Finally A Forced Deportation I Agree With

Originally posted by: David Miller

   Just as I thought. You have no proof - just another fabrication.


Your response was utterly predictable.

 

You made several posts about the deadly exploding sandwich. Be a cowardly little weasel and don't admit it. You have no honor, no balls, no integrity.

Originally posted by: Kevin Lewis

Your response was utterly predictable.

 

You made several posts about the deadly exploding sandwich. Be a cowardly little weasel and don't admit it. You have no honor, no balls, no integrity.


 If true, repost the post you say I made.

Originally posted by: Kevin Lewis

Re your patient: isn't it hospital policy that a patient cannot, and can be forcibly prevented from if necessary, disrupt the operations of the hospital and the care of other patients? It seems to me that generating a horrific stink should qualify.

 


Yeah, Kevin, you'd think that, but it isn't that simple. 

 

Forcible evictions were rare, usually when a patient was violating policy, like smoking, drinking on the premises.  In those cases Security would be called, they warn the patient, more than once.  In the background the hospital attorneys are consulted; the medical team is consulted regarding the severity of illness if discharged ("threat to himself or others").  How severly the patient is incapacitated is certainly a factor.

 

Candy

 

 

Originally posted by: O2bnVegas

Yeah, Kevin, you'd think that, but it isn't that simple. 

 

Forcible evictions were rare, usually when a patient was violating policy, like smoking, drinking on the premises.  In those cases Security would be called, they warn the patient, more than once.  In the background the hospital attorneys are consulted; the medical team is consulted regarding the severity of illness if discharged ("threat to himself or others").  How severly the patient is incapacitated is certainly a factor.

 

Candy

 

 


I am taking my THC gummies with me if I have to go to hospital and they are going to have to pry them from my cold dead hands if they try and take them. 


Originally posted by: Mark

I am taking my THC gummies with me if I have to go to hospital and they are going to have to pry them from my cold dead hands if they try and take them. 


 THC gummiess - that explains the erattic postings and snowflake whinings.

Originally posted by: David Miller

 THC gummiess - that explains the erattic postings and snowflake whinings.


You should try them. They would mellow you out and you would feel so much better. And I say that with 100% sincerity. 

 

I rarely smoked pot as a kid maybe 20 times collectively up until I hit my 30s. A nice young lady I met in Vegas about five years ago reacquainted me to it. (the story is here in the forum if you search for it)

 

 I had been taking prescription sleep meds (Ambien) since my 40s. It worked but extracted a toll of needing a bare minimum of 8 hours of sleep and then the first two hours in the morning only feeling half awake.

Over the years I had tried other less harsh  prescription sleep aids, and then almost every over-the-counter suggestion that I received.  None of them worked. Once I started back on the THC, it was like a a miracle. Now I take one of those Gummies about an hour before I wanna go to sleep, chill listening to music and I easily drift off to sleep. I wake up six hours later fully rested.

 

I have taken off 30 pounds over these past five years and my overall health has dramatically improved.  BP is where it should be and my cholesterol dropped way down. I have also given up alcohol excepting an occasional beer with friends when out in Vegas. Yes, I am a big THC fan. 

 

 

 

Originally posted by: Mark

You should try them. They would mellow you out and you would feel so much better. And I say that with 100% sincerity. 

 

I rarely smoked pot as a kid maybe 20 times collectively up until I hit my 30s. A nice young lady I met in Vegas about five years ago reacquainted me to it. (the story is here in the forum if you search for it)

 

 I had been taking prescription sleep meds (Ambien) since my 40s. It worked but extracted a toll of needing a bare minimum of 8 hours of sleep and then the first two hours in the morning only feeling half awake.

Over the years I had tried other less harsh  prescription sleep aids, and then almost every over-the-counter suggestion that I received.  None of them worked. Once I started back on the THC, it was like a a miracle. Now I take one of those Gummies about an hour before I wanna go to sleep, chill listening to music and I easily drift off to sleep. I wake up six hours later fully rested.

 

I have taken off 30 pounds over these past five years and my overall health has dramatically improved.  BP is where it should be and my cholesterol dropped way down. I have also given up alcohol excepting an occasional beer with friends when out in Vegas. Yes, I am a big THC fan. 

 

 

 


      Sounds like they have been very beneficial for you. 

Originally posted by: David Miller

      Sounds like they have been very beneficial for you. 


Sincerely, I think in a lot of ways we are alike. On issues we care about we can't let things go and feel like we have to always get the last word in. I can pop that gummy at bed time and that heated online argument I was in earlier in the day just fades away and I no longer feel the need to get the last word in. Overall, I am just a much more mellow and less intense person than I was before. That's probably why the BP dropped. 😂 

Originally posted by: David Miller

      Sounds like they have been very beneficial for you. 


My uncle was diagnosed with cancer years ago. I am quite confident that if it was not for cannabis his body would not have been able to handle the nausea and other stress from the cancer treatments. He is pretty conservative and very religious and was quite hesitant to start taking it but now he credits it with saving his life. 

 

Another uncle has arthritis. High CBD content cannabis products transformed him from barely being able to walk around the house to playing golf twice a month. 

 

A friend got hepatitis c from a blood transfusion during the Vietnam war. The medications cause debilitating nausea. The only thing that helped was cannabis. 

 

My father has PTSD and other issues from the war in Vietnam. Cannabis helped him tremendously when the medications that the VA prescribed seem to just make things worse. He doesn't really do it anymore but it helped him a lot. 

 

I know several war veterans that had really bad side effects from prescribed medications but cannabis allowed them to quit those medications and live productive lives. 

 

I understand that you may have a perspective that causes you to be very skeptical of cannabis but I would like you to know that there is responsible use and it has helped a great number of people. 

 

 

 

 

For folks with sleep apnea it is extremely beneficial as studies show it improves your respiration while sleeping and I can attest to that based upon my own experience. 

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