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Canadense

Usuário Growroom
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Tudo que Canadense postou

  1. eu não man... ter filhos estragaria meu estilo de vida...
  2. po man, eu ja falei aqui, só cheiro quando bebo... mas ae é pra concertar, concerta mem...
  3. porra.. uma vez emprenhei minha cabritinha que tava usando anticoncepcional... bom, pelo menos é que ela diz... vai saber nussa... e pra eu convencer pra ela fazê um anjinho??? uma decisão que hj ambos sabemos que foi a melhor decisão...
  4. num ligar pra aparencia vc rapá... minha coleção de bombetas e tenis, alem de sempre andar nos pano... nois é O KANYE WEST fi...
  5. me esqueci de falar... o papai do ceu num gosta e num vai deixar vc entrar no paraiso...
  6. nessas horas eu sou buhddista... a hora é agora!
  7. no meu batismo russo/ortodoxo vinho do vigario...
  8. http://news.ufl.edu/2012/07/10/alcohol-gateway/ UF study shows long-term drug abuse starts with alcohol Filed under Education, Family, Health, Research on Tuesday, July 10, 2012. GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Alcohol — not marijuana — is the gateway drug that leads adolescents down the path toward more serious substances, a new University of Florida study shows. The findings may not settle a decades-old debate over how drug abuse begins, but it could help educators and policymakers build more effective drug-prevention programs, said Adam Barry, an assistant professor and researcher in the College of Health and Human Performance. “By recognizing the important predictive role of alcohol and delaying initiation of alcohol use, school officials and public health leaders can positively impact the progression of substance use,” he said. “I am confident in our findings and the clear implication¬¬s they have for school-based prevention programs. By delaying and/or preventing the use of alcohol, these programs can indirectly reduce the rate of use of other substances.” The study appears in the August issue of the Journal of School Health. Barry used a nationally representative sample of high school seniors, evaluating data collected through the annual Monitoring the Future study. The study, conducted by the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, uses questionnaires to examine the behaviors, attitudes and values of secondary school students, college students and young adults. Once collected, the data is made available for evaluation by other researchers and institutions. Barry’s study focused on data collected from 14,577 high school seniors from 120 public and private schools in the United States. He evaluated whether the students had ever used any of 11 substances, including licit substances such as alcohol and tobacco, as well as illicit substances like marijuana, cocaine, heroin, LSD, amphetamines, tranquilizers and other narcotics. The results indicated that alcohol, not marijuana or tobacco, was most often the first substance students tried, he said. In the sample of students, alcohol also represented the most commonly used substance, with 72.2 percent of students reporting alcohol consumption at some point in their lifetime. Comparatively, 45 percent of students reported using tobacco, and 43.3 percent cited marijuana use. In addition, the drug use documented found that substance use typically begins with the most socially acceptable drugs, such as alcohol and cigarettes, then proceeds to marijuana use and finally to other illegal, harder drugs. Moreover, the study showed that students who used alcohol exhibited a significantly greater likelihood — up to 16 times — of licit and illicit substance use. “These findings add further credence to the literature identifying alcohol as the gateway drug to other substance use,” he said. Barry also cited the important role of parents and their alcohol-related attitudes and policies in the home. “Parents should know that a strict, zero-tolerance policy at home is best. Increasing alcohol-specific rules and decreasing availability will help prevent an adolescent’s alcohol use,” he said. “The longer that alcohol initiation is delayed, the more likely that other drug or substance use will be delayed or prevented as well.”
  9. Mano... é por essas e outras esse STF precisar agir urgente!
  10. Canadense

