Sunday, 19 December 2010

Spice K2: A Legal High to Illegal Drug of Concern

Spice of Life’. Now many countries have either completely banned or are considering ‘Spice’ as an illegal controlled substance. The reason being is that Spice contains potent synthetic cannabinoids, such as JWH-018, JWH-073 and HU-210. These synthetic substances are similar in chemical structure to the active ingredient as cannabis.  Hence, spice is sold as a legal way to get high.

In the United States, some forms of synthetic cannabis found in spice such as HU-210 are currently listed as a controlled substance that is illegal to possess or use. Several states have passed acts making it illegal under state law, including Kansas, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Missouri, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Several other states are also considering legislation, including Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Indiana, and Ohio to ban Spice and any related products under the synthetic cannabis category. At the Federal Drug Enforcement level, the Drug Enforcement Agency considers it to be a “drug of concern”. Spice is considered legal just to the north in Canada.

Professor Fabrizio Schifano, Scientific Director of the Psychonaut Web Mapping Project (www.psychonautproject.eu ) which is a web scanning project devoted to finding and alerting others to the introduction of new recreational drugs states that: “Spice is sold as a legal substitute for cannabis and our study has identified a number of websites offering both information and purchase opportunities”.  He goes on further to state that “Our concern is that very little is known about both human metabolism and toxicity of these compounds. We plan to use this study, the first multilingual review of Spice, to raise awareness among health professionals that the World Wide Web is a new resource for the drug and therefore more information is needed about its effects.”

One of the biggest concerns of Drug Treatment Professionals is that Spice products can be easily bought online and have mass appeal especially with a younger audience looking for new ways to get high. The word spreads quickly on forums, chat groups and social networking sites about its use, where, and how to buy it. In addition, those working in law enforcement and drug treatment programs have very little options when it comes to drug testing for Spice. Only until recently have a few drug testing services been able to successfully detect metabolites in urine samples related to the use of Spice.

No official studies have been conducted on its effects on humans.  Although the effects of synthetic cannaboids are not well documented or understood, recent evidence reports that large doses can have negative effects that are not found among marijuana users, such as increased agitation and vomiting. Professor John W. Huffman who first synthesized many of the cannabinoids used in synthetic cannabis is quoted as saying, “It’s like playing Russian roulette. You don’t know what it’s going to do to you.” Also reports of daily use by individuals over a three month period produced withdrawal symptoms similar to those found in narcotic users.

This article has been provided courtesy of National Therapeutic Services Inc. (www.livingsober.com) located in Southern California offering one of country’s premier drug and alcohol treatment programs for drug and alcohol addiction including treatment of dual-diagnosis disorder.


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Holiday opening hours

Elegalhighs.com will be open throughout the Christmas period. The only working days we will be closed over Christmas are December 25th and December 26th.. we will close at 6pm December 24th and will re open at 11am on December 27th.

You will still be able to place orders during this time but orders placed after 3pm (GMT) December 24th will not be shipped until we return on December 27th.

Additionally we will be closed New years day, we will close at 3pm new years eve and will re open January 2nd at 11am.

We would like to wish everyone a very merry Christmas and  look forward to your continued trade.

If you are from the Manchester area and are looking for some last minute Christmas gifts, why not check out Hedtonik in rushholme, Manchester

Diablo party pills are back in stock

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Friday, 17 December 2010

'Legalise and regulate drugs' says UK's former drugs and defence Minister



Bob Ainsworth MP, former Home Office drugs minister and Secretary of State for Defence, will call for the legalisation and regulation of drugs during a Parliamentary debate he is leading in Westminster Hall, at 2.30pm, Thurs 16th December 2010.

Mr Ainsworth said;

“I have just been reading the Coalition Government’s new Drugs Strategy. It is described by the Home Secretary as fundamentally different to what has gone before; it is not. To the extent that it is different, it is potentially harmful because it retreats from the principle of harm reduction, which has been one of the main reasons for the reduction in acquisitive crime in recent years.

However, prohibition has failed to protect us. Leaving the drugs market in the hands of criminals causes huge and unnecessary harms to individuals, communities and entire countries, with the poor the hardest hit. We spend billions of pounds without preventing the wide availability of drugs. It is time to replace our failed war on drugs with a strict system of legal regulation, to make the world a safer, healthier place, especially for our children. We must take the trade away from organised criminals and hand it to the control of doctors and pharmacists.

As drugs minister in the Home Office I saw how prohibition fails to reduce the harm that drugs cause in the UK, fuelling burglaries, gifting the trade to gangsters and increasing HIV infections. My experience as Defence Secretary, with specific responsibilities in Afghanistan, showed to me that the war on drugs creates the very conditions that perpetuate the illegal trade, while undermining international development and security.

My departure from the front benches gives me the freedom to express my long held view that, whilst it was put in place with the best of intentions, the war on drugs has been nothing short of a disaster.

Politicians and the media need to engage in a genuine and grown up debate about alternatives to prohibition, so that we can build a consensus based on delivering the best outcomes for our children and communities. I call on those on all sides of the debate to support an independent, evidence-based review, exploring all policy options, including: further resourcing the war on drugs, decriminalising the possession of drugs, and legally regulating their production and supply.

One way to do this would be an Impact Assessment of the Misuse of Drugs Act in line with the 2002 Home Affairs Select Committee finding – which included David Cameron – for the government to explore alternatives to prohibition, including legal regulation.

The re-legalisation of alcohol in the US after thirteen years of Prohibition was not surrender. It was a pragmatic move based on the government’s need to retake control of the illegal trade from violent gangsters. After 50 years of global drug prohibition it is time for governments throughout the world to repeat this shift with currently illegal drugs.”
Peter Lilley MP, former Conservative Party Deputy Leader said
“The current approach to drugs has been an expensive failure, and for the sake of everyone, and the young in particular, it is time for all politicians to stop using the issue as a political football. I have long advocated breaking the link between soft and hard drugs – by legalising cannabis while continuing to prohibit hard drugs. But I support Bob Ainsworth’s sensible call for a proper, evidence based review, comparing the pros and cons of the current prohibitionist approach with all the alternatives, including wider decriminalisation, and legal regulation.”
Tom Brake MP, Co-Chair, Liberal Democrat Backbench Committee on Home Affairs, Justice and Equalities said;
“Liberal Democrats have long called for a science-based approach to our drugs problem. So it is without hesitation that I support Bob Ainsworth’s appeal to end party political point-scoring, and explore sensitively all the options, through an Impact Assessment of the Misuse of Drugs Act.”
Labour’s Paul Flynn MP said;
"This could be a turning point in the failing UK 'war on drugs.' Bob Ainsworth is the persuasive, respected voice of the many whose views have been silenced by the demands of ministerial office. Every open rational debate concludes that the UK's harsh drugs prohibition has delivered the worst outcomes in Europe - deaths, drug crime and billions of pounds wasted."
ENDS

Contact:

Neil Smith, Office of Bob Ainsworth MP SMITHN(at)parliament.uk
Martin Powell, TDPF head of campaigns martin(at)tdpf.org.uk
Steve Rolles, TDPF Senior Policy Analyst steve(at)tdpf.org.uk
Transform Office 0117 941 5810

Notes for Editors:

Bob Ainsworth MP has represented Coventry North since 1992 and has held a number of shadow and ministerial positions including: Home Office - Parliamentary secretary, with responsibility for drugs (Jun 2001 - Jun 2003)
Deputy Chief Whip (June 2003 – June 2007)
Minister for the Armed Forces (June 2007 – May 2009)
Secretary of State for Defence (June 2009 – May 2010)
Shadow Secretary of State for Defence (May 2010 – October 2010)

Bob Ainsworth's Blog Biography and Guardian profile
For more information on calls for an Impact Assessment of our approach to drugs see: Transform / IDPC briefing: 'Time for an impact assessment of drug policy' .
David Cameron on drug law reform : Tory contender calls for more liberal drug laws(Independent 2005)

As a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee inquiry into drug misuse in 2002 David Cameron voted in favour of recommendation 24: “We recommend that the Government initiates a discussion within the Commission on Narcotic Drugs of alternative ways—including the possibility of legalisation and regulation—to tackle the global drugs dilemma (paragraph 267).” The Liberal Democrat party policy recognises “The failure of prohibition”, supports decriminalisation of drugs, and calls for an audit comparing the current approach with the alternatives. Lib Dem drug policy paper. Lib Dem manifesto

There is a long history of those involved in developing or delivering drug policy supporting reform once out of office. See Transform's 'supporters of reform' archive which includes: - Former drugs Minister Mo Mowlam: 'Fight terror: legalise the drugs trade' (Guardian 2002)

- Julian Critchley, former Director of the UK Anti-Drug Coordinating Unit: 'All the experts admit that we should legalise drugs' (Independent 2008)

The difference between decriminalisation and legalisation:Decriminalisation is the removal of criminal sanctions for the production, supply or use of an illegal drug. Civil or administrative sanctions, such as a fine or requirement to enter treatment, may remain, even if criminal sanctions (resulting in prosecution and a criminal record) are removed. In popular usage, the term 'decriminalisation' usually refers to the removal of criminal sanctions for possession of drugs for personal use, while sanctions often remain for the production or supply of drugs.

