MTV Casting Call – TRUE LIFE I’M HOOKED ON MOLLY TRUE LIFE: I'M HOOKED MOLLY
Do you take Molly -- the powdered form of MDMA -- so often that it feels like you can't have a good time without it? Is it affecting your ability to function during the day? Is your Molly use no longer confined to the occasional party and starting to become more frequent?
If you appear between the ages of 18-28 and are hooked on Molly, we want to hear your story. Email us at molly@mtv.com. Please be sure to include your name, location, telephone number, a recent photo and a brief description of your situation.
MDMA therapy music? lol Right, I'm a noob, so I am probably going to come off as being a bit stupid. if this isn't the place for this sort of question then I apologise beforehand. Not really a clubber in essence. I have done XTC a few times. rather than being in a club, I prefer to use it as a solitary experience. Have a nice bath, switch off my phone, turn out the lights and then take XTC and lay down and roll for a few hours, looking inwards and tackling any issues that may appear, or just enjoy the feeling that is flowing through my body. Its one of the greatest personal experiences I have ever had and has a profound effect on my thinking and view of the world. Obviously, I have now begun to research this new world that has opened up to me, and amongst all the rave culture/history out there is the premise (the original one could argue) of it being a therapeutic tool. From what I have read, music plays a big part of this. Obviously, I am not into any kind of subconcious suggestion as I am not qualified and this would be a dangerous thing to attempt, although I am into some kind of music that would help put me into a deeply relaxed state. I have tried trance music, and I know there are obviously different types, but what I have heard sounds a bit too busy and jarring when I am just trying to go as deep as possible. Could anyone recommend artists or any tracks in particular for what I am looking for? Again, apologies if this is the wrong place to ask this. Thanks for reading.
Info about MTVs? Was trying to get some route66 pills and ended up with ones with the MTV logo on them, they also have a small R printed on the back.
They a light red/pink colour.
I can only find a small amount of info about ones in America online but these are from london. (Did find a couple of people saying theyre good on another site but thread was taken down)
I think theyre fairly new, anyone know if in general theyre good or not?
I can upload a picture of one if it helps?12
TV Documentary about Ecstasy Forward...
----
Apologies for emailing out of the blue. My name is Mark Rankin and I am writing to you from a documentary production company called Pioneer Productions (www.pioneertv.com).
We are currently making a series of science programmes about how different drugs work. The programme that I am producing will look at ecstasy. We hope to film with past and present users of this drug to explore what effects it has.
We will then talk to experts such (Professor David Nutt, Professor Val Curran) to find out how ecstasy creates these effects.
I am emailing members of Ecstacy groups/forums, apologies if the content of this programme is not relevant to your experiences.
I can be contacted at mark.rankin@pioneertv.com or on 07793047984.
Thanks for taking the time to read this email. I hope to hear from you soon.
Best wishes,
Mark
LSD – Trip to hell? – Drug war Zone on NatGeo TV was on the national geographic channel last sat. did anyone see it? more interested in the acid bit of the program. wondered if anyone had any torrents or downloads for it?
Think! UK – Drug Driving – Eyes (New TV Advert) [YT]cMOm6cERZWw[/YT]
correct me if i'm wrong .. but they look more like aliens than people on drugs :hopeless:
i can't belive some of the shit people come up with :you_crazy12
Music and Drugs is it me or does music always sound so much better on drugs? even just skunk. i was in my room last night stoned out of my tree listening to the knife and i swear the music was so good. has anyone else had any similar experiances or am i just mad? xx
music,movies and mental stimulus to trip/roll to Im lookin for new ideas for trippin... like music that take u on a journey.. example plastikman anthony rother dj hell juan atkins.. or what kind of mind tricks do you like to play.... gimme some ideas guys (and gals)
[In The News] Stupid TV Ads Cut, Mandatory Minimums Stopped!
We have a lot of good news, and a little bad news.
As you may recall, we identified six federal drug war programs that could be cut to save taxpayers a lot of money. After a lot of lobbying - and thousands of emails to members of Congress by supporters like you – Congress has cut these programs by $300 million. This is a tremendous savings! The Drug Czar will have $20 million less next year for those stupid anti-marijuana TV ads. States will have $185 million less for rogue drug war task forces that have caused problems from Tulia, Texas to Flint, Michigan. Other federal drug war bureaucracies will have about $100 million less.
You also helped us fight Congressman Mark Souder’s draconian methamphetamine bill. We’re happy to report that the harsh mandatory minimums have been removed from the bill. This is a big victory for the Drug Policy Alliance, Families Against Mandatory Minimums, the Interfaith Drug Policy Initiative and other groups that have been fighting against new mandatory minimums.
