One Political Plaza - Home of politics
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
General Chit-Chat (non-political talk)
The Final Word on Pot Smoking
Page <prev 2 of 4 next> last>>
Oct 11, 2016 12:11:59   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
Admin e-mailed me, as follows, and I replied, as follows:

Your topic "The Final Word on Pot Smoking" was moved
from "Main" section
to "General Chit-Chat (non-political talk)" section.

Action comment: no comment

You can find the topic here.

As a reminder, you can find all your topics by following My Topics link (also located at the top of the page).


It actually belongs in politics. Smoking weed is legal in Colorado; it's the politics that have done this poor state in.[/quote]

It's a state gone wild. And it stinks as well. I enjoy Colorado and especially Denver and the surrounding area, to visit that is. It's a beer Mecca. But really, I'm tired of smoke. Italy was a smoke ridden country as well. And to be honest, I can enjoy a smoke from time to time, but it doesn't need to be in everyone's faces.

I once made the analogy of smoking should be compared to peeing in the pool.

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 12:19:11   #
KiraSeer2016
 
nwtk2007 wrote:
No doubt about it.


And more, and more, and...ad infinitum.

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 12:21:01   #
KiraSeer2016
 
nwtk2007 wrote:
It's a state gone wild. And it stinks as well. I enjoy Colorado and especially Denver and the surrounding area, to visit that is. It's a beer Mecca. But really, I'm tired of smoke. Italy was a smoke ridden country as well. And to be honest, I can enjoy a smoke from time to time, but it doesn't need to be in everyone's faces.

I once made the analogy of smoking should be compared to peeing in the pool.


I smoke cigars. Doesn't interfere with my mental acuity, as pot would. Tried it once---1968, didn't like the lack of control. I actually looked around and said: "What planet am I on?" God's own t***h.

Reply
 
 
Oct 11, 2016 12:53:13   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
I smoke cigars. Doesn't interfere with my mental acuity, as pot would. Tried it once---1968, didn't like the lack of control. I actually looked around and said: "What planet am I on?" God's own t***h.


That's wild. I've never tried it. Makes me think I should have! LOL!

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 12:56:29   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
I smoke cigars. Doesn't interfere with my mental acuity, as pot would. Tried it once---1968, didn't like the lack of control. I actually looked around and said: "What planet am I on?" God's own t***h.


I need to try a good cigar. Had a pipe while in college but it was more of something I enjoyed smelling rather than enjoying smoking. I bought an old T-Bird from a pipe smoker. Everyone loved the smell of that car! Vanilla Mist and Cherry's Jubilee.

Problem with a cigar, it just doesn't hit the back of your throat like a good old Marlboro Light or a Camel unfiltered!

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 14:24:48   #
Big dog
 
nwtk2007 wrote:
No doubt about it.


It's still a political crime in many states.

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 14:34:54   #
KiraSeer2016
 
Big dog wrote:
It's still a political crime in many states.


Nudity is a political crime?

Reply
 
 
Oct 11, 2016 14:35:56   #
KiraSeer2016
 
nwtk2007 wrote:
I need to try a good cigar. Had a pipe while in college but it was more of something I enjoyed smelling rather than enjoying smoking. I bought an old T-Bird from a pipe smoker. Everyone loved the smell of that car! Vanilla Mist and Cherry's Jubilee.

Problem with a cigar, it just doesn't hit the back of your throat like a good old Marlboro Light or a Camel unfiltered!



I only pay about $2.15 for a pack of cigars. Wild Horse. I just love the name.

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 14:50:11   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
I only pay about $2.15 for a pack of cigars. Wild Horse. I just love the name.


I'll check them out!

Reply
Oct 11, 2016 15:29:05   #
Big dog
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
Nudity is a political crime?


No, pot is a political crime. Making that girl put ON clothes would be criminal though.

Reply
Oct 14, 2016 12:53:45   #
KiraSeer2016
 
Big dog wrote:
No, pot is a political crime. Making that girl put ON clothes would be criminal though.