Legalisation and regulation - ‘legalisation’ is a process - moving away from absolute prohibition - and does not specify what legal framework to regulate production, supply and use of drugs replaces it. ‘Legalisation and regulation’ is not the free for all some have envisaged, and is not a free market model as espoused by some libertarians. Instead it involves controls on producers, products, vendors and consumers. For example models of strict legal regulation see Transform's 2009 publication: “After the War on Drugs: Blueprint for Regulation”

'The Nation' magazine special issue / cover feature on ending the Drug War


Great to see yet more mainstream media coverage of the drug law reform debate, this time in a special issue  of The Nation Magazine. The cover story includes a visual riff on the logo of the infamous D.A.R.E drug prevention program, a gag used previously by Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP is covered in one of the feature articles, by SSDP director Aaron Houston - see below).  

Watch Speakers from Transform's 'Ending the War on Drugs' Event

We have now uploaded footage of the speakers at our 'Ending the War on Drugs' event which has held last month in London.
This was a really successful event, with some great speeches from a range of people who each provided their own particular insight into the so-called 'War on Drugs'.
The speakers are Angus MacQueen, award-winning documentary maker and director of the recent Channel 4 series 'Our Drugs War'; Carel Edwards, former head of the European Commission's Anti-Drug Coordinating Unit; and Misha Glenny, a specialist on Southeastern Europe and author of 'McMafia: Seriously Organised Crime'.

Angus MacQueen speaking at Transform Event from Transform on Vimeo.


Carel Edwards speaking at Transform Event from Transform on Vimeo.

Misha Glenny speaking at Transform Event from Transform on Vimeo.


Legal Highs for Your Next Party

Legal highs can be enjoyed as a solo event, a party for two or as a boost to make a social gathering a much talked about occasion.  If you are planning a party and want to make sure that everyone has a really fantastic time, there is a whole load of products that you can buy to get the fun underway.

Decide the mood for your party, then get online and buy some social tonics.  Before you start flashing the credit card, do check that all the people invited to your party are happy to participate.  You don’t want the party to finish before it begins because of a disapproving few.

You can choose pill and potion stimulants, powders that will make the world a more colourful place, and pills that will bring you down when the party is over. 

You can buy a selection of smoking mixtures and have a bong or hookah pipe where guests can enjoy a puff of, for example, Mellow Yellow, designed to put everyone in a fabulous mood.  If you have a multi-pipe hookah, then use that.  You and your guests can then enjoy a truly social experience.

If mellow isn’t the party atmosphere that you’d intended, get some Red Ball, a blend that will have your guests dancing all night.  A smoking blend such as Amsterdam Gold will add a slight buzz to your party, while Chill will have everyone in a very serene state.

Posted in Herbal Highs, Legal Highs, Smoking by jungle at December 13th, 2010.
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The Wide Array of Legal Highs

There are a number of ways that you can choose to enjoy an altered state with a legal high.  There are hundreds of products on the market, and you can browse the internet and choose one or a combination of natural plants and herbs that will give you a pleasurable experience.

One of the easiest legal highs to enjoy is herbal incense.  Apart from adding an herbal mix to your burner and lighting the candle, you do not have to do anything else apart from lie back and chill out.  The warmth of the flame will release the fantastic herbal properties that will then drift around the room and provide you with a mystical experience.

If you want to dance until dawn then try some party snuff.  Party snuff is available with different combinations of ingredients, but all of them are guaranteed to turn up your volume.  You can pop some snuff in your handbag or pocket; it is portable and can be shared by you and your friends.

If you want to intensify your love life then there are loads of different products on the market that will turn your normal lovemaking into an unforgettable erotic occasion.  Whether you want to prolong the pleasure or make it more sensational, there are pills and herbal blends that are mind-blowingly effective for both men and women.

Whatever state you want to enjoy, there is a pill, tincture, smoking blend or incense that will make your fantasy turn into reality and back into pleasurable fantasy.

Posted in Drug Information, Herbal Highs, Legal Highs, Smoking by jungle at December 17th, 2010.
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The beautiful world of bongs

A bong is a device that has become associated primarily with illegal substances, although in truth it can be used to smoke many other products, including tobacco and other legal highs. Bongs can come in all shapes and sizes.

While bongs are traditionally made out of glass, the acrylic bong has become increasingly popular due in part to the fact that they are a lot easier to clean and a lot harder to accidentally break than the more common glass bongs. Acrylic bongs are also often quite a bit cheaper than their glass counterparts, and are available in a more interesting variety. Glass bong users, such as fans of roor bongs, claim that they give generally smoother ‘pulls’ than their acrylic rivals. Bongs have been around for a very long time, having been used for a great many centuries in countries such as Thailand and Laos. Often, multi-pipe bongs are used in cultural ceremonies.

The appeal of the bong, as opposed to other methods for smoking various substances, is that the water in the bong helps cool the substance, thus cutting down the chances of burning either the mouth or the lungs. The water can also help to trap heavier particles and some soluble minerals, giving a kind of “filtration” effect and preventing some of the more toxic elements of the substance from entering the user’s body. There are several studies that do indeed back up this widely held belief, suggesting that smoking with a bong is safer than smoking unfiltered.

In some countries, the bong is sold specifically as a tobacco inhaling device, thus allowing them to remain on sale.

Posted in Bongs, Herbal Highs, Legal Highs, Smoking by jungle at December 9th, 2010.
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Thursday, 9 December 2010

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Wednesday, 8 December 2010

10 best legal highs

dreamssofblue says:December 7, 2010 at 12:12 pm

i would like to notify all that opiates target all cb1 receptors in the body. that means it can kill you easy with a small overdose as it hits the cb1 receptors in youre vital organs. marijuana does not and you cannot overdose on it. the cb1 receptors become saturated and cannot take in any more thc. through my research i did note it was possible to die from marijuana if you could somehow smoke 1500 pounds of it in 14 minutes or less. the cause of death.. you guessed it , smoke inhilation.

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Portable Vaporizers

There are a wide variety of on the market today.  Here are three of the most popular.

Vapo2 Pocket Vaporizer

The Vapo2 Pocket Vaporizer is an affordable and portable vaporizer, meaning that you can enjoy a smoke wherever you are.  It can easily fit into a handbag or a pocket, so you will hardly even notice you are carrying it around.  And although it is compact, it is effective.  It will still pack a punch when you use it.  It is a robust little device and can easily be lit with an everyday lighter.

When lit it releases the vapour of the herbs and oils of the herbal mixture preventing the CO, CO2 and NH3 from reaching you.  You get your high from purely herbal ingredients, and there are no chemicals to give you that horrible feeling the next day.

Iolite Vaporizer

The Iolite Vaporizer hails from Ireland and is another pocket-perfect beauty.  It runs on butane gas and can run for about two hours before it needs to be re-filled.  It can warm up 500mg of herbal mixture in 45 seconds, giving you a 15-minute vaporization experience.  It is tough and durable and comes in range of colours.

VaporGenie Herbal Vaporizer

This little vaporizer gently heats your herbal mixture so that there is no burning.  You enjoy just the intense flavour without any smoke.  The filter will never need replacing; the unit will not clog up with tar, and can be lit by an everyday lighter.  You can choose between a light maple and a black finish.

Posted in Herbal Highs, Legal Highs, Vaporizers by jungle at November 6th, 2010.
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Health Risks of Legal Highs

Legal highs are coming more and more under the microscope as government and health officials work together to impose a temporary ban on these substances.  Although legal, it is thought that some legal highs contain illegal substances.  It is important, if you buy a legal high, that you know exactly what you are buying.

Even though legal highs are made from herbs and plants, that does not always equate with safe.  Many plants are poisonous or have properties that can have an adverse effect on some people.  Just like prescription medicines some people have an allergy or adverse reaction when taking some legal highs.

Many of the substances found in herbal highs have never been tested to show that they do not possess any potential threat to health.  Mixing the herbal high with alcohol or other herbal substances could be creating a concoction that can create a huge risk to you, including death.

Some of the conditions that have been experienced by legal high users include paranoia, seizures, coma and death.  People have also experienced drowsiness and loss of inhibitions.

If you do take legal highs, the effect of the herbal pill or smoke should wear off after a few days.  Keep taking lots of exercise in fresh air and drink lots of water.  If you find that you take a legal high and suffer an adverse reaction, or you experience negative problems a few days after taking them – go to your GP as soon as possible and get the situation checked out.

Posted in Drug Information, Herbal Highs, Legal Highs by jungle at November 9th, 2010.
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Using Bongs for Legal Highs

The term “bong” tends to conjure images of stoned undergraduates, laughing gormlessly and talking drug induced claptrap. But bongs aren’t exclusively for the use of illegal drugs – you can experience perfectly legal highs by using them.

The principal behind them is simple: fumes are inhaled only after they have passed through a vessel of water, a process which is believed to enhance the smoothness of the flavour and experience of smoking, much more so than, say, using a traditional pipe.  So, completely legal substances such as tobacco can be passed through a bong.

The water cools the fumes and partially filters them as they pass through it, absorbing some of the more toxic substances before the burned gases reach the smoker’s mouth and lungs (other liquids besides water can be used).  It would, however, be a mistake to conclude that smoking with a bong is a risk-free business: it does not make smoking tobacco, for instance, safe – it merely cools the smoke and removes some, not all, of the toxins.

