As far as you're concerned the police can round us all up and consign us all to concentration camps and you couldn't care less.
Presumably you've posted on police discussion board asking for their opinions too? You may as well mate.
evening all. i spent my day talking to an NBOME user who was hospitalised recently
This doesn't sound good. In fact it sounds bloody terrible. You've found the one Nbome user in a million who'se managed to hospitalise himself? I'm getting a picture of this article already Mike. Make sure you have a picture of him looking like Leah Betts, that'll get em going.
i didn't get that impression from anything this guy has written.
If you guys want a change in the status quo then a public debate needs to be had, this can't happen without ( and would mostly consist of ) media articles.
Many influential people ( Richard Branson for example ) are calling for a re-think, how do they make thier opinions heard ? A mixture of talking to govt and newspaper and TV interviews.
As for the Nbomes, they are dangerous. No question. Its not only clever bluelight chemistry types who have access to bags of the stuff, its anyone with the internet and a credit card. To deny that some RCS are dangerous is as silly as the 'weed makes you a rapist' 1950s view point.
The vendors are selling Nbomes and etizolam to make money, not as a public service, they are not Robin Hood meets Timothy Leory, thier moral standing is not so different to tobacco companies or off licences.
What would be so bad about talking to the police ? The police i have met would rather not bust people growing or smoking weed, they see the damage done to and by drug users on a daily basis.
Obviously i wouldnt be on BL if i didnt have some interest in chems but i can see that things are not black and white.
I'm not argueing with you ismene, i just quoted you as your post is a good example of something i find frustrating. I would like to see alternative theories to the current war on drugs. I see loads of people banging on about prohibition being bad but not so many saying how they would deal with things.
The 'legalise everything' idea does not, IMO, take into account the misery and crime caused by 'hard' drugs.
tl;dr - its a tricky moral and ethical issue, there is no point deny that. When mainstream media raises the issue in an intelligent and reasonable way it should be seen as an opportunity. After all there are plenty of intelligent and articulate bluelighters, if they really want change they should engage with the media and use them to be heard, not chuck vegetables at the evil journos who, after all, dont make the laws
just sayin is all