Go to your man-cave, Dog.

Reply
 
 
Oct 17, 2016 21:43:37   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
http://www.superseventies.com/treasurs.html

"Treasures of the Aquarians"

by Richard Davis and Jeff Stone


A startling and important archaeological discovery was recently made in the
area of our planet once known as California, when a cache of artifacts dating
from the 1960s was unearthed, relatively intact, during the building of the
t***sglobal tunnel. The best scholars from a score of disciplines --
including archaeology, history, languages and anthropology -- have studied
and interpreted these artifacts and have mounted an exhibition that will open
at the Metroplex Museum of Art next year. Never has so great a body of
information been available about a time and culture of which we have
previously known so little.

The artifacts were uncovered by a construction crew in the ruins of a
postindustrial town known as Berkeley ("zip code" coordinate 94704). The
primary dig site comprised an area approximately 105 yards long by 44 yards
wide. Additional objects were discovered as much as one quarter of a mile
away, in an area believed to have been the location of the University of
California at Berkeley. Unfortunately, practically nothing of the great
institution remains, but its grandeur is legendary. The campus alone was the
size of a small city, with its classrooms, laboratories, stadia and great
public squares, all of which played an essential role on the dramatic events
of the time.

Berkeley was the crossroads of cataclysmic but only dimly understood social,
political and cultural changes that rocked the civilization of the Western
Hemisphere to its very foundations. Home to thousands of "street people,"
Berkeley was the magnet city of its time. Consequently, the artifacts of the
late 1960s and early 1970s discovered there are unmatched in richness and
variety and as a source for our understanding of that distant time.

Little is known of the societies that neighbored the Berkeley civilization.
Evidently, a people called the Amerikans, whose values were in may ways
antithetical to those of the Berkeleyites, shared the midsection of the North
Amerikan continent with them. The boundaries between the two groups
apparently were not clearly defined, resulting in numerous border skirmishes
and several major battles.

The Berkeley artifacts were not without hazards, particularly the ones later
determined to be primitive drugs and explosive weapons. Yet many of the
researchers developed a genuine fondness and respect for the Berkeleyites,
whom they refer to as "Aquarians." The name is derived from a song recorded
on a grooved plastic disk discovered at the dig site. (Several such objects
were found and were eventually identified by specialists as "phonograph
records.") A favorite of the dig personnel, this song heralded the beginning
of the "Age of Aquarius."

I invite you to journey with us now many thousands of years back into the
deep recesses of time. It is my hope that you too will come to think of the
Aquarians in more familiar terms, perhaps as rather peculiar but valued
friends. It is all too easy, in our age of wide-ranging space exploration and
colonization, to focus on their idiosyncrasies, and so lose sight of the
common humanity they so clearly share with ourselves.

- THOMAS HEAVING DIGGERHALTER
Curator, North Amerikan Antiquities
Metroplex Museum of Art
April, 7069 A.D.

Some "finds" from the dig:

1. Item MJ303
THE SACRED SYMBOL
Silver, inlaid turquoise
Dimensions: 1" x 1 1/2"

Imprinted on many of the Berkeley artifacts is the sacred symbol of the
Aquarians, the hemp leaf. All good was thought to stem from the hemp plant,
and indeed economics, recreation and spirituality were all directly affected
by it. The leaf was so important to the Aquarians that it was
anthropomorphized in a tale and song as Mary Jane, in much the same way as
the British had centuries before personified John Barleycorn.

Buttons, poetry, patches on clothing and even one of the Aquarian
confederation f**gs were found bearing the three-pronged leaf. Apparently,
displaying the leaf symbol in virtually any context was considered "NORML."


2. Items 17, 18, 19
"ROACH" CLIPS
Various metals, beads
Dimensions: Easily concealed

An early interpretation of these small metallic devices supposed that during
the great cockroach epidemics of the twentieth century, in which billions of
the insects infected the cities of North Amerika, the clips were somehow used
to pin the creatures down in order to exterminate them. However, this
interpretation has since fallen into discredit.