Because the principal is so simple, making bongs depends entirely on the creativity and ingenuity of the individual who wants to try the experience out.  If cash-strapped students can fabricate them at the drop of a hat, anyone can.  Generally speaking, though, most people tend to buy them ready-made just for convenience.  They vary from exquisitely well-crafted and elegant hand-blown glass water pipes (although these tend to be on the expensive side) to functional, acrylic mass-produced versions and relatively cheap “travel” bongs.

Posted in Bongs, Legal Highs, Smoking by jungle at November 13th, 2010.
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Vaporizers – a great way to experience your herbal highs

A vaporizer is an item used to extract ingredients from various kinds of plant material, including tobacco and other herbs that can be used to create legal highs. Vaporizers help the active ingredients in the herbs to heat up to such an extent that they come off as vapour, which can then be either directly inhaled via a hose or pipe, or collected in some kind of container, such as a jar.

They require less plant substance to achieve the same result as smoking, and the vaporizer produces little to no smoke. This eliminates the dangers of secondhand smoking (should the substance be tobacco) while even cutting down on and often removing the elements that cause harmful effects to the user. Vaporizers are not only used by those wishing to get high; they have been known to be used by chefs who use them to release flavours from various herbs and spices that would otherwise remain hidden. 

Vaporizers come in many different forms. In addition to the ‘normal’ vaporizer, there are also handheld vaporizers, which are very compact and easy to use, and in many cases do not even require electricity or batteries to work. They are also relatively cheap vaporizers, particularly compared to the more modern digital vaporizer.

Another popular form of vaporizer is known as the volcano vaporizer. This was designed by a German company and actually won the 2003 Dr. Rudolf Eberle Prize for outstanding technical design and innovation. It is believed to be the single best vaporizer available today. 

Vaporizers are generally regarded as a much healthier way of inhaling than bongs and most other methods, because it reduces the carcinogenic effect to almost nothing, while maintaining the desired effect.

Posted in Herbal Highs, Smoking, Vaporizers by jungle at November 17th, 2010.
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Bong Cleaning Accessories

To keep your bong in perfect working order, you will have to give it some TLC to make sure that the device is maintained and working properly.  There is a whole list of accessories that you will have to buy to keep it clean and working efficiently.  Bong brushes and bong cleaners are just a couple of the things that you will need to consider when you buy a bong.

Bong Brush

First of all, you will need a down tube cone bong brush.  When you have used your bong you will have to empty and clean the device.  The brushes come in different sizes, dependent on the size of your bong, and can get to these difficult to reach places.  The brushes have stiff bristles to make sure that they can clean even the most stubborn stains.

Bong Cleaner

There is a range of cleaners that are specifically designed to clean your bong.  Make sure that the product that you buy is meant for your type and make of bong.  Bong cleaners are non-toxic and can be safely used on any part of your bong.  No smell or aftertaste is going to spoil your next bong experience.

Air Freshener

Now that you have cleaned your bong, you can freshen up your room.  Any reputable legal high shop or website will be able to help you choose a suitable product.  A spray into the air or on to any fabric will soon eliminate any lingering odours.

Posted in Bongs, Herbal Highs, Smoking by jungle at November 21st, 2010.
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Bongs for All

Bongs are similar in construction to the familiar water pipes or hookahs that have been used for many centuries across the Middle East. Bongs come originally from Thailand and Laos where they, like hookahs, incorporate the use of water as a coolant and filter for the smoke produced by herbal mixtures. The cooling effect of the water makes for a more comfortable smoking experience, and various aromatic additions enhance the relaxed mood.

The water is effective in filtering out harmful toxic substances such as the larger molecules that make smoking tobacco so dangerous, say enthusiastic users of the bong. You may add to this that using a bong is less addictive than smoking cigarettes, and is part of a communal experience, with multi-pipe bongs very popular as the centrepiece of a gathering. 

Roor bongs are the aristocrats of the bong world. These hand-blown glass bongs combine supreme functionality with exquisite design to make Martin Birzle’s Roor bongs some of the most sought-after pieces of equipment in the bong world. They can be used as decorative items as well as used for smoking herbal mixtures. These cult objects offer the ultimate experience for using legal hallucinogenic herbal products.

Acrylic and aluminium, as well as the traditional wooden bongs, are popular, but glass bongs are generally considered the most pure form of bong because no material residue caused by the heating process is contributed to the smoke.

Using bongs is a great alternative to cigarette smoking, and the bongs themselves are often highly prized as works of art in their own right.

Posted in Bongs, Smoking by jungle at November 23rd, 2010.
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Try something new with blunts

“Blunt” is a slang term for a tobacco cigar filled with an herbal high mixture instead of the normal tobacco.  There are various stories about the origin of blunts, but one is that it was invented in New York in the 1980s in the Jamaican community.

The name comes from the cigars with the brand name Phillies Blunt, as this is the preferred type of cigar for this purpose.  Other cigars that are used include Dutch Masters and White Owl.  The leaf wrapper of a Blunt cigar doesn’t fall apart when users make an herbal high blunt.  Lots of other cigar brands are not up to the procedure and crumble.

Another reason for the popularity of using the Phillies Blunt cigar is that users prefer the sweeter smoke linked to this brand.

The tobacco wrapper burns slowly, meaning that the blunt can be enjoyed over a longer period of time.  It is also highly portable.  A smoker can enjoy a portion of the blunt at different times.  It is easy to extinguish, store in your pocket and bring it out later for another smoke.  Just use an everyday lighter to light; there is no hassle to enjoying this herbal high.

How to Make a Blunt

It is simple to make your own blunt.  Buy a suitable cigar, slice lengthways with a razor and remove the tobacco.  Fill with your own preferred herbal mix, lick the outside of the paper and re-attach the two sides.  Light the cigar and enjoy.

Posted in Blunts, Smoking by jungle at November 26th, 2010.
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An Overview of Legal Highs

Legal highs are a legal alternative to illegal drugs – products that can be taken to achieve a similar effect to banned substances but which avoid the risk of running afoul of the law.  All legal alternatives are herbal, obtained from plants, herbs and oils from around the world.  This means that they are completely natural and contain no chemicals that can leave you with a fuzzy head the next day.

There are a number of different ways that you can enjoy your legal high; pills, snuffs, incense and herbal mixes that you can smoke or inhale.  Just pick your favourite method and relax with your favourite herbal high.

There are a whole range of herbal highs that can get you into a variety of moods.  You may want to pop a pill to get in the party mood, or you may decide that you want to spend an evening chilling out and lay around breathing in the lovely aroma of your favourite herbal incense.

Of course, after your all night partying you may need to take something to come back down to planet Earth, or to get you nodding off after a stressful day.

Whatever reason you choose to take an herbal high, or whatever method or mixture of herbs you choose to enjoy, you can be sure that there is one for you.  By experimenting with the herbal highs that are available, you will soon have a personal list of firm favourites, perfect for any need or occasion.

Posted in Drug Information, Herbal Highs, Smoking by jungle at November 29th, 2010.
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Bongs and water pipes

Bongs, or water pipes, use a filtration system involving water to smoke plant products, tobacco and various other substances. They resemble hookahs in their construction, and the results are similar too. Bongs are made from a wide range of materials and come in various shapes and sizes.

You can actually easily make your own bong using any container that is air- and water-tight, by the addition of a screened bowl and slide apparatus, and making a hole in the lower part of the bong to allow air to get in.

The term ‘bong’ has a Thai origin, where it refers to any tubular pipe or container cut from bamboo, and bongs have been used for many centuries across Laos and Thailand.

Users of hookahs and bongs claim that the cooling effect of the water makes smoking through them safer than smoking cigarettes, and incidentally keeps larger molecules out of the smoker’s system.

Independent research however has found that the bongs and hookahs actually are more efficient at filtering out the desired psychoactive elements in herbs and less good at filtering out tars, so it takes longer to achieve the mild sedative effect that the smokers are after.

Glass bongs are preferred by purists because there is no residue that burns off with the smoke as can occur with wood, acrylic, aluminium and other materials used for bong construction.

Acrylic bongs, on the other hand, are cheaper and less likely to break when you and your fellow partakers start to get into the party mood.

Posted in Bongs, Legal Highs, Smoking by jungle at December 3rd, 2010.
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Legal Herbal Highs

There are many herbal highs available on the market today, all 100% legal to buy and use.

Herbal Incense

Herbal incense is simple to use.  All you have to do is add a pinch of your favourite mixture to your incense burner, and then sit back and relax.  The burner will do all the work for you.  As you lie back and chill out, the warmth of the flame will send the herbal aroma wafting around the room.  You will just smell the fantastic herbal aroma and enjoy the mystical experience.

Party Snuff

If you want to keep dancing all night but want to avoid the fuzzy head the next day, then there is a choice of party snuffs that you can use.  By choosing to take one of these herbal highs, you can be unstoppable till dawn while avoiding the long arm of the law.

Come Downs

After a long night partying or a more than normally stressful day at work, you may need something to help you come down.  Any time you find that you are jumpier than usual and the thought of relaxing seems a million miles away, taking a come down pill may just be what you need.  Take one or two to get rid of your jumpiness and find yourself in a relaxed state or, alternatively, take three to completely knock yourself out for several hours of much needed sleep.

Herbal Viagra

If you feel that you need to add a little oomph to your love life, don’t worry.  You should be able to find completely natural help with an herbal Viagra product. 

