What are Pot-Shots?
Ashleigh Brilliant writes:
WHAT EXACTLY IS A “POT-SHOT” OR “BRILLIANT THOUGHT?”
Pot-Shots are epigrams, composed according to the following very strict rules.
The length must never exceed 17 English words. Note that this is a maximum. Some Pot-Shots are much shorter. Hyphenated words count as a single word.
Pot-Shots must be easy to translate into other languages. Therefore there can be no use of rhyme or rhythm, idioms, puns, or other word-play.
Pot-Shots should be capable of being appreciated in all times and cultures. Topical and cultural references must be avoided.
Every Pot-Shot should be as different as possible from every other one.
Every Pot-Shot must be totally original, and unlike anything else the author, or anyone else, has ever said before.
The words of a Pot-Shot must be able to stand on their own, and not require any illustration in order to be understood or appreciated.
Whatever is being said should be worth saying and said in the best possible way.
NOTE: These are ideal standards, and I myself have failed to meet some of them occasionally — but in general I have adhered to them quite scrupulously
Pot Shot at the medical profession and all the other idiots who advocated that smoking weed was “safe” and “effective”, thus they legalized it.
A study from the USC Head and Neck Center, part of Keck Medicine of USC and the USC Caruso Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, suggests that cannabis, the most commonly used illicit substance worldwide, is associated with an increased occurrence of head and neck cancer. A large, multicenter study published in JAMA Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery revealed that adults with cannabis dependence, known as cannabis use disorder, are 3.5 to 5 times more likely to develop head and neck cancer than those who do not use the substance.
Medicine is lost, we all knew smoking weed was not “safe” but we had to get numerous people sick with CANCER to actually acknowledge what we already knew.