A more plausible hypothesis is that the Aquarians used the clips to fasten a
live "roach" (or facsimile) to a piece of clothing to signify that the wearer
was in spiritual harmony with the cosmos. The Aquarians, like other ancient
human cultures, particularly the Egyptians, believed the cockroach to be a
sacred beast that had found favor with the gods and would be granted
immortality.

3. Item 69
LOVE BEADS
Leather, ceramic beads
Dimensions: Expandable

If an Aquarian could own just one piece of jewelry, it would almost certainly
be LOVE BEADS. Love Beads could be made from practically any durable
material, from plastic to paper-mache to macaroni, and were generally
brilliantly colored.

A strand might hold anywhere from a single bead to dozens, leading
anthropologists to conclude that Love Beads were not purely decorative in
function. It is now believed that they also offer important clues to sexual
behavior, with the number of beads corresponding to the number of an
Aquarian's lovers. It is significant that the strands were simply strung and
easily expandable. The color and design of the beads are thought to have been
carefully coded to indicate how good a lover had been.

Two of the most popular materials for stringing beads were cotton string and
leather cord. It is not known whether there was any significance in the
choice of material, although perhaps it had something to do with the sexual
preferences of the wearer.


4. Item 65
STEAM ENGINE
Glass, rubber, water
Scale: 1:1000
Inscription: "Bong-zai"

This was apparently a scale model for a giant engine that would have captured
heat from deep inside the Earth and used it to generate electricity. A long
tube would be inserted into one of the many faults in the Berkeley area. The
heat rising through the tube would convert the water in the engine's central
chamber into steam. The steam would be released through another tube and used
to drive a turbine that would generate electricity.

Evidently, large-scale testing of the device was conducted using heat
produced by burning hemp. This made excellent sense, considering the plant's
widespread availability.



Get the book and read it. It's not expensive.

NEED I SAY MORE?
http://www.superseventies.com/treasurs.html br br... (show quote)
Quite an analogy for the transcendental herb of the incarnate mind,Also the downfall of an idealistic and hopeful intellectual though misunderstood homeland of young pioneers in the acid wilderness. All of the time they spent looking for the answer with artificial stimuli the answer was with them all along. Stay in present time.

Reply
Oct 21, 2016 13:28:43   #
KiraSeer2016
 
Coos Bay Tom wrote:
Quite an analogy for the transcendental herb of the incarnate mind,Also the downfall of an idealistic and hopeful intellectual though misunderstood homeland of young pioneers in the acid wilderness. All of the time they spent looking for the answer with artificial stimuli the answer was with them all along. Stay in present time.



I have no idea what you just said, CBT.


I call the hippies the spoiled baby-boomer brats. Some Moms and Dads didn't want them to have the deprivation (the Great Depression and then World War II) that they themselves went through. So they were spoiled and coddled. I'm glad to say my mother and father weren't amongst them.

Reply
Oct 21, 2016 13:40:18   #
nwtk2007 Loc: Texas
 
KiraSeer2016 wrote:
I have no idea what you just said, CBT.


I call the hippies the spoiled baby-boomer brats. Some Moms and Dads didn't want them to have the deprivation (the Great Depression and then World War II) that they themselves went through. So they were spoiled and coddled. I'm glad to say my mother and father weren't amongst them.


He's describing those who sought to expand their minds through chemistry.

Reply
Oct 21, 2016 13:44:27   #
KiraSeer2016
 
nwtk2007 wrote:
He's describing those who sought to expand their minds through chemistry.


I've had 3 years of college chemistry. It expanded my mind all right.

Reply
Page <prev 2 of 4 next> last>>
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
General Chit-Chat (non-political talk)
OnePoliticalPlaza.com - Forum
Copyright 2012-2024 IDF International Technologies, Inc.