In a word:Yes.
What this website is about is recognizing that people will do drugs regardless of whatever entity, government or otherwise, attempts to prevent it by whatever means necessary, whether that means using the legal system to criminalize it or manipulating social pressures to ostracize the act of recreational or addictive drug use of all kinds. Oftentimes, pushing an act outside of societal norms creates a vacuum of information that prevents people from finding reliable facts concerning illegal drugs, whether it be from a pure lack of easily attainable knowledge all the way up to flat-out lies that end up costing more lives than they were intended to save.
That's where we come in.
What Bluelight is is an open forum dedicated to saving lives through its users collecting, reporting, and sharing facts concerning drug use. We believe that human beings have a right to know what they put into their bodies and that they also have a right to make informed decisions with correct information. Most of us are here because we were going to use the drugs anyway and wanted to know how to do it correctly with relatively minimal damage to our bodies. The information on this website has probably saved countless lives. Unfortunately, it have also probably cost several.
The Bluelight Shrine is a testament to this somber reality.
Bluelight the website isn't here to pass judgment on people's choice to use psychoactive substances. Plenty of other people and organizations will gladly take up that mantle. We're here to provide information. Many people use this information to take drugs. There are still others who use this knowledge to
attempt to discontinue a habit that they find destructive. And there are many sections on this website that have nothing to do with drug use at all.
So yes. This website is about enabling, both in the connotation that you used and, also, to enable them to make an informed decision even among the word of mouth misinformation provided by uneducated drug users and the dearth of knowledge that is a result of the drug prohibition enforced practically worldwide. Knowledge is power, and we would rather drug users have that power and live than watch them die in a misguided attempt to protect them.