Discussion:
Ban legal highs
(too old to reply)
h***@anony.net
2015-01-18 12:13:15 UTC
Permalink
Any product sold for human or animal food or mood altering
should have a safety license after being tested

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/cannabis-substitute-drugs-black-mamba-and-spice-are-a-recipe-for-violence-in-prisons-9984954.html

The substances cannot be detected in standard drug tests
So-called “legal” highs are contributing to violence in prisons and
the amount of inmates admitted to hospital after using the drugs is
rising.

A synthetic cannabinoid known as Black Mamba has caused so many
prisoners to suffer seizures that they have to be rushed to A&E in
ambulances that are dubbed “mambalances” by inmates at Walton and
Altcourse prisons, the Liverpool Echo newspaper reported.


Another substance called Spice has contributed towards disorder in the
institutions with both of the varieties are said to have been major
factors in 210 assaults carried out in six months with 38 against
staff members, according to the Mirror.

The dry shredded plant material with added chemical compounds looks
almost identical to cannabis and mimics the effects of THC found in
real weed.

Although synthetic cannabinoids were classified alongside cannabis as
a Class B drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 in December 2009,
according to Drugs Scope, inmates are able to pass them off as rolled
tobacco and the substance cannot be detected in drug tests.

Cannabis substitute Spice allegedly increases violence among users
Symptoms such as feelings of paralysis, anxiety, paranoia, extreme
hunger and fears of developing schizophrenia are felt after smoking
the marijuana substitutes according to users who posted their
experiences on drug advisory website Talk to Frank.

Prison Officers Association general secretary Steve Gillan told the
Mirror: “Spice is a recipe for violence.

“It regularly puts people in hospital and appears out of control in
our jails. We’ve seen a 37 per cent rise in attacks on staff.

“It’s a dangerous drug that is putting people in hospital on a growing
basis.”
Barry
2015-01-18 14:27:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by h***@anony.net
Cannabis substitute Spice allegedly increases violence among users
Symptoms such as feelings of paralysis, anxiety, paranoia, extreme
hunger and fears of developing schizophrenia are felt after smoking
the marijuana substitutes according to users who posted their
experiences on drug advisory website Talk to Frank.
'Talk to Frank'? That piss poor excuse for a drug advice site couldn't
tell the difference between acid and aspirin lol
Jesse'
2015-01-22 03:30:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by h***@anony.net
Any product sold for human or animal food or mood altering
should have a safety license after being tested
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/cannabis-substitute-drugs-black-mamba-and-spice-are-a-recipe-for-violence-in-prisons-9984954.html
The substances cannot be detected in standard drug tests
So-called “legal” highs are contributing to violence in prisons and
the amount of inmates admitted to hospital after using the drugs is
rising.
A synthetic cannabinoid known as Black Mamba has caused so many
prisoners to suffer seizures that they have to be rushed to A&E in
ambulances that are dubbed “mambalances” by inmates at Walton and
Altcourse prisons, the Liverpool Echo newspaper reported.
Another substance called Spice has contributed towards disorder in the
institutions with both of the varieties are said to have been major
factors in 210 assaults carried out in six months with 38 against
staff members, according to the Mirror.
The dry shredded plant material with added chemical compounds looks
almost identical to cannabis and mimics the effects of THC found in
real weed.
Although synthetic cannabinoids were classified alongside cannabis as
a Class B drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 in December 2009,
according to Drugs Scope, inmates are able to pass them off as rolled
tobacco and the substance cannot be detected in drug tests.
Cannabis substitute Spice allegedly increases violence among users
Symptoms such as feelings of paralysis, anxiety, paranoia, extreme
hunger and fears of developing schizophrenia are felt after smoking
the marijuana substitutes according to users who posted their
experiences on drug advisory website Talk to Frank.
Prison Officers Association general secretary Steve Gillan told the
Mirror: “Spice is a recipe for violence.
“It regularly puts people in hospital and appears out of control in
our jails. We’ve seen a 37 per cent rise in attacks on staff.
“It’s a dangerous drug that is putting people in hospital on a growing
basis.”
Drugs don't do that to anyone, they are all bias opinions from
government that can't kill their own meat,apparently the USA is
founded upon killing for liberty.
You be the judge.

If a judge hands down a sentence of death without having
experienced it psychologically then their is no valid sentence as
it is not law.

You new supreme court judge is the man that killed bin laden
illegally.

I am working to only have guns used on people not animals as the
past,as we are smarter than that now...apparently
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