phoenixrain88
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2008
- Messages
- 81
I envision the destruction of much of what makes the drug community worthwhile, swept in by the shimmering and illusory wings of the legalization movement.
Indica will dominate. Indica, the weed of TV-and-potato-chips-on-the-couh, the weed of I've-put-in-my-day's-work-and-it's-time-to-shut-down-my-mind. Indica. The body high that lasts an hour, followed by mental sluggishness, physical tiredness, and an overriding fog. Indica, the Valium of weeds.
Not sativa. Sativa often triggers insights which would be damaging to consensus reality. When I smoke sativa, along with my brother and many of my friends, we all report dissociative effects. We are able to view the primates around us as such, to pick out the inherent absurdities of culture, and it is all driven home in such an intuitive and visceral way. The realizations are tectonic in strength. And they are undermining to the capitalist order at their very core.
The consumer is merely a vessel through which product is processed. A drug need only leave the consumer alive to continue using his body to process pill after pill of that drug, and need only confer the IDEA of wellness (viz: statins, antidepressants ...) Food need only fill the consumer's belly. Alcohol need only pacify the consumer and keep him buying more. Capitalism is the reduction of products to the lowest common denominator, with a FEW higher-end options at grossly inflated prices, and with products which -- though in moderate demand -- would undermine the system itself ruthlessly suppressed by individuals acting individually. It's no conspiracy. No collective plotting. Just individual suppression, cogs twirling without knowledge of the greater machine.
If weed is legalized, there will be no more mind highs. There will be intense, mindless body highs, about an hour in duration, and the desire to smoke more, more, more, more until the reasoning and observative faculties are rendered all but moote. The same thing which alcohol, benzos, opiates, and all the other drugs (aside from psychedelics and sativas) induce.
Indica will dominate. Indica, the weed of TV-and-potato-chips-on-the-couh, the weed of I've-put-in-my-day's-work-and-it's-time-to-shut-down-my-mind. Indica. The body high that lasts an hour, followed by mental sluggishness, physical tiredness, and an overriding fog. Indica, the Valium of weeds.
Not sativa. Sativa often triggers insights which would be damaging to consensus reality. When I smoke sativa, along with my brother and many of my friends, we all report dissociative effects. We are able to view the primates around us as such, to pick out the inherent absurdities of culture, and it is all driven home in such an intuitive and visceral way. The realizations are tectonic in strength. And they are undermining to the capitalist order at their very core.
The consumer is merely a vessel through which product is processed. A drug need only leave the consumer alive to continue using his body to process pill after pill of that drug, and need only confer the IDEA of wellness (viz: statins, antidepressants ...) Food need only fill the consumer's belly. Alcohol need only pacify the consumer and keep him buying more. Capitalism is the reduction of products to the lowest common denominator, with a FEW higher-end options at grossly inflated prices, and with products which -- though in moderate demand -- would undermine the system itself ruthlessly suppressed by individuals acting individually. It's no conspiracy. No collective plotting. Just individual suppression, cogs twirling without knowledge of the greater machine.
If weed is legalized, there will be no more mind highs. There will be intense, mindless body highs, about an hour in duration, and the desire to smoke more, more, more, more until the reasoning and observative faculties are rendered all but moote. The same thing which alcohol, benzos, opiates, and all the other drugs (aside from psychedelics and sativas) induce.