Asked by kj
Which of the following is true about cannabis?
1. all cannabis products make users feel high
2. vaping cannabis is safer than vaping nicotine
3.THC-free cannabis products do not have any cannabinoids
4. cannabis today has more thc than cannabis a few decades ago
1. all cannabis products make users feel high
2. vaping cannabis is safer than vaping nicotine
3.THC-free cannabis products do not have any cannabinoids
4. cannabis today has more thc than cannabis a few decades ago
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
Short answers: Only statement 4 is generally true. Explanations:
1) "All cannabis products make users feel high" — False. The psychoactive high comes mainly from THC. Many products are low‑THC or THC‑free (for example CBD-dominant products) and typically do not cause a THC-like high.
2) "Vaping cannabis is safer than vaping nicotine" — False (too simplistic). Safety depends on the product, device, additives, and source. Both nicotine and cannabis vaping carry risks; illicit or contaminated cannabis vapes (e.g., linked to the 2019 EVALI cases involving vitamin E acetate) are particularly hazardous. Regulated products may reduce some risks but do not eliminate them.
3) "THC-free cannabis products do not have any cannabinoids" — False. “THC‑free” usually means no (or negligible) THC, but products can still contain other cannabinoids (CBD, CBG, CBC, etc.). Some “THC‑free” labels may also reflect concentrations below a legal threshold while still containing trace cannabinoids.
4) "Cannabis today has more THC than cannabis a few decades ago" — True. Selective breeding and cultivation techniques have increased average THC potency in many commercial cannabis strains over the past few decades.
If you want, I can provide sources, explain cannabinoid types, or summarize vaping risks in more detail.
1) "All cannabis products make users feel high" — False. The psychoactive high comes mainly from THC. Many products are low‑THC or THC‑free (for example CBD-dominant products) and typically do not cause a THC-like high.
2) "Vaping cannabis is safer than vaping nicotine" — False (too simplistic). Safety depends on the product, device, additives, and source. Both nicotine and cannabis vaping carry risks; illicit or contaminated cannabis vapes (e.g., linked to the 2019 EVALI cases involving vitamin E acetate) are particularly hazardous. Regulated products may reduce some risks but do not eliminate them.
3) "THC-free cannabis products do not have any cannabinoids" — False. “THC‑free” usually means no (or negligible) THC, but products can still contain other cannabinoids (CBD, CBG, CBC, etc.). Some “THC‑free” labels may also reflect concentrations below a legal threshold while still containing trace cannabinoids.
4) "Cannabis today has more THC than cannabis a few decades ago" — True. Selective breeding and cultivation techniques have increased average THC potency in many commercial cannabis strains over the past few decades.
If you want, I can provide sources, explain cannabinoid types, or summarize vaping risks in more detail.
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