WildTurkey
Well-Known Member
smoke em if you got em.. drink your glasses to the bottom..
I would argue that Kirk's judgement of the whole ARob situation was much, much worse than Greg Garmon's judgement. Kirk's judgement showed much sketchier priorities also. We all know this is true even if some of us choose to ignore it.
I would argue that Kirk's judgement of the whole ARob situation was much, much worse than Greg Garmon's judgement. Kirk's judgement showed much sketchier priorities also. We all know this is true even if some of us choose to ignore it.
Here is a thought, why don't we decriminalize marijuana and criminalize the legal opiates being pushed by the drug companies? Oh right, too much $$$$$ at stake for the pharmaceutical companies. I realize the following article mostly focuses on New Mexico but let's not kid ourselves, it is a nationwide problem.
If I had a son and I allowed him to play football from Pop Warner age up through high school and especially if he went on to play college ball for let's say Kirk Ferentz who, judging by his unsympathetic treatment of ARob following at least two concussions that we know about (look up his quote comparing knee injuries to concussions and also academic indigestion) takes an old-fashioned approach to concussions, I would most definitely encourage my son to smoke some dope to alleviate some discomfort caused by taking repeated shots to the head and body and vehemently discourage him from using legal opiates.
I have no idea why Greg Garmon chooses to smoke dope. A great many high school kids do, including myself at that age. I also smoked a little during college as a stress reliever and some enlightenment you might say but quit shortly thereafter. I never felt compelled to move onto stronger illegal drugs.
We need to get over this country's marijuana hysteria. Nowhere in the following article did I see anyone linking using marijuana to using harder drugs. Quite the contrary. But moving on from pills is mentioned.
The word marijuana is not mentioned. Which is unfortunate in a way as it is much safer and less addictive.
Considering the punishment and long-term damage due to prolonged hits to the head that we are just now beginning to understand (but not necessarily accept), I find it shocking that we don't prescribe medical marijuana for football players on a regular basis.
Marijuana should be legalized. No restrictions. I have no dog in the fight.
Except maybe fewer Hawkeyes, specifically running backs, would be shown the door. They would then be treated like all the underage alchohol abusers and only suspended.
From the NY Times article:
"Public health officials here say the spike is being driven primarily by prescription opioids — painkillers like oxycodone, morphine and methadone — whose sales in the state rose 131 percent during the same period. In New Mexico, the overdose death rate from prescription drugs now outstrips that from illegal drugs, the report found."
"Over the last decade, deaths from prescription drug overdoses have risen to unprecedented levels throughout the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
“'Every young person I’ve talked to that’s using heroin always started with pills,†said Jennifer Weiss, president of the Heroin Awareness Committee, formed in 2010 to curb opiate addiction in New Mexico. “It’s just been progressively getting worse.' Ms. Weiss’s own son, Cameron, a wrestler and football player at La Cueva High School, a local sports powerhouse, became addicted to prescription painkillers after a series of injuries."
Marijuana as a Gateway Drug: The Myth That Will Not Die | Healthland | TIME.com
I will say it again. The meds doctors have prescribed in my lifetime have worse side effects than marijuana.
Pharmaceutical companies don't want anyone to be able to get their medicine from a plant that can resupply the patient forever. They want a patient to buy a manufactured drug that the company made.
Here is a thought, why don't we decriminalize marijuana and criminalize the legal opiates being pushed by the drug companies? Oh right, too much $$$$$ at stake for the pharmaceutical companies. I realize the following article mostly focuses on New Mexico but let's not kid ourselves, it is a nationwide problem.
If I had a son and I allowed him to play football from Pop Warner age up through high school and especially if he went on to play college ball for let's say Kirk Ferentz who, judging by his unsympathetic treatment of ARob following at least two concussions that we know about (look up his quote comparing knee injuries to concussions and also academic indigestion) takes an old-fashioned approach to concussions, I would most definitely encourage my son to smoke some dope to alleviate some discomfort caused by taking repeated shots to the head and body and vehemently discourage him from using legal opiates.
I have no idea why Greg Garmon chooses to smoke dope. A great many high school kids do, including myself at that age. I also smoked a little during college as a stress reliever and some enlightenment you might say but quit shortly thereafter. I never felt compelled to move onto stronger illegal drugs.
We need to get over this country's marijuana hysteria. Nowhere in the following article did I see anyone linking using marijuana to using harder drugs. Quite the contrary. But moving on from pills is mentioned.
The word marijuana is not mentioned. Which is unfortunate in a way as it is much safer and less addictive.
Considering the punishment and long-term damage due to prolonged hits to the head that we are just now beginning to understand (but not necessarily accept), I find it shocking that we don't prescribe medical marijuana for football players on a regular basis.
Marijuana should be legalized. No restrictions. I have no dog in the fight.
Except maybe fewer Hawkeyes, specifically running backs, would be shown the door. They would then be treated like all the underage alchohol abusers and only suspended.
From the NY Times article:
"Public health officials here say the spike is being driven primarily by prescription opioids — painkillers like oxycodone, morphine and methadone — whose sales in the state rose 131 percent during the same period. In New Mexico, the overdose death rate from prescription drugs now outstrips that from illegal drugs, the report found."
