johnboy
Bluelight Crew
Parents snap up drug-test kits
By RACHAEL HODDER
20jan01
ONE in three ecstasy-testing kits sold at a Fitzroy bookshop are bought by parents for their teenagers.
Parents buy the kits to pass on a "safe rave" message to their youngsters.
Polyester Books manager Paul Elliott said the $22.95 kits were popular and sold to a wide range of people, including many parents.
He said it was similar to the safe sex message that most parents passed on to their children as a precautionary measure.
Mr Elliott said he assumed the parents thought the kits would help if their children were experimenting with drugs.
"You can't use them in a club. You've got to wear rubber gloves when you do the testing," he said.
Mr Elliott said another testing kit would soon hit the market to cover other lesser-known drugs.
The legal ecstasy testing kits show the presence of the drug's active ingredient, known as MDMA, but not its strength or the presence of other chemicals. Mr Elliott said other coun tries had government-sanctioned testing of illicit drugs.
"In other countries they have laboratories where you can test pills. It is more thorough and scientific," he said.
"If the government is concerned about people hurting themselves that's what they should be doing."
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/common/story_page/0,4511,1627069%255E2862,00.html
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"i think i'll stick to drugs to get me thru the long, dark night of late-capitalism..."
Irvine Welsh
By RACHAEL HODDER
20jan01
ONE in three ecstasy-testing kits sold at a Fitzroy bookshop are bought by parents for their teenagers.
Parents buy the kits to pass on a "safe rave" message to their youngsters.
Polyester Books manager Paul Elliott said the $22.95 kits were popular and sold to a wide range of people, including many parents.
He said it was similar to the safe sex message that most parents passed on to their children as a precautionary measure.
Mr Elliott said he assumed the parents thought the kits would help if their children were experimenting with drugs.
"You can't use them in a club. You've got to wear rubber gloves when you do the testing," he said.
Mr Elliott said another testing kit would soon hit the market to cover other lesser-known drugs.
The legal ecstasy testing kits show the presence of the drug's active ingredient, known as MDMA, but not its strength or the presence of other chemicals. Mr Elliott said other coun tries had government-sanctioned testing of illicit drugs.
"In other countries they have laboratories where you can test pills. It is more thorough and scientific," he said.
"If the government is concerned about people hurting themselves that's what they should be doing."
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/common/story_page/0,4511,1627069%255E2862,00.html
------------------
"i think i'll stick to drugs to get me thru the long, dark night of late-capitalism..."
Irvine Welsh