Urbain
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2008
- Messages
- 3,082
''Surrey police said that 18-year-old Charlie Barker from Wrecclesham, Farnham, died after attending an illegal party in a tunnel under Chobham Common, where he took a drug – 2CI – through a nasal inhaler. 2CI is illegal in the UK, and is commonly eaten, not consumed via a nasal inhaler. Toxicology reports are currently unavailable, but it is possible that 25I-NBOMe was responsible for the death of Barker, a talented and popular graffiti artist, since that is a more usual way of taking it''
So, Mike Powers article, mostly an assault on the NBOMe's, Although Guardian! Oh! ''Toxicology reports are currently unavailable''. Where are you going? Publishing reports as fact!
Again, a massively contradictory paragraph:
''The first death attributed to mephedrone in the UK was that of Gabrielle Price, a 14-year-old from Worthing, West Sussex, who became ill at a house party where she had taken the drug together with ketamine. It was widely reported that she had died as a result. However, a pathologist's report showed the cause of death was broncho-pneumonia following a streptococcal A infection, and that the drugs had played no part''.
Very naughty Mr Powers.
I don't support legal highs as such, steps can be taken to reduce any potential harm, although this can never be wholly reduced. The unfortunate thing with this article is, that it promotes most drug deaths we read about, to be deatsh due to the substance itself. The majority are deaths not induced by the drug itself, but down to other combining factors, such as mixing an upper with a downer, or consuming alcohol. At the end of the day, you make your choice, and take your chance, when you take any drug. Mixing substances together is a reckless coin toss. Additionally, included in the article is a report of someone accepting a substance from a stranger, and ingesting it. Drugs from anyone, even yourself, that have not been tested, will always be an unknown drug, and another chance you take.
So, Mike Powers article, mostly an assault on the NBOMe's, Although Guardian! Oh! ''Toxicology reports are currently unavailable''. Where are you going? Publishing reports as fact!
Again, a massively contradictory paragraph:
''The first death attributed to mephedrone in the UK was that of Gabrielle Price, a 14-year-old from Worthing, West Sussex, who became ill at a house party where she had taken the drug together with ketamine. It was widely reported that she had died as a result. However, a pathologist's report showed the cause of death was broncho-pneumonia following a streptococcal A infection, and that the drugs had played no part''.
Very naughty Mr Powers.
I don't support legal highs as such, steps can be taken to reduce any potential harm, although this can never be wholly reduced. The unfortunate thing with this article is, that it promotes most drug deaths we read about, to be deatsh due to the substance itself. The majority are deaths not induced by the drug itself, but down to other combining factors, such as mixing an upper with a downer, or consuming alcohol. At the end of the day, you make your choice, and take your chance, when you take any drug. Mixing substances together is a reckless coin toss. Additionally, included in the article is a report of someone accepting a substance from a stranger, and ingesting it. Drugs from anyone, even yourself, that have not been tested, will always be an unknown drug, and another chance you take.

