Ecstasy - MDMA - XTC

SouthCrackalackSouthCrackalack 3,853 Posts
edited October 2007 in Strut Central
Yay or nay? I think the last time I used it was in the early 2000's, but I just watched the Frontline(Peter Jennings) report on it(link below)..and just wondered what everyone here thinks about it. It's history is quite interesting. It definintely ended up getting a bad wrap with the bullshit goverment studie. The goofy raver/frat boy types geeking out on it didnt help its image by any means..but I know it is still going strong with the hip hop/clubbing community. I admit that I had a shitload of fun times back in the day, but it was shitty quality of the pills that really started to turn me off..fuck all that speedy shit. It also was weird to see the transition from the kind of people taking them/selling them in the late 90s..shit just got too shady for me. What's your experiences and opinions on MDMA?Here is the link..just click to enter the site and the drop down menu, Health>Drugs>Peter Jennings Ecstasy Rising (this is also a GREAT source for other free documentaries)http://best.online.docus.googlepages.com/

  Comments


  • where is it the link?

  • where is it the link?

    oops, there you go(look in the original post)

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    Frontline(Peter Jennings)

    Peter Jennings worked for ABC. Frontline is produced for PBS.

  • Doh..Primetime..not Frontline. Sorry.

  • Yay or nay? I think the last time I used it was in the early 2000's, but I just watched the Primetime(Peter Jennings) report on it(link below)..and just wondered what everyone here thinks about it. It's history is quite interesting. It definintely ended up getting a bad wrap with the bullshit goverment studie. The goofy raver/frat boy types geeking out on it didnt help its image by any means..but I know it is still going strong with the hip hop/clubbing community. I admit that I had a shitload of fun times back in the day, but it was shitty quality of the pills that really started to turn me off..fuck all that speedy shit. It also was weird to see the transition from the kind of people taking them/selling them in the late 90s..shit just got too shady for me. What's your experiences and opinions on MDMA?

    Here is the link..just click to enter the site and the drop down menu, Health>Drugs>Peter Jennings Ecstasy Rising (this is also a GREAT source for other free documentaries)
    http://best.online.docus.googlepages.com/

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    Doh..Primetime..not Frontline. Sorry.

    Ahh..that explains it. I was looking for that episode on the Frontline site and couldn't find it anywhere.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,784 Posts
    What's your experiences and opinions on MDMA?

    Used it quite a lot when I was young and first went raving and clubbing in the early nineties, but then about a third of the population of 18-30 year-olds in the UK were doing the same (and so far no 28 Days Later[/b] scenario despite tabloid fears). Doing my first E in a club was a really powerful experience, up there with doing my first acid trip, but on a completely different wavelength, and I can see why lots of people were totally seduced by the drug - friends of mine were slowly upping the number of pills they were taking, and regular usage led to higher tolerance that was (a) un-affordable and (b) became slightly disturbing to consider were 18 pills a night might lead somebody... my own usage dropped at about the same rate that I witnessed it rising in people around me, and I haven't done a pill in 5 years at least, and probably 3 in total since about 1998. Given the right time and place, and I would do another.
    I would recommend reading Last Night A DJ Saved My Life[/b] for a number of reasons, but in this instance because of the social commentary they make on the impact E had in breaking down the barriers of a class-divided nation like England; I agree wholeheartedly on their conclusions. The young people that are growing up now take for granted many of the big changes that happened in this country because of ecstacy and raving - not all them were good (dance music commodification, strict laws drawn up against public gatherings with 'repetitive beats' etc), but I don't remember there being such an insular, snobbish attitude that there is now - the sort of people that laugh at others for being 'chavs' now, would have been scoring their pills and dancing with them 15-17 years ago. There was a better sense of community and a stronger feeling of counter-culture. At least, that's how I remember it, and if was because of the pills, booze, herb and partying, Amen to the stuff.

    Edit: have unknowingly taken quantities of MDMA last year and year before, both times loved it, even though I had to be told what I was on.

  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    I was looking through an old photo album the other night and realized that I've got a hilarious series of shots of various high school friends from the late 80's grilling their asses off. One of these days, I'll get them to a scanner.

    And my take on X is...if the pill is pure, pop away. And you'll know it's pure if you're able to go to sleep comfortably, albeit in a strange state of dreamy cluodiness, at the end of your trip.