Posted in Herbal Highs, Legal Highs by jungle at December 6th, 2010.
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New digital scales added

We've just added a new range of digital scales to our store catalogue;

RC500 pocket sized scalesRJ500 palm scalesRA50 digital scales ( dual function scales with new item counting function)RB350 Touch (touch screen scales)RE50 Mini scalesRx50 Precision scalesRD350 flick scalesRZ350 Flip top scalesRZ1000 High capacity flip top scales (weighs upto 1kg)RZ100 Precision flip top scales (0.01g)Enjoy this article?

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Acccount section bugs squashed

It recently came to our attention that a few of the features offered on site were not working as expected,

It has been reported that the wish list and promo code features weren't working correctly,

These problems it seems were caused by the new back end system we integrated last month.

We've fixed both of these features now, you should be able to add as many products as you like to your wish list with no issues now, all valid promo codes should also be working correctly again.

Our thanks go out to the customers who let us know about these issues and our most sincere apologies go out to any customers affected by them.

If anyone else notices any other issues, inconsistencies or were unable to use a valid promo code last month, please do not hesitate to get in touch.

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New products added

We have a great selection of new products for you this week, 2 new pills, 2 new incenses and an excellent new powder.

New products:

Mazatec gold solid salvia incense : This new solid incense easily crumbles into a fine golden powder and burns to release an enticing aroma.Jumping nuns : These highly stimulating new pills can really help you to lift the habit - 2 pills per packHerb incense - 3.5g : A unique blend of herbal and nature identical compounds designed for use a ceremonial incenseSpaced - Get spaced with the ultimate in herbal tranquility. 1 pill per pack.Dust - 1g - This stimulating dust prevention powder is a replacement for the now out of compliance charge

Loads of new products just added

We've just added a whole host of new products to our site and there's more to come !

Watch this space as we've got some major store announcements coming soon.

We've added a new range of thick glass bongsNew ethnobotanicalsWe've re worked the "pipes" section of our website, new categories include "Chillums" and "Deluxe pipes" New 'red eye' deluxe pipes added New ceramic bongsNew chillum addedNew range of tight vac's - vacume sealed stash potsEnjoy this article?

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New party packs just added

When compared to purchasing items in our party packs individually

Whether your partying the night away or relaxing at home. There's a pack for any occasion

Visit our party packs section now

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Monday, 6 December 2010

Stimulant

30 August 2010119 views2 Comments

In our present culture, with the rush and fast-pace lifestyle we’re forced to lead, it seems that we are constantly looking for one thing: something to keep us awake. From the high powered s such as cocaine to popular soft drinks and coffee, the need for legal highs drugs is in demand.

Although most people don’t realise it, the majority of all people take s. These may come in the form of a morning cup of coffee or tea, or a mid-afternoon stop at the soda fountain to help keep us going.

Caffeine, which is found in most soft drinks, coffee, tea, and some foods, is an extremely popular . Since caffeine can be purchased by anyone of any age by tossing a few quarters into a machine, few realize that it is actually a drug. Caffeine can cause problems such as headaches and, when one attempts to quite drinking it, can cause withdrawal symptoms.

The name is given to a handful of drug groups which increase the users’ alertness and activity levels. These groups of s include pharmaceuticals like amphetamines,

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Addict Teenager Steals £10,000 in Legal Highs From Headshop

4 September 201072 viewsNo Comment

Richard Burke, a 19 year-old from Donegal Town in Ireland pleaded guilty in Donegal Town District Court to stealing legal high drugs worth

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Hallucinogen

5 September 201069 viewsNo Comment

An is a drug that alters your conciousness, and may induce dream- or trance-like states. These are different from drugs like stimulants which only amplify normal states of conciousness.

Across the internet users have access to legal s which boast of having similar effects to LSD or Ketamine. The only difference? While Ketamine and LSD are illegal to buy or own, the s on the internet market are legal with some even boasting that you can take them into any country without fear of arrest.

Since these s are not illegal, there is no real age limit, although some sites state that they only sell to adults

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Depressant

9 September 2010108 viewsOne Comment

s are what we call substances that make the central nervous system slow down. These usually make one feel calm and relaxed. Illegal s include marijuana and heroin. However, there are also many legal s which people indulge in.

One of the most popular legal high s is alcohol. Beer, wine, and any other sort of alcohol are not usually considered s by those who take them, but they most certainly are. Alcohol works to relax the majority of those who use it. Although many consider alcohol to be good in moderation, it can also become very harmful when one becomes addicted and turns into an alcoholic.

A legal that is often used among children is Nitrous Oxide (also known as

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Police Ban Legal Highs at Bestival

11 September 201070 viewsNo Comment

People attending this year’s Bestival will be denied entry to the event if they try to bring legal highs onto the site, said the organisers. Any person found to be carrying a prohibited substance will be ejected if they refuse to give up the material to security staff.

Hampshire Constabulary police officers will be positioned at Bestival entrance gates to search anyone suspected of carrying drugs. They will provide amnesty bins so anyone can voluntarily surrender any controlled substances before they enter the site. Any person who is arrested on suspicion of possessing illegal drugs will not be permitted to enter the Bestival. What happens to people found with legal drugs is unclear.

Dr. Jenifer Smith, NHS Chief Medical Advisor, said, “We have had a large number of people in our Emergency Department who have taken legal highs such Vanilla Sky, NRG-1 and Ivory Wave. Our medical staff is not familiar with these substances, which can have unpredictable results and may result in long term mental and physical problems.”

Police officers will patrol on cycle and foot to prevent crime and reassure the public. The police will distribute crime prevention lanyards to protect personal possessions, such as wallets and mobile phones.

Alcohol, which is known to cause long-term physical and health problems, will be sold at the event. However, the amount of alcohol that can be brought in by festival goers is limited.

Inspector Terry Clawson, Hampshire Constabulary, said, “We want everyone to enjoy Bestival, and we will control drug use, excessive alcohol consumption and crime. Our officers have years of experience, and we will respond quickly to any problems.”



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Legal High Mephedrone Highly Pure

21 September 2010100 viewsNo Comment

After analysing samples of the drug Mephedrone, scientists at the University of Sunderland in England have revealed that the now-illegal drug is very high in purity. Unlike cocaine and other illicit powders, the impurity levels in the six samples of Mephedrone that were tested were extremely low.

The researchers said that a low levels of organic impurities means it’s very likely that the drug had been created in synthetic chemistry labs. However, the size of the particles and crystalline forms did vary between the samples, meaning the drug is likely to vary in its effect on the user from strain to strain. Risk of overdose is still very low and generally lower than similar drugs like amphetamines.

Mephedrone, which is now banned in most parts of the world, has been the most popular legal high in history.



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Euphoria

3 October 201074 viewsNo Comment

is a state of mind in which there is a great sense of wellbeing. It is usually described when someone is experiencing high contentment and happiness. It usually refers to exaggerated physical and psychological state.

Natural highs such as orgasms, triumph in an achievement, or even during some religious rituals or meditation can cause . can also be reached by taking psychoactive drugs, including legal highs such as alcohol.



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Legalise Cannabis, Argues Leading Expert

3 October 201057 viewsNo Comment

Cannabis is less dangerous than alcohol and tobacco, according to Professor Roger Pertwee, Britain’s leading expert on the drug. He believes that cannabis should be available for recreational use and sold with the same restrictions as those used to regulate tobacco and alcohol. Professor Pertwee proposes that a person apply for a license to purchase cannabis, be over the age of 21 and have a doctor’s approval. A government agency would regulate the drug to control the quality and safety of the products.

Last year the government declared cannabis to be a Class B drug, which carries a maximum penalty for possession of a fine plus five years in prison. Cannabis dealers are faced with a 14-year maximum sentence. This move was against the recommendations of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, whose chairman, Professor David Nutt, Imperial College London professor of neuropsychopharmacology, was fired after criticising the government’s actions and drug policy. Five of his colleagues protested his firing by resigning themselves.

Professor Pertwee wants to reopen the debate on cannabis. He notes that since the drug is illegal, users are forced to buy it from an illicit dealer or grow it illegally. The composition of purchases from illegal dealers is not controlled and no one knows what has been added to it.

There has been concern that using cannabis can cause schizophrenia in a small number of people. Professor Pertwee suggested that doctors should assess a person’s medical history to determine their susceptibility to mental problems before granting them a license.

Professor Nutt said, “Criminalisation of cannabis is irrational since it is obviously less harmful than alcohol, and we must develop new regulations for cannabis. Professor Pertwee’s analysis has merits in fact and should be actively examined.”



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A giant leap backwards as Ban Ki Moon appoints career Russian diplomat as new head of UNODC

 
 It has been confirmed today that UN Sectretary General Ban Ki Moon has appointed the Russian diplomat Yuri V. Fedotov as the new Executive Director of the UN Office of Drugs and Crime. the implications of this move are discussed below. (update 09.07.10 official confirmation here)

Who is Yuri V. Fedotov? 


