The new drug law that will hurt everyone

For several months now, our conservative government has been hustling the ‘New Psychoactive Substances’ Bill through parliament and into law. Widely condemned as one of the worst laws ever seen, the NPS act is hateful, illogical, poorly worded and has the potential to make us all criminals. Quite simply, from May 26th, we will see an increase in drug-related suffering and death in the UK.

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The NPS act will ensure more drug-related incarcerations

The reason for this law coming into being is a national hysteria surrounding ‘legal highs’. Your average pensioner hates seeing teenagers getting high and not being punished for it, and wants to see legal high vendors kicked out of their towns. The conservatives, hopping on this bandwagon, have brought out reams of misleading and false statistics about legal high-related deaths. Countless voters have been riled up by the media, seeing images of innocent teens on front pages, hospitalised and killed by drugs that have slipped through the legislative cracks.

In fact, deaths from legal highs are tiny, around a dozen per year, accounting for a tiny percentage of frequent legal high users (around 10% of UK youth use legal highs). Compare this to alcohol users, where we would expect one million alcohol-related hospitalisations every year. But tightening alcohol legislation doesn’t win votes. Portraying innocent teens being preyed upon by wily drug dealers wins votes.

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Salvia: a one-of-a-kind psychoactive plant

Salvia divinorum is a really unique psychedelic drug. Like many interesting psychoactive plants, Salvia has been used culturally for centuries. The Salvia plant was grown in secretive groves by the Mazatec tribe in Oaxaca, Mexico. The tribe chewed Salvia leaves in religious rituals, revering the healing and psychoactive properties of the plant. In the 1960s, anthropologists visited the tribe and took cuttings of Salvia to the western world. Salvia contains the most potent naturally occurring hallucinogen we know of. See here for more information about Salvia divinorum.

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Flowering Salvia divinorum

Along with the classical psychedelic effects such as visual distortions, Salvia also induces feelings of strange movement, shifting realities and a loss of control. Scientists often call Salvia’s effects ‘psychotomimetic’, meaning Salvia mimics the delusions experienced in disorders such as Schizophrenia.

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