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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

BDD Social and Information Booth v2 - Effie wants us to put CUM right here

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About D-IX : "...but the war ended before D-IX could be put into mass production..."

I mean I'm glad the Nazi's didn't have it during war but still,
Shaaaaaaaaaaaaaaame
 
^Wow...

Its a super speedball pill! (D-IX, anyway)

I know a good portion of the Nazis were on either methamphetamine or opiates (but to be completely fair, the RAF, USAAF, US Army and the Japanese military were all heavy users of amphetamine and methamphetamine.)

Oh yeah no doubt man, a very close highschool friend of mine is serving in the USAF and they still use what they call 'no-go's and 'greenlight's. I bet you can guess whats in them too, Diazepam for the no-go's and Dex in the greenlights. Now obviously if you walked into a recruiting office and asked them about it they'd look at you like you were retarded but yes they do use them in USAF Combat Control. AMERICAAAAA fuck yeah! lol :p =D=D
 
Woot, first half of my midazolam pill crushed and up my nose, quite painful. I love/hate the way that snorting midazolam makes you instantly cough as soon as it gets into your nose, it a weird feeling, was lucky I twisted my head away from the second line before I coughed as the second line could have been blown halfway across the room. Time to man up and sniff the second line now.


D-IX looks amazing btw, I wonder if someone could convince BigPharma to get it back into production =D They are all about the money, and although there may not be any legit medical uses for that combination, the amount of it that would spill onto the streets and increase their profits would make it worth their while. I think we should start a petition or a mailing campaign to all the big pharmaceutical companies.
 
D-IX sounds insane

and I know all about the "no-go pills" and "greenlights"

That's an awesome name for amphets, didn't MLB baseball players used to call Dexedrine "greenies"?
 
I think we should start a petition or a mailing campaign to all the big pharmaceutical companies.

Whoa, you literally read my mind no shit. I was thinking we have enough Bluelighters to at least get their attention hahaha. =D

edit: to NT: Yeah I believe they did call 'em that, back when MLB was entertaining and competitive i.e Bonds vs. Sosa lol.

Ok guys we were doing pretty good there for awhile. Where the hell did everyone go :?
 
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The mods are working ;)

Lmao, I love my job but I'd trade with them any day. I would much rather do some page editing than shit like having to remove a 400+ lb. heart attack victim from a vehicle 8) ....and it never fails, their families seem to have "no idea" why they could've had a heart attack ..sigh.. :|
 
^How often do you run OD/bad drug interaction/reaction, etc calls?

I'd say about three to five times a week here in Tuscaloosa. The general DOC here is cocaine, and all the bars and clubs only add to the problem. Although a majority of our OD calls (or NR's [non-responsive] as we call them) dropped off drastically after the April 27th tornado but now they've picked back up, more people are starting to go out and party it up again. :\
 
It's not all that bad, but it just isn't for some people. You just have to disconnect from your personal emotions and let your training take over and then it's just like any other job, albeit someone's life could very well depend on your immediate decisions.
 
It's not all that bad, but it just isn't for some people. You just have to disconnect from your personal emotions and let your training take over and then it's just like any other job, albeit someone's life could very well depend on your immediate decisions.

That's the part I'd have a hard time disconnecting my emotions from haha
 
That's where training comes into play, having confidence in your knowledge is key, and also accepting the fact that you just can't save everyone no matter how badly you want to. Once someone's in limbo (might die any second) all you can do is what you can with what you've got. It sounds extremely insensitive but when it comes down to it, all we're thinking about is keeping them alive and stable long enough to get them to an ER, and that's what we do. ;)
 
^It sounds like you're the best of the best too! I just think that I (personally - and this would probably change with the training) would have a hard time with it.

I do a have a few friends in the emergency medicine field (EMT-Bs and EMT-Ps specifically) and they're perfectly normal people so I imagine the training is what makes the difference. :)
 
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