New poll shows 70% support for legal regulation of cannabis

 
The following press release was issued today by the campaigning group Liberal Democrats for Drug Policy Reform. The blog will explore its fascinating findings in more detail at a later stage. For more information on drug policy and public opinion see Transform's (soon to updated) 2004 briefing Attitudes to Drug Policy and Drug Laws: A review of the international evidence. 
Note: Transform has provided a quote, but has not been involved in the poll, and has no affiliation with the LDDPR 



Three other drugs: Magic Mushrooms, Amphetamines, and Mephedrone show a majority in favour of legalisation and regulation, whilst 3 in 10 people would prefer the state regulate rather than prohibit heroin supply. These poll results demonstrate that the public is ready for a mature, open discussion of alternative approaches to drug policy and that there is no need for politicians to fear a backlash should they express doubts about the wisdom of our current approach.

Rather than just ask whether each drug should be “legalised”, the poll gave brief descriptions of three regulatory options and asked the public to pick which they thought most tolerable for each of a series of drugs. The options were:

Light regulation (drugs sold like tobacco and alcohol are now) Strict government control and regulation (an example of how government could heavily regulate a legal market in an attempt to minimise harm) and Prohibition (the current status of illegal drugs).support for legalisation regulation combnes support for the first two options

Headline results include:
70% support for cannabis legalisation/regulation, with 1 in 3 of those polled feeling that it should be sold in a similar way to alcohol and tobacco. More people supporting legalisation/regulation than prohibition for 3 other drugs: Magic Mushrooms (52% to 34%), Amphetamines (49% to 40%), and the recently banned “legal high” Mephedrone (41% to 39%). 39% support for the legal regulation of ecstasy sales, 36% support for regulation of cocaine, and 30% of respondents supported the legal regulation of heroin. For alcohol and tobacco over 1 in 4 respondents supported strict government control and regulation and 8% expressed a desire for tobacco to be prohibited.
Poll result summary graph 

The Drug Policy Networking Zone at the AIDS 2010 conference in Vienna






  
IAS AIDS conference 2010 in Vienna:
Drug Policy Networking Zone in the Global Village

Transform Drug Policy Foundation and the International Drug Policy Consortium are co-orgainising and hosting the Drug Policy Networking Zone at the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna, Austria, from 17 to 23 July 2010. You can download the networking zone flyer and event schedule here(pdf).

About XVIII International HIV/AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010)

The International AIDS Conference is the worlds premier gathering for those working in the field of HIV, policy makers, persons living with HIV and other individuals committed to ending the pandemic. There will be over 25,000 delegates at the main conference, and the Global Village is additionally open to the public.

It is now clear that stigma, discrimination and human rights violations, as well as punitive or misguided policies towards key populations most affected by HIV, are major obstacles to an effective response to HIV.

Given the 2010 deadline for universal access set by world leaders, AIDS 2010 will coincide with a major push for expanded access to HIV prevention, treatment, care and support. With a global economic crisis threatening to undermine public investments, the conference will help keep HIV on the front burner, and will be a chance to demonstrate the importance of continued HIV investments to broader health and development goals. In this context, the protection of human rights is a fundamental prerequisite to an effective response to HIV.

This year's conference has a special focus on drug policy reform with the launch and pormotion of the Vienna Declaration being one its primary aims.

The Drug Policy Networking Zone

The Drug Policy Networking Zone, located in the Global Village, is a space for sharing ideas, experiences and expertise on drug policy reform. It is also a place to forge new links and develop strategic thinking. We’ve joined forces with the Harm Reduction and Human Rights Networking Zones to produce a ‘mega’ zone with a full schedule of talks, discussions, debates and multimedia running throughout the week. Click here to find out more about the full programme of events that will be taking place in the ‘mega’ zone.


Opening Reception

There is an opening reception of the Drug Policy, Harm Reduction and Human Rights networking zones on Sunday 18th July, 16:00-18:00. All welcome.

Press briefing

We will be holding a press briefing in the Drug Policy Networking Zone from 15:30-16:00 on Sunday 18th July.

Highlights from the Drug Policy Networking zone event shedule include:

What can the drug policy reform movement learn from HIV/AIDS activism?Tuesday 20 July, 16:00-16:45
Civil society actors within the HIV movement have a much stronger presence and a louder voice within drug policy debates than civil society within drug policy reform. This session aims to discuss and debate the essential features of AIDS activism that could inform drug policy activism. ”Beyond a declaration”, how can we continue to move towards drug policy reform?Wednesday 21 July, 14:15-15:15
The Vienna Declaration is a global call for science-based drug policy and is the official declaration of AIDS 2010. The session will feature one of the declaration’s key authors, Evan Wood, from the International Centre for Science in Drug Policy, Steve Rolles from Transform and Kasia Malinowska-Sempruch from OSI. Drug policy and law reform: progress and challenges for the futureWednesday 21 July, 12:00-13:00 and Thursday 22 July, 16:30-17:30
Policies that act as a barrier to drugs services can increase the health risk for injecting drug users putting them at greater exposure to blood-borne infections, including HIV. The panel will look at how lobbying, campaigning and legal challenges against such policies and interventions can lead to law reforms that ultimately provide greater protection to IDUs and enable them to access drug treatment and harm reduction services without fear of being punished.
Volunteering

We welcome volunteers to help us with the organisation and staffing of our zone in the Global Village.  Please contact Marie at mnougier

Transform in the British Medical Journal: 'An Alternative to the War on Drugs'


The British Medical Journal this week publishes a special edition on drug titled: 'Drug users and HIV: treat don't punish'. the cover feature includes a special commentary section on drugs, HIV/AIDS and harm reduction to coincide with the huge AIDS 2010 conference in Vienna that kicks off this Sunday (see this blog for details and Transform's involvement in the Global Village's Drug Policy Networking Zone).


Transform at AIDS 2010 in Vienna: photo blog - day 1


Transform and IDPC are co-hosting the Drug Policy Networking zone in the Global Village space at the huge AIDS 2010 conference in Vienna (see this previous blog for more details). With over 20,000 delegates it is the biggest health conference in the world. Below are a few images from the first two days. More detailed reports from the conference will follow during the week...


Georgia becomes the first country to sign the Vienna Declaration

The First Lady of Georgia announced at a breakfast event at the AIDS 2010 conference today that Goergia would sign the Vienna Declaration, the first country to do so. It is the official declaration of the XVIII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2010).


Our Drugs War : Channel 4 documentary series

On Monday 2 August at 8:00pm the first of a three-part series on Channel 4 'Our Drugs War' will be broadcast.

updated:

Unashamedly anti-prohibitionist in tone, the excellent first part (1 hour) can now be viewed online here.

Here's a link to the article by Angus MacQueen, the series producer in the Observer - 'Why do we so wilfully cover up the failure of the war on drugs?'

This is coverage from the Scottish SUN: 'We will NEVER win the war on drugs'

On domestic and international fronts, reform calls gather mainstream support

There have been two very positive developments for drug law reform in the last few days: On Sunday, The Observer newspaper ran a series of pro reform news and comment features alongside arguably the most unambiguous call for a debate on alternatives to the drug war, including regulation, yet to emerge from a UK broadsheet. Meanwhile, the previous week witnessed the debate making a significant step forward in Mexico when President Calderon joined calls for a debate on legalisation as a response to the country's growing crisis, followed by a clear call for legalisation and regulation by his presidential predecessor Vincente Fox - both statements receiving massive international media coverage.
The Observer.The first piece in the news section united these recent developments. Titled 'War on drugs: why the US and Latin America could be ready to end a fruitless 40-year struggle', with the subheading: 
'Mexico's president Felipe Caldéron is the latest Latin leader to call for a debate on drugs legalisation. And in the US, liberals and right-wing libertarians are pressing for an end to prohibition. Forty years after President Nixon launched the 'war on drugs' there is a growing momentum to abandon the fight' 
The coverage then describes some of the developments in the Americas, from the Mexican president's recent comments through to the growing cannabis law reform activity in California and elsewhere in the US.

A second piece in the Observer is a drug law reform op-ed (also using the Mexican presidential comments as its launch pad) titled 'Drugs: the problem is more than just the substances, it's the prohibition itself' by Maria Lucia Karam, a retired Brazilian judge and board member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP). Using examples from Brazil she argues that:
'Prohibition consigns the drug market to criminalised actors not subject to oversight of any kind. Legalisation would mean regulation and regulation is the best way to control the dangers of drug use, while cutting the cartels off at the knees'.and that:
'Latin America is advancing the debate, but even in the US there are efforts to undo the damage of prohibition, the most prominent being California's effort to legalise marijuana
.
Hopefully, the thousands of Mexicans, Brazilians and people from other parts of the world who have been killed in the insane "war on drugs" will not have died in vain. Their deaths are already showing that it is time to put an end to all the pain and harms caused by drug prohibition; it is time to legalise and regulate the production, the supply and the consumption of all drugs.'Finally, and most significantly, the sentiments in the two features are endorsed in a powerful leader editorial  titled 'A unique chance to rethink drugs policy' aimed squarely at the UK's coalition government, its subtitle clearly stating that 'Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg are perfectly placed to launch a national debate on whether we should try legalisation'. It begins with a withering critique of the drug war: 
'If the purpose of drug policy is to make toxic substances available to anyone who wants them in a flourishing market economy controlled by murderous criminal gangs, the current arrangements are working well.If, however, the goal is to reduce the amount of drugs being consumed and limit the harm associated with addiction, it is surely time to tear up the current policy. It has failed.This is not a partial failure. For as long as courts and jails have been the tools for controlling drugs, their use has increased. Police are powerless to control the flow. One recent estimate calculated that around 1% of the total supply to the UK is intercepted.Attempts to crack down have little impact, except perhaps in siphoning vulnerable young people into jails where they can mature into hardened villains. When a more heavyweight player is taken out, a gap opens up in the supply chain which is promptly filled by violent competition between or within gangs. Business as usual resumes.


