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Is alchohol worse than ecstasy?









Cian

Well-known member
Jul 16, 2003
14,262
Dublin, Ireland
No-one knows, and that's why its a flawed argument.

The 'drink-related deaths' for example, includes car-accidents, etc where a driver is over the alcohol limit. Similar testing for drug use is very much less widespread, and comparable instances would often be missed.

Is toxicology on drivers in fatal car crashes not done in the UK? We get a few proven cocaine-usage-probably-caused car crashes a year.
 


Seagull73

Sienna's Heaven
Jul 26, 2003
3,382
Not Lewes
Depends what the ecstacy is cut with dunnit. Certainly in it's pure form it is 'okay' but I've certainly had some pills with very questionable substances in, including speed, laxatives and almost definitely poisons.

How do you know what it was cut with? You would've been off your face. :thumbsup:

Look at the stats of people who die from alcohol related deaths, and those that die from drug overdoses - there isn't even a comparison. A little simplistic, but the threat from alcohol as a 'drug' has been ignored for decades - and the binge culture we see now is a result of that.

The early to mid-90's where the peak for ecstasy - and you never feared of any trouble in town because everybody was too f**ked to what to fight, and then people went home and got more trashed. Who is that affecting?

What we don't know yet are the real long-term implications of mental health on ecstasy usage. Classification means jack shit until you know just how deadly it is, and we have only seen very few examples of people actually dieing through taking ecstasy.
 


Buzzer

Languidly Clinical
Oct 1, 2006
26,121
why not mix both of them together? I mean, what's the worst that could happen?


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7228325.stm



Man 'had sex with victim's body'


Miss Bowman, 18, was stabbed and bitten several times outside her Croydon home in September 2005.
Chef Mark Dixie, 35, of no fixed address, denies murdering Miss Bowman.
Prosecutor Brian Altman told the Old Bailey: "The defendant confesses that he had sex with Sally Anne and that he had sex with her after her death."
The court heard Mr Dixie had said he had been drinking, took drugs and had "taken advantage of the situation".
Mr Altman added: "That astonishingly is his defence. It is born out of desperation. "There is not a single grain of truth in it." The case continues.
 




















Griffffffffo

New member
Feb 4, 2008
8
Eastbourne
a bit of everything in small doses can't be too harmful.
Although when articles like this come out, i wonder why tobacco and alcohol aren't being upgraded, or at least their effects being drilled home, rather than other things being downgraded!
 


Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,594
Haywards Heath
frankly its comparing apples and meat pie.
That's the best comment on this thread. I don't see the point of the arguement. The effects of ecstacy and the effects of alcohol are mutually exclusive events, what do you gain by comparing the two? Taking ecstacy over a long term does undoubtedly f*** up your brain, if you're doing too much you get big warning signs such as pill dreams, which can be pretty horrific, mild depression and poor short term memory to name a few. Most people notice this and stop or cut down before any big damage is done. With alcohol you don't get any signs until it's too late and you liver is shagged. For me that is the main difference.
 


John Bumlick

Banned
Apr 29, 2007
3,483
here hare here
Depends what the ecstacy is cut with dunnit. Certainly in it's pure form it is 'okay' but I've certainly had some pills with very questionable substances in, including speed, laxatives and almost definitely poisons.

ecstasy cut with laxatives? what a f***ing nightmare. did it make you want to take a shit and then just hold it?
 






Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
25,514
Worthing
You're joking , best sex in the world is on pills


Sex after a pill............................. it becomes a real mission..... and painful.
 




Lady Whistledown

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
47,641
The issue with alcohol is its social effects. As the programme said, a humungous proportion of hospital admissions are in some way alcohol related. It's not just beardy old lushes whose livers have collapsed through years of knocking back White Lightning in bus shelters.

Go to A&E on a weekend after chuck out time and I guarantee you will spot at least two of the following:

Victims of drunk drivers, or pissheads who've staggered into the path of a moving vehicle. Black eyes and split eyebrows from drunken fights. Broken digits from stumbling over while bladdered. Kids unconscious through alcohol poisoning after knocking back ten bottles of WKD. Domestic violence victims who are battered by their drunken partners. People who are raped or sexually assaulted because they lost their inhibitions after a couple of shandies and couldn't say no. The guy who drinks fifteen pints then thinks he's invincible enough to walk along a high wall without falling off. A comatose adult male who's only taking up the NHS bed because he drank himself into unconsciousness and there's nowhere else to safely put him while he sleeps it off (his mates don't care because they've had their kebab and just want to get the bus home).

Ever wondered why you usually spend three hours waiting for non-emergency treatment in A&E? There's your answer, you're behind all that lot.

Imagine the taxes we'd all save if the emergency and healthcare services didn't spend so much time clearing up after people too trollied to look after themselves.
 






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