    Cansado

    cara, eu odeio pulissa tb... mas ja me pegaram em flagrante e me chamaram de senhor... acho que deve ser pq minha identidade ae no barzyl é um passaporte azul marinho... nunca levei porrada, muito menos esculacho... po uma vez, eu fumando um blunt antes de um santos e SPFC na avenida pacaembu, só escutei a viaturo... TODO MUNDO NA PAREDE... eu dread, na caruda continuei andando... olhei pra traz, mó galera levando enquadro e eu ainda de blunt na mão... Na boa, pulissa num sabe abordar, e zé mané num sabe ser enquadrado... E O CICLO CONTINUA!!!! unica vez que levei esculacho foi numa DP que eu entrei pra saber onde era a junta militar pra eu fazer meu adiamento do alistamento... os cara olharam pra mim e falou, tu ta fudido com esse cabelo...
  11. eutb num entendi pq levaram o rolo de papel higienico.... AHAHAHAHAHHAAHHAHAHAHAHHA EDIT: e na boa, com umas planta dessa num era GR nem a pau...
  12. na boa, o governo ta fudendo com amsterdam... alem de fechar bares agora as 3 da matina...
  13. por que seria ilegal??? puuuuuuts.... esse dai deve esconder que fuma até dele msm..
  14. http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/07/08/mexico-urges-u-s-to-join-drug-policy-review/ WASHINGTON — Mexico’s incoming president Enrique Pena Nieto called Sunday for a “new debate” on the drug war raging in his country and urged the United States to play a “fundamental role” in the review. A week after returning the once-authoritarian Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) to power on campaign promises to reduce the violence that is blighting Mexican life, Pena Nieto said it was time for a re-evaluation. “Yes, I do believe we should open up a new debate regarding how to wage war on drug trafficking,” the young telegenic new leader of the world’s 11th most populous country said in an interview with CNN’s Fareed Zakaria. “Personally, I’m not in favor of legalizing drugs. I’m not persuaded by that as an argument,” he said. “However, let’s open up a new debate, a review in which the US plays a fundamental role in conducting this review.” Demand for cocaine and marijuana in the United States fuels the rampant narcotics trade in Latin America, and Mexicans have long said the illegal flow of guns from across the US border is driving up the death toll. The center-left Pena Nieto, 45, won last Sunday’s presidential election with 38.21 percent of the vote as opposed to just 31.59 percent for his main opponent, veteran leftist candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador. Lopez Obrador has accused the PRI of vote-buying and vowed to challenge the results in the courts, but barring a stunning reversal Pena Nieto will be sworn in as Mexico’s new leader on December 1. The presumptive president-elect campaigned hard on reducing the drug violence that has marred the past 12 years of rule by the right-wing National Action Party (PAN). The PAN and outgoing President Felipe Calderon hemorrhaged support due to the violence that has killed over 50,000 people since 2006 and turned parts of Mexico into war zones. Calderon took the cartels on, attempting a military crackdown. It is still unclear how Pena Nieto plans to go about fulfilling his promises. “What we seek now in our new strategy is to adjust what’s been done up until now. It’s not a radical change,” he told CNN. “It’s to broaden the coverage and above all, the emphasis I aspire to of reducing the violence in our country.” The center-left PRI was synonymous with the state as it governed for seven decades until 2000 through a mixture of patronage and selective repression — isolating political foes through bought elections and skewed media coverage. A question put to Pena Nieto by Zakaria betrayed the fears of some in Mexico that the new leader might be more open to backroom deals with the cartels. “But there can only be a reduction in violence, Mr president-elect, if the cartels also agree to a reduction in violence. If they keep fighting, you will simply be unilaterally disarming?” Zakaria asked. Pena Nieto’s reply was short on specifics. “I’m persuaded that if we achieve the specialization in the work carried out by the various branches of the federal police and the inspector general’s office, waging war on impunity will allow us to combat crime,” he said.
  15. esse bud meio cinza bem cara de commercial bud.... a tal da jack hair tb tem por aqui, nada haver com a Jack Herer q todos conhecem... mas ela é uma boa pra levantar grana, cheira doce e a galera compra aos montes por causa do preço. :/
  16. eu num me acho... eu sou... eu quero a legalização sem me impor restrições...
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