The same story is told around the world, the only difference being in the scale of violence. Writing in today's Observer, retired judge Maria Lucia Karam describes the grim consequences of a failed war on drugs in the cities of Brazil: thousands of young people murdered every year by rival dealers and police.


Few nations are untouched by what is, after all, a multibillion pound global industry. Importing countries, such as Britain, must cope with the social effects of addiction and end up squandering the state's resources on a Sisyphean policing task.


But that suffering is mild compared to the destructive forces unleashed on exporting countries. Mexico, from where cartels supply a range of drugs to lucrative US markets, has paid an extraordinary price for the illicit appetites of its rich neighbour. The border region has become a militarised zone with violence at the level of a guerrilla insurgency.The editorial shows an unusual level of insight for a media discourse more often preoccupied with populist parochial concerns:
'Prohibition entails a double dishonesty. First, there is the pretence that the supply and demand can be managed by force. But anyone who has experienced addiction knows that banning a substance restricts neither access nor desire. Usually, it makes matters worse, bringing otherwise law-abiding people into contact with professional criminals. Most addicts, meanwhile, say their problems start with the need to annihilate feelings of despair or memories of trauma. Prosecuting them for those problems solves nothing.


The second pretence of prohibition is that drugs can be addressed within single national jurisdictions. Plainly, they cannot. The UK hosts a retail market for products that are cultivated and processed around the world. Around 90% of the heroin on British streets starts out as poppies in Afghanistan. So revenue from UK drug use funds corrupt officials, warlords and the Taliban, undermining Nato's military operation. Rarely is the connection made in public.'before ending with a direct appeal to the UKs new leaders:

'By its very nature as a coalition, encompassing a broad spectrum of political views, the new government is well placed to inaugurate a free-thinking national debate on an issue that has been constrained by policy blinkers.


Neither David Cameron nor Nick Clegg seems much in awe of political taboos. Both men, in fact, seem to take pleasure in breaking them. But their ability to do so with impunity lasts for as long as there is goodwill towards their project.


This is a moment in which a political leader could steer the drugs debate out of its current dead-end track and towards something more meaningful and more likely to deliver what the public ultimately wants: safer, healthier, happier communities.


It is far from certain that decriminalisation, regulation or legalisation would work. But they should be examined as options, for it is absolutely certain that prohibition has failed'.The position is a useful and pragmatic one, acknowledging the failure of the current policy and inviting an evidence based debate on alternatives, much as the IDPC  call for Impact Assessments of drug policy supported by Transform, has done over the past year.  David Cameron, it is worth repeating, made a not dissimilar call in 2001 when on the Home Affairs Select Committee he supported the recommendation 'that the Government initiates a discussion within the

"Consider Drug Regulation" says ex-president of Royal College of Physicians


The following press release was issued by Transform at 00:00 Tues 16th of August 2010
This post will be updated with media coverage (see below)





In his final Bulletin, the outgoing President of the Royal College of Physicians, Professor Sir Ian Gilmore wrote:
"I feel like finishing my presidency on a controversial note. I personally back the chairman of the UK Bar Council, Nicholas Green QC, when he calls for drug laws to be reconsidered with a view to decriminalising illicit drugs use. This could drastically reduce crime and improve health. Drugs should still be regulated, and the argument for decriminalising them is clearly made by Stephen Rolles in the latest edition of the BMJ."
His comments come in the wake of a flurry of calls for reform from health professionals, in the lead up to the publication of the Vienna Declaration, an international manifesto for reform, which calls for drugs to be decriminalised in order to promote individual and public health.


Danny Kushlick, Head of External Affairs at Transform Drug Policy Foundation said:
"Sir Ian's statement is yet another nail in the coffin of the war on drugs. The Hippocratic Oath says 'First do no harm'. Physicians are duty bound to speak out if the outcomes show that prohibition causes more harm than it reduces. Sir Ian is justly fulfilling his role by calling for consideration of the evidence for legal control and regulation."
Kushlick concluded:
"With a Prime Minster and Deputy Prime Minister both longstanding supporters of alternatives to the war on drugs, at the very least the Government must initiate an impact assessment comparing prohibition with decriminalisation and strict legal regulation."

ENDS


Contact:
Danny Kushlick, Head of External Affairs, 07970 174747


Notes for Editors:

David Cameron calls for debate  legalisation:
As a member of the Home Affairs Select Committee inquiry into drug misuse in 2002 - Cameron voted in favour of recommendation 24:
"We recommend that the Government initiates a discussion within the

Reconsidering addiction: a film about Bruce Alexander's remarkable 'rat park' experiment

.Seven minute trailer for an upcoming documentary by Jennifer DiCresce on Bruce Alexander's Rat Park experiment:

 

The Following discussion on Rat Park by Mike Jay (reviewing Alexander'sbook the 'Globalisation of Addiction') was originally posted on this blog in January 2009:

Bruce Alexander is best known - though deserves to be much better known - for the 'Rat Park' experiments he conducted in 1981. As an addiction psychologist, much of the data with which he worked was drawn from laboratory trials with rats and monkeys: the 'addictiveness' of drugs such as opiates and cocaine was established by observing how frequently caged animals would push levers to obtain doses. But Alexander's observations of addicts at the clinic where he worked in Vancouver suggested powerfully to him that the root cause of addiction was not so much the pharmacology of these particular drugs as the environmental stressors with which his addicts were trying to cope.
To test his hunch he designed Rat Park, an alternative laboratory environment constructed around the need of the subjects rather than the experimenters. A colony of rats, who are naturally gregarious, were allowed to roam together in a large vivarium enriched with wheels, balls and other playthings, on a deep bed of aromatic cedar shavings and with plenty of space for breeding and private interactions. Pleasant woodland vistas were even painted on the surrounding walls. In this situation, the rats' responses to drugs such as opiates were transformed. They no longer showed interest in pressing levers for rewards of morphine: even if forcibly addicted, they would suffer withdrawals rather than maintaining their dependence. Even a sugar solution could not tempt them to the morphine water (though they would choose this if naloxone was added to block the opiate effects). It seemed that the standard experiments were measuring not the addictiveness of opiates but the cruelty of the stresses inflicted on lab rats caged in solitary confinement, shaved, catheterised and with probes inserted into their median forebrain bundles.
Yet despite (or perhaps because of) their radical implications for the data that underpin addiction psychology, the Rat Park experiments attracted little attention. Alexander's paper was rejected by major journals including Science and Nature, and eventually published only in the respectable but minor Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior. Although the experiments have subsequently been replicated and extended, they still inform the science of addiction only at its margins. The Globalisation of Addiction is Alexander's attempt to draw out their full implications for our understanding of addiction, and to chart a course towards forms of treatment that can transform their findings into practice.
His analysis begins with a radical reconception of addiction itself. Throughout the 20th century, as the science and treatment of addiction have developed into vast academic and professional industries, its underlying nature has stubbornly refused to coalesce into any sort of consensus. Is it a physiological condition marked by metabolic responses such as tolerance and withdrawal, a condition produced simply by exposure to 'addictive' drugs? Or is it a psychological affliction, the product of an 'addictive personality' - or, alternatively, a moral weakness, a failure of willpower and abrogation of social responsibilities? And how do these clinical views of addiction relate to the ever-expanding meanings of the term in the wider culture?
For Alexander, all these seemingly disparate accounts are united by their focus on the individual addict; but even a cursory historical and cultural survey reveals that the incidence of addiction is essentially a social phenomenon. Many historical and indigenous cultures have lacked even the concept of addiction - but many of these same cultures, once their traditional structures have been disrupted by conquest or colonisation, have been destroyed by it. All across the Americas, the Pacific and Australia, hundreds of 'demoralised' cultures have descended into vicious spirals of addiction, usually to alcohol, in many tragic cases wiping themselves out entirely. The root causes of addiction, then, must run deeper than any individual pathology: they must be sought in a larger story of cultural malaise and 'poverty of the spirit' that forces individuals, often en masse, into desperate and dysfunctional coping strategies.
Once addiction is recognised as a consequence of broader social currents, it becomes clear that the problem is far more widespread than the professional focus on drugs allows. Uncontrolled and chaotic appetites are extensively diagnosed across our culture not merely for illicit drugs, alcohol and nicotine but for other substances (food), other consumer activities (shopping, gambling), and other sources of emotional support such as romantic love. 'Addictive' is a slogan of enticement used to sell online gaming, exercise programmes and women's magazines. Even successful and high-functioning individuals can often be accurately described as addicted to money, power or status. Throughout the 20th century, these extensions of the concept of addiction were typically marginalised on the grounds that, unlike illicit drugs, these were mainstream activities that generated dysfunctional behaviour only in a minority of subjects. But alcohol has always been both mainstream and addictive, and it is increasingly clear that illicit drugs are used widely without necessarily generating addiction. Any attempt to get to the root of the problem must recognise that addiction is rampant not merely among a subculture of problem drug users but across society at large.
Alexander's search for the drivers behind the modern explosion in addiction leads him to consider the parallel spread of free market societies. Along with their obvious economic benefits, free markets also bring a widespread increase in what he terms cultural 'dislocation'. What were once elaborately reciprocated cultural transactions are reduced to simple commercial exchanges, and 'the competitive marketplace becomes the matrix of human existence'. Social fabrics are loosened as economic winners and losers polarise into their respective ghettoes, and traditional networks of trust are replaced by often brutal demarcations between neighbourhoods and social classes. It is our now endemic culture of competitive, zero-sum individualism that has, in the phrase of Alexander's title, globalised addiction over the last 50 years.
It is, he acknowledges, too simplistic to blame capitalism itself: the fundamental problem, dislocation, can equally be generated by feudalism , communism or any other political system. Nevertheless, a consumer society systemically erodes the sovereign remedy against addiction which, following Erik Erikson, Alexander terms 'psychosocial integration'. This has long been recognised as a necessity for social functioning: even Charles Darwin, whose theory is typically used to support competitive free market ideology, insisted that generating 'social and moral qualities' was a crucial factor in human evolutionary success. Psychosocial integration eliminates the hyperfocused pursuit of individual gratification that manifests as addictive behaviour, and balances individual autonomy with social belonging. Dislocation, though its effects are concentrated among the poor and socially excluded, has pervasive effects on society as a whole, which is why levels of happiness and wellbeing stubbornly refuse to rise in proportion with purchasing power. The greatest modern triumph over drug addiction, in China during Mao's Great Leap Forward from 1949-1955, took place against a background of material poverty but intense social cooperation in rebuilding a shattered society.
This analysis has helped Alexander to understand the successes and failures of treatment programmes in his professional world in Vancouver, where alcoholism and violence remain an intractable problem among many native Canadian Indians. Dislocation, rather than poverty, is their ultimate cause: communities resettled on unfamiliar land can be subsidised to the point where a 4x4 sits in every drive and a satellite dish on every roof, but still manifest higher levels of addiction than those which are allowed to remain in their homelands and follow their traditional subsistence strategies. In the arresting motto adopted by British Columbia's successful aboriginal community projects, 'Culture is Treatment'.
Once addiction is reconceived as a symptom of the dislocation embedded in modern cultures, the practical measures required to manage it become vast in scope. Treatment of addicts needs to become more holistic, and interwoven into a far wider spectrum of social programmes. Education and treatment need to lose their narrow focus on illicit drugs and alcohol, and to encompass addiction in all its forms. Although the prohibition of drugs is a major contributor to social dislocation, legalisation is far from a panacea: the majority of addictions, after all, are to legally available products. (The greatest benefit of legalisation, perhaps, would be to allow communities to determine their own drug policies, thereby providing a crucial lever for increasing psychosocial integration.) Faith-based treatments, whether Christian or more broadly spiritual, have an important role to play: St. Augustine's Confessions remains a powerful template for the addiction recovery narrative, and membership of faith groups can provide an effective antidote to dislocation. Political activism, both global and local, is a tool of social empowerment that can benefit addicts and addiction professionals alike.
All these strategies are eminently sensible, but remain hard to patch into the treatment of addiction as currently constituted. We may accept Alexander's persuasive case that drug addiction, properly understood, is a scapegoat for broader social dysfunction, but it is by no means obvious how to respond effectively. Like it or not, treatment remains focused on individuals, for whom his analysis holds limited explanatory power. Alexander does not deny the existence of personal tendencies to addiction, which may include genetics and neurochemistry, but maintains that they are often marginal factors and poor predictors of individual risk: overall, interventions are more effective at the social level than the personal. But these underlying causes are far easier to identify than to address. Our societies are profoundly structured around the need for individual autonomy; and personal freedom must, on some levels, always include the freedom to become addicted.
The Globalisation of Addiction is a considerable work, highly ambitious in its scope, impressive in its multidisciplinary scholarship, clear in its structure and generous in its references. It is both its strength and its weakness that it integrates addiction so convincingly into broader issues of social and political reform. Like Rat Park, it offers a fundamental critique of the 20th century view of addiction, but also demonstrates how dominant are the processes and structures that drive it.
Published with permission from Mike Jay. Mike is a writer and historian (See Mikejay.net ) and a trustee of Transform Drug Policy Foundation.

Originally published on www.nthposition.com
Article copyright 2009 Mike Jay

The Globalisation of Addiction is available on Amazon with a readable excerpt.

US: National Black Police Association Endorses Marijuana Legalization/Regulation initiative


Below is a press release issued yesterday by the US based Law Enforcement Against Prohibition detailing the newly announced support of the National Black Police Association for California Prop 19 ballot initiative that would legalise and regulate non-medical cannabis production and sale for over 21s in the state (details here). This follows the support of California's National Association for the Advancement of Black People backing the initiative last month.

The latest announcement has already been covered in the New York Times , LA Times and others


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: August 19, 2010
CONTACT: Tom Angell - (202) 557-4979 or media//at//leap//dot//cc

National Black Police Association Endorses Marijuana Legalization

African American Cops Say California's Prop. 19 Will Protect Civil Rights & Public Safety

SACRAMENTO, CA -- A national organization of African American law enforcement officers has announced its endorsement of Proposition 19, California's initiative to legalize marijuana.

The National Black Police Association (NBPA), which was founded in 1972 and is currently holding its 38th national conference in Sacramento, is urging a yes vote on legalization this November 2.

"When I was a cop in Baltimore, and even before that when I was growing up there, I saw with my own eyes the devastating impact these misguided marijuana laws have on our communities and neighborhoods. But it's not just in Baltimore, or in Los Angeles; prohibition takes a toll on people of color across the country," said Neill Franklin, a 33-year veteran police officer and executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), an international group of pro-legalization cops, judges, prosecutors and corrections officials who have been organizing to support Prop. 19. "This November, with the National Black Police Association's help, Californians finally have an opportunity to do something about it by approving the initiative to control and tax marijuana."

On Thursday, Franklin spoke alongside California NAACP president Alice Huffman at the NBPA conference on a panel about criminal justice issues like marijuana legalization.

Many cops and civil rights leaders are now speaking out against marijuana prohibition because it is not only ineffective at reducing marijuana use and results in the arrest and incarceration of people of color at a highly disproportionate rate, but also because making marijuana illegal has created a lucrative black market controlled by violent gangs and cartels. LEAP has organized a group of more than 30 California police officers, judges, prosecutors and other criminal justice professionals who support Prop. 19.

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) and its 30,000 supporters represent police, prosecutors, judges, FBI/DEA agents and others who want to legalize and regulate drugs after fighting on the front lines of the "war on drugs" and learning firsthand that prohibition only serves to worsen addiction and violence.

According to NBPA, there are 80,000 black law enforcement officials in the U.S.

For more information, visit http://www.CopsSayLegalizeDrugs.com or http://www.BlackPolice.org

Media Review: Prof Ian Gilmore calls for decriminalisation and regulation to be considered

Transform issued a press release last Monday about Sir Ian Gilmore's comments in his final Newsletter as president of the Royal Society of Physicians:
"I feel like finishing my presidency on a controversial note. I personally back the chairman of the UK Bar Council, Nicholas Green QC, when he calls for drug laws to be reconsidered with a view to decriminalising illicit drugs use. This could drastically reduce crime and improve health. Drugs should still be regulated, and the argument for decriminalising them is clearly made by Stephen Rolles in the latest edition of the BMJ."The press release led to a huge amount of media coverage and debate in print and broadcast media over the following days, with Transform at the heart of much of it; having broken the story and with the BMJ piece on Transform's 'Blueprint for Regulation' specifically cited. Amongst the coverage detailed below, especially in the following days, were some very significant developments. 

Print coverage on the day included:
Cocaine should be legal, says top doctor - front page coverage in the Telegraph (mentions BMJ piece and quotes Transform's Danny Kushlick), story also ran on Fox news website Legalise heroin and cocaine to cut crime and improve health, top doctor says in the Daily Mail (included quote from Danny and an online poll that asked 'should we legalise drugs in a bid to cut crime and improve health'  currently running at 56% in favour, 44% against. Also well worth looking at some of the 284 comments the story attracted - the most up-voted being supportive, the most down-voted against)There was also coverage in the Guardian (quoting both Danny and Steve), as well a coverage in the Times, Independent, the Herald Scotland, the Mirror, and many other regional papers. during the following days:
The Guardian ran an excellent leader editorial that cited Transform and the BMJ piece 'The War on Drugs: bring out the peace pipe', effectively joining the Observer in its critique of drug war and call for consideration of both decriminalisation and regulation:"Politicians could prepare public opinion for change by a public assessment of what Britain's war on drugs has achieved. It should ask whether better results could have come by a less damaging route. A policy that results, via the Afghanistan poppy harvest, in financial support for the Taliban, boosts international organised crime and is the underlying problem for more than half of the UK prison population will require some defending.