  • Options
    And my take on X is...if the pill is pure, pop away. And you'll know it's pure if you're able to go to sleep comfortably, albeit in a strange state of dreamy cluodiness, at the end of your trip.


    How is one to know at the beginning if it's pure if the only way of knowing is if they are able to sleep at the end?

  • jdeezjdeez 638 Posts
    if the pill is pure, pop away. And you'll know it's pure if you're able to go to sleep comfortably, albeit in a strange state of dreamy cluodiness, at the end of your trip.





    How am I not myself?

  • DB_CooperDB_Cooper Manhatin' 7,823 Posts
    And my take on X is...if the pill is pure, pop away. And you'll know it's pure if you're able to go to sleep comfortably, albeit in a strange state of dreamy cluodiness, at the end of your trip.


    How is one to know at the beginning if it's pure if the only way of knowing is if they are able to sleep at the end?

    The golden rule of untested hard drugs is: always have Mikey try it first.


  • Here is a little advice for people interested in trying Ecstasy..don't go Christmas shopping at the mall a couple days before Christmas after ingesting the drug. People tend to look at you funny while waiting in the long lines.

    I would love to see video of me and friend in the mall that day

  • jaysusjaysus 787 Posts
    It's really not that hard to figure out, get a test kit already!

    http://www.dancesafe.org/testingkits/


  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    Here is a little advice for people interested in trying Ecstasy...don't go wandering barefoot through the mall after ingesting the drug. Security guards tend to kick you out.

    I would love to see video of me and friends in the mall that day


  • shooteralishooterali 1,591 Posts
    I was looking through an old photo album the other night and realized that I've got a hilarious series of shots of various high school friends from the late 80's grilling their asses off. One of these days, I'll get them to a scanner.

    And my take on X is...if the pill is pure, pop away. And you'll know it's pure if you're able to go to sleep comfortably, albeit in a strange state of dreamy cluodiness, at the end of your trip.
    XTC has been linked to the deminishing of spinal fluid in ones body.
    People ignore that fact but if you tell them they "penis may stop working or breast may fall off", they'll stop using the shit.IMO

  • pjl2000xlpjl2000xl 1,795 Posts
    used to do it back around 99 to 2001. It was cool but the next day usually was pretty horrible. All the serotonin in your brain gets depleted so you hit massive lows, like depression and just feeling bummed. But thats when you take supplements like firmrola was saying such as 5 htp to somewhat replenish these chemicals. They also help a lot with withdrawal from other substances.

    In the whole hippy community, the kids that goto Disco Biscuits, Phish (when they were huge) and electronic or jam band festivals or shows, there was a substance around called "molly" that was supposedly pure MDMA. Ive never got any, but lots of people said it was cut with dope, or other adulterants.

    MDMA is a pretty fascinating drug though. Its actually pretty safe if you take it the right way. A lot of the anti drug propaganda about holes in your brain or spinal fluids leaking was mostly scare tatics used to thwart usage. The biggest concern with E is dehydration which can cause serious problems and even death. People forget to drink fluids cause they are trashed and wind up overexerting then overheating while on it.

    some stuff

    In the Beginning...[/b]


    It came. It was embraced. It was banned. But the final
    chapter has yet to be written.[/b]









    Christmas Eve, 1912:[/b] The pharmaceutical company Merck files for a patent on MDMA ('ecstasy') as a precursor to a drug that they hoped would be effective in controlling bleeding. Their patent application is granted two years later (1914.) In spite of persistent rumors, there is no evidence that they were aware it was psychoactive or intended to market it as a product. 1927: Merck researchers perform some animal experiments, noting that the substance had some similarities (in structure and effects) to adrenaline. 1953-1954: [/b]The US Army conducts animal experiments with MDMA and a number of structurally related drugs. What they hoped to discover is unclear, but the research was labeled as sensitive and not declassified until 1969. It seems likely they were seeking new non-lethal chemical weapons or interrogation tools. 1959: Merck researchers again investigate MDMA's potential use as a stimulant. There are rumors that it was investigated as a drug to keep aviators alert, but no evidence of human experiments has been found. Shulgin in his laboratory.

    1965: Independently predicting that
    MDMA might be psychoactive, a chemist named Alexander
    Shulgin
    synthesizes
    MDMA while working at Dow Chemical, but does not try the substance.
    Shulgin had made Dow a tidy sum of money with his prior work on a
    biodegradable insecticide,

    and as his reward was allowed to pursue whatever field
    of research appealed to him. Shulgin chose to study psychoactive
    drugs...a
    decision that would eventually impact the entire world.



