Originally posted by Joseph K
View Post
Coronavirus
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAll drugs? Several states have made cannabis legal to use and buy for personal use in specific situations. I was unaware of any state allowing any drug.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View Post
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostOK - but it's probably still illegal to push, give, sell etc. hard drugs - but possession is going to be decrimiinalised according to that news item. Will be interesting to see how that pans out.
Comment
-
-
The Newsnight Yet another sensational piece of free publicity for PRH. Nobody ever seems to ask questions about these things.
Why bother to find your own story ?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View Post
Although I'm not so sure about skunk not causing psychosis - in my experience using after using it daily for about seven months and then leaving university (graduating in fact) this was when I first experienced auditory hallucinations after having smoked it. I guess perhaps it might have been something that only occurred when I smoked weed, and thus not a genuine case of psychosis, but in fact, while I continued to occasionally smoke weed in the years after uni, I didn't always experience hallucinations but I almost always didn't enjoy it, would throw up and feel paranoid - pretty stupid really. But then I tried MDMA and discovered that not only did that enable me to smoke trees of weed at a time, but that it could be euphoric, magical etc. though had the misfortune of doing it with cretins, and it was that and speed etc. which caused the psychosis proper.
Despite of but also because of the foregoing I still agree with Hart that all drugs ought to be decriminalised - though I think other aspects of society should be transformed along side of it, for a better set and setting.
Comment
-
-
Don't know about anyone else but I don't find this particularly reassuring - notwithstanding the PM's track record on U-turns.
slow, controlled easing of restrictions that would not have to be rolled back again – a process he[the PM] described as “cautious but irreversible”.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostYes, googling isn't exactly helpful on this one - Princess Royal Hospital Telford, Penguin Random House publishers...
Incidentally, on the question of vaccine hesitancy among health workers, I thought this BBC piece was interesting. It confirms what one might suspect - that people with a wide range of expertise/qualifications can also hold a wide range of views. Doctors are preaching the risks of (any) vaccination, scientists are climate emergency sceptics, economists have divergent views on economic policy. It seems to me that sceptics emerge mainly on the (extreme) right - viz Mr Steve Baker's new "Covid Research Group" - another of his libertarian 'give us back control' running hares.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostYes, I tried "coronavirus PRH" "politics PRH" and "right-wing PRH". Decided it must be Penguin Random House given ts's publishing background.
Incidentally, on the question of vaccine hesitancy among health workers, I thought this BBC piece was interesting. It confirms what one might suspect - that people with a wide range of expertise/qualifications can also hold a wide range of views. Doctors are preaching the risks of (any) vaccination, scientists are climate emergency sceptics, economists have divergent views on economic policy. It seems to me that sceptics emerge mainly on the (extreme) right - viz Mr Steve Baker's new "Covid Research Group" - another of his libertarian 'give us back control' running hares.
Comment
-
Comment