Decriminalisation would not be an answer in itself. Legalisation is no quick fix. But prohibition's defenders need to show how, against its dire results, their policy can still be justified."
Arguably more significantly was the interest of the tabloids: Gilmore had a very welcome opportunity to speak to a wider audience when given space for an editorial piece in the Sun, titled 'treat addicts like patients, not cirminals' (when it first appeared online, missing the point entirely, it was daftly titled 'treat junkies like patients, not criminals' - we are not sure which ran in the print version)At the weekend the Sunday People - hardly famed for its progressive position on drug policy - went further, dedicating a two page spread to the drug law reform debate, quoting Transform, listing famous supporters of reform, and detailing Portugal's experience with decriminalisation. Better still, they joined the Observer and Guardian in taking a clear editorial position in favour of reform,  their 'Voice of the People' leader column titled 'Time for a new look at drug laws':  "When the Misuse of Drugs Act was passed in 1971 our politicians, lawyers and medical experts still dreamed of creating a drug-free society.

If we locked up all dealers and users the market would dry up... wouldn’t it?

Forty years on it is clear that the war on drugs was a naive policy that failed miserably and injured more people than it protected.

The huge profits of the international drugs trade fund terrorism, drive crime, and wreck lives across the globe.

But jailing users does nothing to break the cycle of those who commit crime to fuel their habit.

Now, at last, the Government is ­looking at the bigger picture and considering radical plans to decriminalise hard drug use. As we reveal today, 12,000 addicts could be moved out of jails and into hospitals to be treated as patients and not criminals.

Top doctors believe it is the only way to cut crime, improve health and save public money. But it will be a hard pill to swallow for the thousands of victims of druggie muggers and burglars who steal to fund their habit.

It’s a bold move. But if Ministers are finally having a “mature debate” on drug strategy they then need to discuss the “L” word. Legalisation. Criminalising some drugs while ­allowing a free market in others, such as alcohol and nicotine, makes no sense.

Our leaders need to think the ­unthinkable and consider bringing the entire drug industry, from production to use, out of the shadows and under ­legitimate controls.

Could we allow adults to buy limited supplies of drugs from licensed and regulated outlets and tax them as ­highly as possible without creating a black market?

Legalisation may spark an initial ­increase in the number of adults who use drugs, albeit in safer and healthier circumstances. But should adults be ­allowed to make that choice – when many already choose to wreck their lives, quite legally, with alcohol?

Tough questions – but the Government must seize the moment and ask them."
OK, so not exactly how Transform might argue it but we have to welcome the fact that this -mostly reasonable- editorial appeared in a national paper new to the reform position and, like the Sun coverage, is reaching much wider audience than the same Guardian and Observer readers, most of whom are already sympathetic to the drug law reform position. The positive tabloid coverage in particular is a sure sign that this debate is moving into the mainstream and moving in a positive direction.

Broadcast media 

On the Tuesday the story broke, Steve did 17 broadcast interviews and Danny did 10, in addition to the various interviews Gilmore himself gave, and a further 7 picked up by our colleagues over at Release. Highlights of Transform's coverage included appearances on
BBC Breakfast TV (live interview)SKY breakfast news (pre-recorded interview for news segment)BBC Radio 4's Today program (quotes and Today audio clip on BBC coverage) 5 Live breakfast (pre-record for new segment), and 5 live morning debate (with David Raynes)BBC News Channel (debate with Neil McKeggany)SKY lunchtime newsTalk Sport radio BBC Radio Wales (debate with Ian Oliver)BBC World Service (international broadcast)BBC News International TV (international broadcast - debate with David Raynes again)The following day there was an additional appearance on CNN International, a 'Connect the World' half hour special on drug policy and law reform, with Steve debating former DEA agent Bob Stutman.

In addition there was plenty of blog action around the issue, all attracting many comments (mostly positive) - notably including:
Fergus Walsh's BBC Blog 'Would decriminalising drugs work?'Mark Easton's BBC blog, writing about the 'British System'Tom Chivers' Telegraph blog Another top doctor has backed a rethink of drug policy. Maybe it's time to listen CNNs Connect the World blog 'should we decriminlize drugs?Tory peer Lord Norton calling for Royal Commission on the drug laws 'decriminalising drug use' on Lords of the Blog (a very interesting Lordly debate ensuing)There was also a steady stream of op-eds, including efforts from:
Antonia Senior (call for legalisation/regulation in the New Statesman and the Times - unfortunately now behind a paywall), Libby Purves, also in the Times (supportive of decrim) Paul Thomas in the New Zealand Herald 'drug decriminalisation makes sense'James Bell in the Guardian 'why not tax my drug addicts'And even some satire from the Daily Mash legalise drugs, says some crazy president of the Royal College of Physicians.

Critical voices were, of course, also in evidence but curiously muted - the sense being that the media were struggling to find many. If there were pro drug war op-eds in any of the nationals we must have missed them. There were some quotes in the news coverage, however; In a widely quoted comment by Keith Vaz MP he stated that the legalisation of drugs "would simply create the mistaken impression that these substances are not harmful, when in fact this is far from the truth". This rather facile misconception about what a public health approach to drug regulation would entail is exactly the same one that he carried through the mostly awful 2010 Home Affairs Select Committee report on cocaine.

The Home Office response was even more inadequate, and missed the point to a such a staggering degree as to not deserve or warrant any further scrutiny:
'Drugs such as heroin, cocaine and cannabis are extremely harmful and can cause misery to communities across the country. The government does not believe that decriminalisation is the right approach. Our priorities are clear; we want to reduce drug use, crack down on drug related crime and disorder and help addicts come off drugs for good.' In a Mirror news piece (nominally about a separate 'legal highs' story that this blog will return too at a later date) we also learn that:

Leading doctors argue prohibition of heroin and cocaine has failed and they should be decriminalised and allowed for use under licence and tomorrow the Government will launch a major review of Britain's drugs laws. Home Office Minister James Brokenshire will rule out new legalisation but call for a more "mature debate" on how to control drugs.You can only laugh (somewhat bitterly) at the Minister's concept of what constitutes a 'mature debate', one in which entire policy arenas he does not approve of are closed down before the debate has even begun. This despite the genuinely mature debate - one in which all options are on the table - that is happening in the real world (note links above for example), and being encouraged by the President of the Royal College of Physicians (not to mention the President of Mexico), and indeed Broke nshires own Prime Minister (albeit a while back). For the record decriminalisation of personal use, certainly non-prosecution of users, was also in the Lib Dem manifesto. They have been strangely and disappointingly silent during all this.There was a predictably critical blog post from Kathy Gyngel from the Center for Policy Studies, but it is a lacklustre and scatter gun affair by her standards (see the comments for some critique of the factual analysis). 
Overall - this has been a hugely positive few days for the UK debate. Its always hard to gauge how much impact events like this have; maybe it was just a silly season story on a slow news day.  But it feels like part of a much more significant shift in the debate that has taken place over the last couple of years and appears to be accelerating- one in which the law reform arguments are being increasingly well understood for the principled pragmatic position they represent. Even Drugscope, usually very cautious in the debate, this week made a welcome call (in the Times) for decriminalisation to be considered (repeating a call they made back in 2001 but have been very quiet about since).

Small steps as ever, but the direction of travel is the right one. 


The Independent becomes the latest national UK newspaper to back legalisation

.
Does the media follow public opinion or lead it? Probably a bit of both, but it is clear that the climate around drugs policy is changing in the public political and media spheres, and the momentum for change is building.

As we described yesterday, quite aside from the unabating stream of supportive op-eds, The Observer, The Guardian and Sunday People, (and the Daily Record in Scotland) have now all recently taken editorial lines in their leaders critical of the drug war and supportive of  moves towards the legal regulation of drugs.

Today it is the turn of The Independent in a leading article "Mexico's stark reminder of the cost of prohibition" which details the now familiar horrors of the War on Drugs before saying:
"The President was obliged to send in the troops because the poorly paid Mexican police had been infiltrated by the cartels; even so, reports suggest that in some areas the latter's power is, if anything, growing. By this reading, the violence suggests merely that turf wars are becoming more vicious, for a larger slice of an ever more lucrative market. In short, Mexico and the US are losing the drug war...

Which brings us back to the root of the problem. If Americans lost their taste for drugs, the Mexican cartels would be out of business. That, however, will not happen; indeed the forbidden nature of drugs may make them more attractive. So why not legalise them? The argument has been powerfully made before and will be so again, but probably to no avail. Sadly the barbaric drug wars will continue."
This is backed up by a front page and double page spread, with an excellent opinion piece by Johan Hari; "Violence breeds violence.The only thing drug gangs fear is legalisation" which concludes:
"Yet Mexico is being pressured hard by countries like the US and Britain – both led by former drug users – to keep on fighting this war, while any mention of legalisation brings whispered threats of slashed aid and diplomatic shunning.

Look carefully at that mound of butchered corpses found yesterday. They are the inevitable and ineluctable product of drug prohibition. This will keep happening for as long as we pursue this policy. If you believe the way to deal with the human appetite for intoxication is to criminalise and militarise, then blood is on your hands.

How many people have to die before we finally make a sober assessment of reality, and take the drugs trade back from murderous criminal gangs?"

The Independent editorial's pessimistic appraisal that "the barbaric drug wars" will inevitably continue is misplaced. They will not; no policy as self evidently counterproductive as the drug war can stand the sort of scrutiny it is now receiving for ever. Like the targets of many of the large scale social justice movements of the last century, what once seemed immovable can unravel far more quickly than anyone expects once a tipping point is reached.

Four national UK newspapers have adopted unambiguous pro-reform editorial positions within three weeks. We could be nearer the tipping point than you imagine.