fking jews.
You stupid dickhead. You utter moron. I've been posting in every single one of these threads as a staunch supporter of the legalisation of all drugs (well, bar one or two). I know you read my posts because I always see you offering commentary on each, so don't use that as an excuse.
You're a fool who thinks his opinion is law, that's all.
Point is that you try to justify the legalisation of certain drugs because they're less harmful than nicotine and alcohol
I have not done that once. I have urged people to confront the hypocriisy of current drug legislation by answering the question: "Why are nicotine and alcohol legal when demonstrably less harmful and addictive drugs are not?"
and therefore must be legalised. That's a load of tosh. MDMA is less harmful than nicotine, yeah, but nicotine in the form of smoking is one of the most fucking dangerous drugs there is.
No shit sherlock.
I, the government, propose that we criminalise nicotine. You now don't have much of a case for the legalisation of the drugs you mentioned, since you thought they should only be legalised because nicotine and alcohol were too.
I did not. It's extremely frustrating that you keep making that straw-man argument when anybody should be able to clearly see that's not the argument I'm going for at all if they read my posts. I am sincerely asking you to just stop being a retard for a second and comprehend what people actually write.
For the record, I actually don't support tobacco being legal any more than I do ice, crack and heroine. I am asking for people, including governments, to take a good hard look at their drug legislation and rationalise it - remove inconsistencies. If their final decision is that all drugs (including tobacco) should be banned then at least it's consistent. I very much doubt that would happen, and instead there likely would be a long intelligent public debate about it. Right now, governments simply shove such issues under the carpet.
I think that arguments concerning choice and freedom are a much wiser approach. Provided that legalised drugs don't pose a threat to the freedom and safety of those who choose to steer clear (hello crystal meth & PCP).
Again I ask you to read my posts: I've never said otherwise. And since you bring up your own past posts, it's only natural I bring up mine: the ones I know you've read and in which I vehemently support various aspects of drug legalisation on the grounds of liberty. Why are you so hypocritical?
Now to confront various inaccuracies because, let's face it, I know moar about this than you.
No, you really don't Neb. Countless times in the past I've mentioned drugs and chemicals and you were woefully naive. You
might have done one or two more later year organic chemistry courses than me but that's a poor substitute for molecular bio, biochem, and a spare copy of the Merck Manual laying around the house.
No it's not the most addictive nor the most harmful.
False. Nicotine most certainly is the most addictive commonly used recreational drug around and you've just done nothing to disprove it with that graph. Do you actually know what dependence means? Hint: it's not at all equivalent to addiction. merely one facet of it. Dependence is generally defined as the point at which your body produces a tolerance to a substance and where discontinuation of the drug produces negative withdrawal effects, often neurotoxic (e.g. stims and opiates).
Psychological dependence, in contrast, is how likely a drug is to produce generally psychological urges of need that leads to repeated use. How likely a drug is to 'hook' someone. Addiction as a whole is a combination of both these factors.
Catch all that? Good, here's a nice read for you:
The Most Addictive Drugs
lol wtf? it's found in minute amounts and naturally produced GHB certainly IS NOT A DRUG. You stupid fuck.
*sigh* So you don't even know what the definition of 'drug' is now? Maybe you should go read some medical literature about GHB because I sure as fuck am not going to sit here trying to convince you that drugs can, in fact, be produced endogenously as well as exogenously.
Ok cool so GHB is good for those things (I'm supposing that what you've said is true). This is not a valid argument for its legalisation for recreational use. Keep in mind I think that it should be allowed recreationally, I'm just pointing out that you're a dud.
Thank you for another logical fallacy in the form of a straw man argument. I never, in fact, claimed that GHB's harmlessness is reason for it to be used recreationally. I produced this as evidence that it was less harmful than alcohol to highlight hypocrisy in current drug legislation.
hehehe. ecstacy is an amphetamine silly! you really don't know wot ur on about. tehehehehehe! :rofl:
Ecstasy isn't
amphetamine, it's structural related to amphetamine because it has an amphetamine backbone. However, it's not produced from amphetamines and its mechanism of action focuses largely on the serotonin and oxytocin neurotransmitter pathways. Specifically referring to MDMA as an amphetamine (or worse, just amphetamine as is stupidly done in the media w.r.t. ice) is like referring to methylphenidate as an amphetamine (again, amphetamine backbone, but different mechanism of action), i.e.: stupid.
What the fuck does that even mean?
Ecstasy is typically used to augment raving via emotional warmth and speeding, rather than to achieve euphoria and chase a high (see why below). I did try using it for that but it's less than ideal and certainly nothing compared to dedicated psychostimulants (euphoria is a result of dopaminergic action, but ecstasy does not produces as much of this).
Do you have any proof of this? I'm not doubting it, and I'm interested.
Only anecdotal - my sister's ex was an eccy dealer and he was of the mind that people simply don't use it in that way (except in that people chew more to continue a night). Looking at the way it's used at ANU I certainly believe that's true. However, it ranks below marijuana in addictive potential (i.e. low) and since a large part of the addictive potential of the amphetamine class stems from re-dosing, it follows that ecstasy does not fit the normal pattern of the amphetamine family in terms of addiction (i.e. it's likely re-dosing is low).
I found two research studies on this specific area and the first states: "It appeared Ecstasy was not conducive to regular and frequent use, because tolerance was reported to develop to the positive effects of Ecstasy, while negative effects increased with use."
The article is here and you should be able to access the entire article via an ANU lab computer (though the sentence I quote is in the abstract):
Wiley InterScience :: Session Cookies
While the second details similar findings: "Acute pharmacodynamic tolerance was, however, evident, with a period between drugs being described as necessary in order to maintain drug effectiveness. This may help explain the low addiction potential of MDMA."
Wiley InterScience :: Session Cookies