While Becker does make some fairly good points, I think that
some of them have become somewhat outdated and in the future might become even
further from how pot was both viewed and used when he wrote about the subculture of pot. One of the the
reasons that I think this is because what people think as "pot" or
"weed" has actually changed greatly from the 1960's. One of the main differences is that the
potency of marijuana has increased almost ten fold from advanced breeding techniques used by both illegal growers and medicinal growers. This makes the whole smoking correctly less
important. Also in places like
California where marijuana is legal for medical purposes they have used oils
to extract the THC and used it to make a variety of goods including chap-stick that
will get you high. This same potency
difference also brings up the question that if it is that much more potent it
will be easier to get much higher and you would feel the effects and not have
to think about them. While I am not
admitting or denying using marijuana, when you get high, you know it. As far as needing an internal guide for
smoking marijuana, with the popularization of it's use though movies like
"Harold and Kumar go to White Castle" everyone knows that when you
smoke marijuana you get hungry, and everyone knows that stoners love listening
to music to which there is a fairly strong correlation. This has made pot knowledge much more
mainstream which kind of eliminates the need for an internal guide. I read the entire article and some of the
things did make a great deal of sense, however with the way the culture of
marijuana has gone in my opinion it has outdated some of his ideas. I do agree with his discussion about going
from not accepting the use of marijuana to not really caring if friends or
people around you do it, since I did have much different thoughts about it before
college.
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