Additionally, two things were added to his bill that the Alliance has been calling for all year – a program to provide grants to states for treatment programs for pregnant women and women with children, and a federal study to look at ways to establish a federal treatment-instead-of-incarceration program for offenders with substance abuse problems. When we started our campaign, Souder’s bill was all mandatory minimums and no drug treatment. Now it contains drug treatment and no mandatory minimums! We would like to thank the thousands of you who wrote to your members of Congress!!
Unfortunately, we couldn’t take out a provision that applies an enhanced sentence of up to 20 years for making or selling methamphetamine in a household where a child resides. Though methamphetamine in the presence of children is a serious problem, this provision could devastate families by giving thousands of mothers long prison sentences when other options, such as treatment, are available. Even more unfortunately, Congress added the meth bill to the PATRIOT Act, making it virtually impossible to stop. Congress will vote on the PATRIOT Act sometime in December. We’re still lobbying to improve the bad provisions in it.
Finally, our bill to suspend federal laws that prohibit Katrina victims with drug convictions from receiving public housing, food stamps, public assistance, and school loans now has 10 co-sponsors. We hope to move the bill in December or early next year. If you haven’t faxed your member of Congress in support of the bill, please do so today.
Also, please consider giving a contribution to our work. We depend on donations from people like you to advance the reform of our nation’s drug laws.
Thank you for your commitment to drug policy reform!
Link To Original Article
[The D’Alliance] TV Tip: Marijuana in National Parks! Danger! [The D'Alliance] TV Tip: Marijuana in National Parks! Danger!
The latest episode of Outdoor Investigations on the Outdoor Life Network features a profile of the federal Campaign Against Marijuana Planting (CAMP), a collaborative effort between federal authorities and state and local law enforcement to eradicate marijuana planting on public lands. Having viewed it earlier this week, it is little more than a not-so-sensational call for more funding of an ineffective enterprise. The show's set up online reads:
The Mexican drug cartels have moved into remote portions of our national parks to grow marijuana crops worth billions of dollars. Sequoia National Park in California is getting hit the hardest, and rangers there have taken on responsibilities of drug enforcement agents. It's big business with a lot at stake for all sides: billions of dollars in profit for the cartels up against the safety of rangers, park visitors and a precious landscape in danger of being destroyed. Undoubtedly, the federal government has the authority to exercise dominion over lands that it controls. But the analysis must not end there. The primary shortcoming of the show is that it failed to thoroughly investigate the true nature of circumstances taking place in Northern California's national parks. In short, the whole scenario is a product of the larger failure of marijuana prohibition. The only tangible "solution" to the exaggerated problems posed by the show -- from physical harm to park attendees to environmental damage -- was more funding. So it is "case closed" for a tidy TV program that sought principally to heighten public anxiety, embellish the "virtues" of government action, and parade those who receive emoluments for their continued participation.
Were marijuana decriminalized, the reality is that there wouldn't be any Mexican drug cartel operatives "doing business" in our national parks. Period.
Earlier this month, USA Today ran an article on CAMP, painting a fairly clear and balanced portrait of how it operates and with what results. Seizures are up, but so is production. Overall marijuana prices are down, and potency is up.
As such, he government is failing by its own measures of progress. But the only voices to be heard from official quarters are calls for more funding. Indeed, if there is one function government performs supremely well it is the ability to throw taxpayer money down a black hole without restraint.
Dale Gieringer of California NORML notes the ultimate futility of CAMP, calling for an end to marijuana prohibition (which could bring up to $250 million is sales taxes, by his estimate). Humboldt County Supervisor Roger Rodini, a Republican, calls CAMP "a vast expenditure of public funds that for all practical purposes does no good."
USA Today subsequently published a letter to the editor from James May, a colleague of mine here in Sacramento. He writes, in part: CAMP's $1.1 million annual budget would be better spent on proven demand-reduction measures, such as treatment for those addicted to more dangerous drugs such as heroin.
Rational judgment is needed more than ever to combat a federal government gyrating in the throes of its own "reefer madness."
I couldn't have said it better myself...
Posted by Nikos Leverenz.
Read More...
Do your parents take drugs? Need help for TV programme Hello,
I work for a TV production company called
Somethin' Else and we would like to speak to parents of teenagers who take drugs
(particularly ecstasy), to find out what they and the kids
think and feel about it all.
Would anyone be interested in helping?
If you are genuinly interested, please email
ascher.nathan@somethin-else.com or reply here...
Thanks....Ascher
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