    1967: A student at the University of California/San
    Francisco describes having taken MDMA to Shulgin. Eventually, Shulgin

    tries the new drug himself...and is amazed.


    1972:[/b] MDMA is seen in Chicago by police. Use is apparently slowly
    spreading, but it remains a rather rare drug.


    1977: A friend of Shulgin's, psychologist Leo
    Zeff
    ,
    begins to prepare for retirement from his practice. While starting
    to clean
    out his office of memorabilia,
    he
    invites Shulgin over to see if the chemist would like any of the items.
    Shulgin, in turn, brings him a gift: A small vial of MDMA, and a
    suggestion
    that he might find the material worthwhile. Leo, who was
    experienced with psychoactive drugs and had used them in his practice
    for
    some patients, accepted the gift without committing to whether or not
    he might try it.



    Several days later,
    Shulgin receives a phone call from Leo. He has tried the MDMA. He no
    longer wants to retire. Instead, he begins to utilize the new drug,
    first in
    his
    own practice, then introducing other therapists to it. The ability
    of MDMA to help patients overcome emotional barriers was so striking
    that
    one psychiatrist dubbed it "penicillin for the soul." When
    Dr. Zeff passed away years later, his widow estimated that
    the network of therapists using MDMA had grown to about 4,000.


    Michael Clegg

    1984: All hell breaks loose. The growing networks
    of therapists, chemists and users, which had managed to stay largely

    below the radar of the government, becomes impossible to ignore when
    Michael Clegg begins openly selling MDMA in Texas,

    using advertising, a 1-800 number to place orders, and even offering
    shipping. A former seminary student, Clegg considered himself an 'Ecstasy
    missionary' (having given the drug that name himself) destined to
    help bring MDMA to the public. At its peak, he was delivering half
    a million pills a month to the Dallas area.


    Responding to the crisis
    of people being able to get high without risking arrest, the Drug
    Enforcement Agency announced its intent to Emergency Schedule MDMA,
    placing it into Schedule 1 (the most restrictive class of drugs,
    such as heroin) for a year while it was decided how it should be
    permanently Scheduled.


    Shocked and angered by the DEA's plans
    to completely ban access to a drug that had become an important and
    valued part
    of their practices, psychiatrists, therapists, and other scientists
    and doct ors challenged the Scheduling, resulting in government hearings

    on how MDMA should be Scheduled.


    1985: The hearings began. The DEA
    appointed Judge Francis Young to hear the case. Months of testimony
    and sometimes bitter argument
    went by as the hearings dragged on through the summer, autumn and
    into winter.



    1986: On May 22nd, Judge Young released his decision
    on the laws, science, and use surrounding MDMA, declaring that MDMA

    was safe when used under medical supervision, did not have a high potential
    for addiction, and had legitimate medical use. As such, Judge Young

    said, it was not legal to place MDMA higher than Schedule 3. This much
    less restrictive category would have allowed doctors to continue to

    use MDMA, but would have still made sale without a prescription illegal.


    Angered by these findings, the DEA condemned
    Judge Young as biased, shortsighted, and incorrect in his interpretation

    of the laws. They rejected his non-binding ruling and declared MDMA
    permanently Schedule 1.


    Outraged by the DEA's attempts to re-write
    the laws and ignore the science, the groups that had first challenged
    the Scheduling of MDMA sued, taking the DEA to court.


    1988: After several years of motions, hearings, and
    angry debate, the doctors and scientists appeared to have achieved
    victory: On January 27, the courts agreed with Justice Young's original
    opinion and ordered the Drug Enforcement Agency to reassess its Scheduling
    decision. In the meanwhile, MDMA is removed from Schedule 1, becoming
    briefly legal once again.


    The DEA, complying with the court order,
    're-evaluated' their decision. And decided that they had been right
    all along, and the doctors, scientists, and courts were the ones that
    were wrong about the science and the law. They permanently declared
    MDMA Schedule 1, taking effect on March 23, 1988.



    Vindicated in their interpretation of
    the law, in the science and in court but beaten down by sheer political
    power, the doctors and scientists were defeated. The prohibitionist
    bureaucrats had lost every battle but won the war, and MDMA has remained
    in Schedule 1 since.



