. Even that statistic is usually out of wack though. They compare it to ciggarettes, most will never smoke the equivalent to a pack a day. More like 1/20th or less.
Better hope that puffer doesn't have a genetic defect. Puffing on those recreational chemicals can cause issues for you.
Even then, you have look at it on an individual bases. What one person can get away with with regard to consumption might not be the same as the next person.