Salandrion
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2011
- Messages
- 192
This past weekend I munched down the last of my tested powder that I had been holding onto since the previous July. Having bought my test kit months after this purchase, I was relieved to know that I lucked out, even though I knew what I had was pure from the love and clean euphoria it gave me. Nevertheless the hunt has began again, and I am very much less confident that she will make an appearance for me this summer.
Granted, I live in a state that is traditionally bad for quality MDMA proliferated freely, that doesn't mean its unobtainable but rather that it would take a serious amount of luck to find your way into the inner circles that distribute the good stuff. I was extremely dismayed when I tested 2 molly's from respected people in the scene and found them to be Methylone and Non-reactive. Admittedly due to the fact that I was under the influence, I'm lucky that the one dealer wasn't massively pissed when I exposed his product in front of his face at the event that I attended. Very cool dude, who was shocked at the results and almost in disbelief of the reliability of the kit itself. This gave me an incredible revelation that MDMA could be on its last breath towards mainstream extinction in summer of 2012.
The electronic music scene is exploding in the United States beyond epic proportions. Without a doubt supply will likely never meet demand here as most MDMA is produced outside of the country due to strict precursor scheduling. We are about to experience a massive shift in mainstream music popularity that has a specific drug associated with its scene, Ecstasy. The problem arrises when not the new kids entering the scene get piped and don't know it, but the old heads that have been around since the early 90s can't tell the difference between the RC's they're getting and the drug that made them fall in love with the scene in the first place. This summer will see a massive increase in "Ecstasy" related injuries and possible deaths due to adulterants and conspicuous consumption that will garner national media attention. This is why we as a community must act now.
I don't know how to go about it, or what channels to go through, but the members of Bluelight that are located in the United States need to formulate a plan to bring DanceSafe and the Trip Project into media attention. There will be a critical moment where the media will grip, and demonize ecstasy as they did in the late 90s and early 2000's but the issue will be exposing the reality that its the dangerous alternatives to ecstasy that are actually causing the harm which will alter public opinion towards harm reduction rather than prevention.
So if you are still with me after this long post, I thank you and welcome any constructive comments and or criticisms you have. We will never have the luxury that European countries do with being neighbors to sensible public policy. If we don't act, not only will the drug we love become extinct, but the aspects of raving (in a ravers case) will largely disappear as the Unity and Responsibility aspect of PLURR will become massively irrelevant.
Much love and keep on keeping on...
Granted, I live in a state that is traditionally bad for quality MDMA proliferated freely, that doesn't mean its unobtainable but rather that it would take a serious amount of luck to find your way into the inner circles that distribute the good stuff. I was extremely dismayed when I tested 2 molly's from respected people in the scene and found them to be Methylone and Non-reactive. Admittedly due to the fact that I was under the influence, I'm lucky that the one dealer wasn't massively pissed when I exposed his product in front of his face at the event that I attended. Very cool dude, who was shocked at the results and almost in disbelief of the reliability of the kit itself. This gave me an incredible revelation that MDMA could be on its last breath towards mainstream extinction in summer of 2012.
The electronic music scene is exploding in the United States beyond epic proportions. Without a doubt supply will likely never meet demand here as most MDMA is produced outside of the country due to strict precursor scheduling. We are about to experience a massive shift in mainstream music popularity that has a specific drug associated with its scene, Ecstasy. The problem arrises when not the new kids entering the scene get piped and don't know it, but the old heads that have been around since the early 90s can't tell the difference between the RC's they're getting and the drug that made them fall in love with the scene in the first place. This summer will see a massive increase in "Ecstasy" related injuries and possible deaths due to adulterants and conspicuous consumption that will garner national media attention. This is why we as a community must act now.
I don't know how to go about it, or what channels to go through, but the members of Bluelight that are located in the United States need to formulate a plan to bring DanceSafe and the Trip Project into media attention. There will be a critical moment where the media will grip, and demonize ecstasy as they did in the late 90s and early 2000's but the issue will be exposing the reality that its the dangerous alternatives to ecstasy that are actually causing the harm which will alter public opinion towards harm reduction rather than prevention.
So if you are still with me after this long post, I thank you and welcome any constructive comments and or criticisms you have. We will never have the luxury that European countries do with being neighbors to sensible public policy. If we don't act, not only will the drug we love become extinct, but the aspects of raving (in a ravers case) will largely disappear as the Unity and Responsibility aspect of PLURR will become massively irrelevant.
Much love and keep on keeping on...