    1991: Alexander Shulgin's legendary book, "PIHKAL"
    is published, and the world discovers what 'Sasha' has been up to in
    the past few decades. (The book's title is short for "Phenethylamines
    I Have Known And Loved", a reference to the basic chemical
    structure he based his work on.) The book itself is divided into
    two parts: The
    autobiographies of Alexander and his wife Ann; and a massive drug section
    describing the structures, dosages, effects, and synthesis of
    nearly
    180 psychoactive drugs, most of which Shulgin had invented; many of
    which were new to science. (The
    Chemistry
    section
    is available on-line.) Within the book were also glowing
    descriptions of the effects of MDMA:



    "I feel absolutely clean inside, and there
    is nothing but pure euphoria. I have never felt so great, or believed

    this to be possible. The cleanliness, clarity, and marvelous feeling
    of solid inner strength continued through the rest of the day,
    and
    evening, and into the next day. I am overcome by the profundity of
    the experience..."




    Today, most of the psychedelic drugs
    that have been prohibited in America were born in Shulgin's basement

    laboratory, and his work continues to inspire the invention of even
    more new drugs.



    March, 2001: Alarmed by skyrocketing use of MDMA
    and their own clear inability to stop it, the US government increases

    penalties, making the distribution
    of MDMA ten times more severely punished, dose for dose, than heroin.
    In
    spite of being opposed by prominent scientists and even the former
    head of the National Institute on Drug Abuse as irrational and a diversion
    of resources from the control of truly dangerous
    drugs, the measure passes easily.


    November 2, 2001: Revenge of the Scientists. The
    US Food and Drug Administration gives approval for human testing of
    MDMA
    for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder to the Multidisciplinary
    Association for Psychedelic Studies
    . MAPS, a group made up of many
    of
    the same doctors and researchers that had originally fought tooth-and-nail
    to keep MDMA available to doctors, is conducting the research as part

    of their plan to gain full FDA approval of MDMA as a prescription drug.
    The next two years would prove to be a long, difficult struggle to
    gain IRB approval (Institutional Review Board oversight is needed to
    conduct human research.)



    September 5, 2003: The infamous
    MDMA researcher George Ricaurte, who's work had been the cornerstone
    of MDMA prohibition and anti-MDMA government
    ad campaigns, confesses:
    One of his most recent and sensational studies, claiming that a "common
    recreational dose" of MDMA could cause extensive
    brain damage and Parkinson's-like symptoms never actually happened.
    The monkeys used in the experiment had actually been given near-lethal
    doses of methamphetamine; not MDMA!


    September 23, 2003: With Ricaurte
    disgraced, the
    "it'll eat holes in your brain" house of cards began to
    come tumbling down; MAPS
    was finally granted IRB approval for human research with MDMA.


    April 6, 2004: The first dose of MDMA in MAPS' post-traumatic
    stress disorder study is administered.




    To support or get more information on
    this ongoing research, visit MAPS on
    the web
    . MAPS also maintains a
    complete record of the Scheduling fight
    , including government documents,
    testimony and court rulings.




    Epilogue


    Today, the placement of MDMA in Schedule
    1 remains one of the most blatantly anti-science and anti-reason pieces

    of government excess. Scheduling shows no signs of having actually
    reduced usage and has driven the market into the hands of criminals,
    while
    simplistic anti-drug 'education' efforts ensure that young people don't
    know what they need to know to stay safe when, inevitably, many of
    them
    choose to use drugs anyway.



    MDMA prohibition will
    inevitably be overturned, not because those of us that champion research
    and personal freedom have a
    powerful
    political machine or even broad support. It will be overturned because
    we are right. The science supports us, and the truth has a power of

    its own. Like water and wind carving out the Grand Canyon, the truth
    is a force of nature that can be opposed and delayed, but never stopped.

    Whether in ten years or a hundred, the defeat of drug prohibition is
    inevitable because prohibition is not rational; prohibition is a religion

    built on ignorance and fear, not sound public policy. They only real
    question is how
    much money we can spend and how many lives we can destroy in the name
    of the dark god Prohibition before this foolishness ends.



  • Yeah, hippies hooked me up with "molly" before back in the day supposedly..but who knows..just seemed like regular xtc to me..except powder not pills. You know the bullshit people spout off when talking about drugs or other thing they consider "cool".

  • YNOTYNOT in a studio apt mixing tuna with the ramen 417 Posts
    So far I've watched: Beat Diggin. Scratch. LTJ Bukem. Stoned in Subrbia. etc...
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