SaltyDawg
Well-Known Member
How much is in your system doesn't tell you anything though. As has been pointed out, marijuana stays in your system for weeks or months. There is no test that will tell you how recently someone has done marijuana. All you can detect is that they have done it in the past several weeks or months. This "high" wears off in a matter of hours, but the drug stays in your system for weeks or months. If you usually smoke a lot of marijuana every day, and then one day you don't smoke any, you'll still have a lot in your system even though you didn't smoke any that day and are actually sober.You can test it's just not feasible and not to mention the legalities of roadside blood testing. It's not whether marijuana is in your system it's a matter of how much. No question this is a legit factor in legalization given that driving while high is very dangerous.
It's not like alcohol where it affects you as long as it is detectable. With alcohol, they know you are drunk. With marijuana, they only know that you were high at some point within the past several weeks or months.
This is my point here. The people saying "weed should be legal but driving is a bad idea" need to choose which one is more important. Is driving such a bad idea that it should be illegal? If so then you have to take away the right to drive from anyone who has smoked weed (legally) within the past several weeks or months. If driving after weed is not that big of a deal, then you obviously just legalize it and be done with it.
My position is and has been that driving after weed is not a big deal. Multiple studies support this position. Smoking a whole lot of weed makes you drive like someone who had half a beer or something like that but is still legal to drive and not even close to the legal alcohol limit (as the studies indicate).
But enough people were taking the "weed should be legal but driving after weed is bad" position that I had to call them on it. You can't have both. If driving after weed really is bad, and really is dangerous, then there is no way it should be legal to drive after weed. And since there is no way to test for it, roadside or otherwise, then you either can't legalize weed at all (and this is the main argument against legalizing it in the states that try), or you have to revoke the drivers license from anyone who gets a marijuana card.