Originally posted by Andy W.:
311 is the police call for public nudity! Their name has nothing to do with weed. 420 is the police call for MJ. You know you are lame when you have to make up a [censored] story to justify being a pothead. Some 311 fan, tool box.

-Andy



Who said 311 is the police code for weed. I guess I missed something. Though 420 is NOT a police code for weed.

Myth #1 : 420 is the police call-in code for "Possession of Marijuana" or "Drug Bust in Progress" or "Hippie Smoking Herb" or whatever.

Bust : It's not. Check cobras.org for all your cop related call-in number codes. The call codes are pretty universal and 420 ain't even on there.

Myth #2 : "Come Together" by the Beatles is 4 minutes and 20 seconds long. And if you know the lyrics, you know they were reeeeeeally [censored]' high when they wrote it.

Bust : Granted, the words to the tune are pretty "wow, man, dude, whoa!" and the Fab Four might have smoked a bit of shake back in the day. But the song is 4 minutes and 16 seconds long.

Myth #3 : April 20th is Earth Day. And you gotta perpetuate the celebration of smoking a bit of the Mother Earth, maaaaaaan.

Bust : Um, check that calendar, Sunshine. Earth Day has been on April 22 since 1970.

Myth #4 : THC (Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol), the element in weed that makes you high, has 420 chemicals in it.

Bust: The number of active chemicals in THC hovers around the 300-315 mark, depending on the strain of bud you're puffin'.

Myth #5 : Dr. Albert Hoffman, the discoverer and synthesizer of LSD first dropped acid at 4:20 p.m., April 19, 1943.

Bust : Well, yes, he did. His notebooks can verify that. And if you wanna get all technical and [censored], he first tripped three days prior--by accident. But acid and weed are two separate drugs. This is just some odd, hippie coincidence.

Myth #6 : When the Grateful Dead toured they always stayed in room #420 of whatever hotel they were at.

Bust : Dead biographer and historian for 20 some-odd years (and author of A Long Strange Trip: The Inside History of the Grateful Dead) Dennis McNally has gone on record as saying this is ridiculous.

Myth #7 : April 20 is National Pot Smokers Day.

Bust : That's true--but it's only on April 20th because of all this 4:20 [censored].

Myth #8 : April 20 is the last day you should plant your seeds.

Bust: This makes no sense. You can grow virtually anytime, virtually anywhere.

Myth #9: The number comes from the children's nursery rhyme "Sing A Song of Sixpence," which is all about drugs. It says, "Sing a song of sixpence, a pocket full of rye. Four and twenty blackbirds baked in a pie." Get it?

Bust : There is no tie-in except for the number and the word "baked." Go to http://writingresources.com/nursery_rhymes/sing_a_song_of_sixpence.html for the real story on the bird-pie thing.

Myth #10 : In the H.P. Lovercaft short story "In the Walls Of Eryx," the protagonist talks of a hallucinatory plant with "shaggy stalk, spikey leaves" and the ability to seemingly stop time. When the slowed-down time in the story is checked, it's 4:20.

Bust: This is the coolest-sounding, coincidental myth, but the story has time checks throughout.



Truth : According to a very trustworthy source, High Times editor Steve Hager, the pot periodical wrote a history in 1998, which found that the 420 phenomenon started in San Rafael High School in California, in 1971. A dozen stoners who hung and smoked together heard of a secret patch of homegrown growing nearby. They decided to meet at 4:20 at the campus statue of scientist Louis Pasteur to begin their search for the secret field o' weed. They never found it. But they started incorporating the time and number 420 into their language to slyly talk about smoking in front of teachers and parents. They then told two friends who in turn told two friends and so on and so on....Further documentation is at 420.com.


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