Translate GreenPassion (powered by Google) | Law Enforcement Lets watch for the eye in the sky. | 
09-18-2008, 05:41 AM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: out on the farm
Posts: 5,311
Thanks: 563 Thanked 1,471 Times in 932 Posts
Rep Power: 350 | | Cannabis: police seizures show drop in drug's strength Cannabis: police seizures show drop in drug's strength
Official data seen by the Guardian shows potency of marijuana gathered in police seizures has fallen
Paul Owen The Guardian (UK)
The potency of cannabis gathered in police seizures has dropped, new official data reveals, casting doubt on one of the government's key arguments for reclassifying the drug from class C to class B.
Figures collected by the Forensic Science Service and seen by guardian.co.uk show that the potency of herbal cannabis, which includes the strong "skunk" strain, has dropped from 12.7% to 9.5% since 2004, when it was first moved from class B to the less serious class C.
This means that samples collected by the police are now weaker than when David Blunkett, the then-home secretary, downgraded the drug in 2004.
According to the figures the level of THC - the main psychoactive ingredient - in herbal cannabis was 12.7% in 2004, 13.5% in 2005 and 11.3% in 2006, before dropping to 9.5% in 2007, the year covered by the latest figures. Cannabis resin, a milder form, has decreased in strength from 3.4% to 2.6% between 2004 and 2007.
The FSS said the figures were not representative and were from too small a sample.
But David Porteous, a criminology lecturer from Middlesex University, said: "This information suggests that, in the time that it has been a class C drug, usage levels of cannabis have fallen and so has its strength. These findings make a mockery of the decision to re-reclassify cannabis and of the government's wider claim to base policy-making decisions on scientific research.
"Furthermore they call into question the validity of other controversial and publicly criticised government claims regarding drug policy, for example the link between cannabis and mental illness or the legitimacy of our current classification system."
Announcing the regrading of the drug in May, home secretary Jacqui Smith told the Commons that the potency of marijuana had "increased nearly threefold since 1995".
A spokesman for the Home Office said that the home secretary's assertion was based on a report from May this year entitled Home Office Cannabis Potency Study 2008. This report gave the median potency of sinsemilla (stronger strains such as skunk) as 15%, that of other herbal cannabis as 9%, and that of resin as 5%. No statistics for 1995 were given.
Another Home Office report, from April this year, also using FSS figures, casts further doubt on Smith's assertion. It says the strength of sinsemilla, intensively grown cannabis, rose from 5.8% in 1995 to 10.4% in 2007, less than a twofold increase. The strength of other forms of herbal cannabis was 3.9% in 1995 and 2.6% in 2007, a drop.
The FSS is a government organisation that supplies forensic science services to ministerial departments, government agencies and police forces. It released the new figures seen by guardian.co.uk earlier this month.
A spokeswoman for the FSS said that the figures seen by guardian.co.uk were "unlikely to be an accurate representation of THC in cannabis across the board as not all samples submitted to the FSS are routinely analysed for THC content. The FSS database also does not distinguish between sinsemilla cannabis and imported herbal cannabis."
She said the FSS had been involved in the May 2008 report used by Smith to make her decision. "The FSS participated in an in-depth study of THC content for the Home Office in partnership with other forensic agencies, and this is likely to be more representative of actual cannabis strength."
The Home Office spokesman said that skunk now made up "a staggering 81% of seized cannabis". This was up from 15% in 2002 and just over 50% in 2004-05.
In May, Smith told parliament the strength of cannabis had increased threefold and there was a "causal link, albeit a weak one, between cannabis use and psychotic illness".
Explaining why she was going to reclassify the drug as class B from next year, she said: "My decision takes into account issues such as public perception and the needs and consequences for policing priorities. There is a compelling case for us to act now rather than risk the future health of young people."
Smith's ruling went against the recommendations of the government's scientific experts, the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which was asked by Smith to take its third look at cannabis classification in recent years. The council's advice was that cannabis should remain class C.
When cannabis was downgraded, the proportion of young people using it fell from 25.3% in 2003-04 to 20.9% now. Among those aged 16 to 59, the proportion over the same period fell from 10.8% to 8.2%, according to the British Crime Survey. guardian.co.uk
*************************************************
For those that smoke it it is just a drop in quality, for those that promote prohibition it should be a knock out as they constantly claim that the potency is on the rise and todays pot would contain 30% THC at least - all smoke and mirror as you can see. And it doesn't surprise me at all as this findings are in correlation with the data from the DEA that show as well that average pot they seize is under 12% and that the potency of commercial cannabis is decreasing despite the fact that they still claim to the public that it is rising to "super dangerous levels".
The article shows the general global trend all to well, prohibition is boosting more then ever the trade, organized crime is flourishing - at least if we can believe this part of their claims, and the customer ends up with a shitty quality as too much business and money is envolved in the trade. And on heroin we see the opposite effect, thanks to our Afghanistan mission, e have more of the finest stuff on the market then ever and cheaper then ever.
So what do we learn from this article once again? Right, lets end prohibition, it never work to begin with.
__________________ Keep the gun oiled and the thumb green!  | | The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to green_nobody For This Useful Post: | | 
09-18-2008, 05:09 PM
|  | Administrator | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: New England
Posts: 2,069
Thanks: 1,116 Thanked 1,732 Times in 872 Posts
Rep Power: 500 | |
you won't see this well covered in mainstream media....
| 
09-18-2008, 06:27 PM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: out on the farm
Posts: 5,311
Thanks: 563 Thanked 1,471 Times in 932 Posts
Rep Power: 350 | | Quote:
Originally Posted by scott06 you won't see this well covered in mainstream media.... | if i only could guess why they won't cover such great news - the evil pot is getting safer as its potency drop to only 12% now, many tokers will survive their adiction now, less overdoses of marijuana....
...and the watching citizen starts to wonder: it is safer now?! potency dropped badly?! man, am i stupid, still hits as hard as back in high school and i never hear nor seen an overdose of my pot, we burned pounds and pounds and no one ever died from weed - they bullshitting us! Hey, they not only BS us on weed, they do it on everything!!!! 
there is a limit for everyone, even for the most peace loving toker and that might lead to just that
Besides, everyone else would as well figure that they been bullshitting us all the time - politicians, lobbyists, corporates, almost entire media from left to right - have been lying to us, and that point would come across even to the total sheeple.
__________________ Keep the gun oiled and the thumb green!  | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:34 AM. |