"Over the last decade, deaths from prescription drug overdoses have risen to unprecedented levels throughout the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
“'Every young person I’ve talked to that’s using heroin always started with pills,†said Jennifer Weiss, president of the Heroin Awareness Committee, formed in 2010 to curb opiate addiction in New Mexico. “It’s just been progressively getting worse.' Ms. Weiss’s own son, Cameron, a wrestler and football player at La Cueva High School, a local sports powerhouse, became addicted to prescription painkillers after a series of injuries."
Marijuana as a Gateway Drug: The Myth That Will Not Die | Healthland | TIME.com
This is moot as it relates to the discussion of Greg Garmon. It's illegal, he knows its illegal, yet he still chose to do it and in front of the prospects of being a couple months away from competing for a starting job at a Big Ten university.
It shows very poor judgement and sketchy priorities. Very poor.
This is moot as it relates to the discussion of Greg Garmon. It's illegal, he knows its illegal, yet he still chose to do it and in front of the prospects of being a couple months away from competing for a starting job at a Big Ten university.
It shows very poor judgement and sketchy priorities. Very poor.
Not everyone can live up to your high moral standards.
Swing, and a miss.
Wrong.
Nope. Still missed the point. Moral standards have nothing to do with whether a member of a team makes a conscious decision to not abide by a rule. That's poor judgment, morality is not in play. If KF had a team rule against hunting bears and Vandenberg decided to whack that black bear anyway, he'd be no different. The existence of the rule in the larger context of the team and whether an individual decides he wants to be a part of that team and follow the rules is the message, not his personal opinion on the merits of the rule. There's always other teams and options to pursue if this set of rules doesn't fit within one's own moral standards.
Does Garmon deserve another chance? Personally, for this type of infraction, being a first time offender, I think he does. But if KF decides not to, then it's his team, his call.
Swing, and a miss.
copycat.
Nope. Still missed the point. Moral standards have nothing to do with whether a member of a team makes a conscious decision to not abide by a rule. That's poor judgment, morality is not in play. If KF had a team rule against hunting bears and Vandenberg decided to whack that black bear anyway, he'd be no different. The existence of the rule in the larger context of the team and whether an individual decides he wants to be a part of that team and follow the rules is the message, not his personal opinion on the merits of the rule. There's always other teams and options to pursue if this set of rules doesn't fit within one's own moral standards.
Does Garmon deserve another chance? Personally, for this type of infraction, being a first time offender, I think he does. But if KF decides not to, then it's his team, his call.
Here is a thought, why don't we decriminalize marijuana and criminalize the legal opiates being pushed by the drug companies? Oh right, too much $$$$$ at stake for the pharmaceutical companies. I realize the following article mostly focuses on New Mexico but let's not kid ourselves, it is a nationwide problem.
If I had a son and I allowed him to play football from Pop Warner age up through high school and especially if he went on to play college ball for let's say Kirk Ferentz who, judging by his unsympathetic treatment of ARob following at least two concussions that we know about (look up his quote comparing knee injuries to concussions and also academic indigestion) takes an old-fashioned approach to concussions, I would most definitely encourage my son to smoke some dope to alleviate some discomfort caused by taking repeated shots to the head and body and vehemently discourage him from using legal opiates.
I have no idea why Greg Garmon chooses to smoke dope. A great many high school kids do, including myself at that age. I also smoked a little during college as a stress reliever and some enlightenment you might say but quit shortly thereafter. I never felt compelled to move onto stronger illegal drugs.
We need to get over this country's marijuana hysteria. Nowhere in the following article did I see anyone linking using marijuana to using harder drugs. Quite the contrary. But moving on from pills is mentioned.
The word marijuana is not mentioned. Which is unfortunate in a way as it is much safer and less addictive.
Considering the punishment and long-term damage due to prolonged hits to the head that we are just now beginning to understand (but not necessarily accept), I find it shocking that we don't prescribe medical marijuana for football players on a regular basis.
Marijuana should be legalized. No restrictions. I have no dog in the fight.
Except maybe fewer Hawkeyes, specifically running backs, would be shown the door. They would then be treated like all the underage alchohol abusers and only suspended.
From the NY Times article:
"Public health officials here say the spike is being driven primarily by prescription opioids — painkillers like oxycodone, morphine and methadone — whose sales in the state rose 131 percent during the same period. In New Mexico, the overdose death rate from prescription drugs now outstrips that from illegal drugs, the report found."
"Over the last decade, deaths from prescription drug overdoses have risen to unprecedented levels throughout the country, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
“'Every young person I’ve talked to that’s using heroin always started with pills,” said Jennifer Weiss, president of the Heroin Awareness Committee, formed in 2010 to curb opiate addiction in New Mexico. “It’s just been progressively getting worse.' Ms. Weiss’s own son, Cameron, a wrestler and football player at La Cueva High School, a local sports powerhouse, became addicted to prescription painkillers after a series of injuries."
Marijuana as a Gateway Drug: The Myth That Will Not Die | Healthland | TIME.com