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Upcoming 1-hour TV special: "Ecstasy Rising" on April 1

Excellent collaboration of facts and stories. Very informative for E-virgins, and those who also use the drug regularly.

Very impressed.
 
My theoretical max is 72 and I had an internet radio station running at the same time :)
 
lol sorry, I guess I got used to having 8mbit cable really quickly.
 
everyone who downloads this try to pass it along to your friends or other places on the internet. I'm putting this on soulseek once it is finished downloading.
 
there were a few misleading things that annoyed me, the heroin lacing being one, and the people in the end speaking of MDMA comedowns as if every person, no matter about dose, frequency, etc would get a killer depression after MDMA use. That last thing really annoyed me, especially as I was watching with my girl who never done any drugs and I was hoping for the docu to make a good impression.. looks kinda stupid with me trying to explain afterwards that 'as long as you use infrequently you probably wont suffer any comedowns at all, but erather a pleasant afterglow'.
oh well..
 
Man, ugggghhhh I'm still only getting minimal kbs (like 10). How do I go about turning on ports in my firewall to make it faster? Again, excuse my computer ignorance.
 
ATTENTION TO EVERYONE LOOKING FOR THIS VIDEO!!!

The MAPS Organization now has the video available as a 5-part download!

Just click this link
 
Well actually, if your not looking for above average quality, I just watched the streamed Real Player one. Now having seen it, I have NEVER seen anything like this on television. Amazing how much different this one was compared to all of the past ones.
 
Yeah I watched this the night it first came on. I watched it with my parents hoping they would have a better view on it. My mom hated the fact how it wasn't a documentary about the "bad" things about e, but my dad became really interested in it... I am really glad this documentary was on because I am sure it really helped out with changing peoples views about the drug.
 
sk8punk151 said:
Yeah I watched this the night it first came on. I watched it with my parents hoping they would have a better view on it. My mom hated the fact how it wasn't a documentary about the "bad" things about e, but my dad became really interested in it... I am really glad this documentary was on because I am sure it really helped out with changing peoples views about the drug.

lol my mom fell asleep watching and at the end was still biased as hell, and my dad was real interested, but wouldnt show ne sign besides tellin me to shut up evertime i talked during the presentation.
 
buzzy said:
lol sorry, I guess I got used to having 8mbit cable really quickly.
I've 10meg in-room line in uni and I know what you mean. Pretty easy to get into the habit of thinking "150kb/s? Thats crap, I need to find a faster server!!" :D

I've posted this on another forum I frequent which doesn't have such a kind look on drugs as Bluelight (few do ;)) and its gone over pretty well. Quite a few people have thanked me for posting it and say they've learnt a few things which is really all I was after :)
 
For my money the most important message they got out was the one about governments not being taken seriously when it matters because of the damage they have done to themselves through spreading bullcrap.

All we need is one person to stand up and say "enough".

And the people would follow them........I know I would.
 
very nice show, just had change to watch it.
very good information imo
 
It figures. The ABC special is the single most important media disclosure ever produced on MDMA, and I've been without internet access for the last week. 8(

What a magnificent documentary!

I couldn't stop thinking afterwards how MDMA laws & enforcement has ultimately been a DEA engineered witchhunt solely for the purpose of obtaining large annual budgets. All told, when adding up the federal & local law enforcement costs, judicial costs, annual incarceration costs (greater than $40,000 per prisoner per year), opportunity costs (someone in prison doesn't pay taxes or tuition costs or child support), costs incurred resulting from secondary crimes due being a black market product, etc.

The end result probably exceeds well over 100 billion dollars per year (far greater than what is spent fighting terrorism annually in the US).

Is it any wonder that the DEA and NIDA is fighting so hard to prevent truthful information from being made available? Why they interfere with FDA approved medical research involving MDMA. Or why they fund fraudulent research (like Ricaurte's) designed to produce a specific result.

As far as I'm concerned, the only crime here is that created government agencies who artificially "manufacture" crime in order to fill their coffers each year (100 billion annual dollars). Compound that for 10 years and it equals 10% of the total US Gross National Product (GNP). Think about that...
 
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