Quote:
Originally Posted by RU OX Alum
carrots can potentially kill too
and it's hard/near impossible to slip some one some X, and if it is clean, the only way to die is from dehydration, and if you die that way then you deserve for being to stupid to drink enough water.
I think your post is one of the dumbest things I've ever read about drugs.
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What if you were allergic to MDMA/ amphetamines? you might say it's impossible to slip someone some X but is it just X that it's so hard to give someone? (i actually am curious, b/c of the taste, unable to breakdown in drinks, etc?) what if you gave it to someone and told them it was something else, that doesn't seem to hard.
(I've been drugged before. I had one beer. I blacked out and almost choked on my own vomit. I had no idea what was going, thank god my friends were there, so I'm a little defensive when it comes to saying that its "impossible" to give someone anything. )
And you can die from taking these drugs, you might have a reaction to the mdma or amphetamines.
University of utah
but also
here:
Quote:
What is certain is that taking MDMA can prove fatal. A few people are particularly chemically sensitive to the drug and just one dose may be enough to kill them. Some of those who have suffered liver failure have required liver transplants, but the transplants have not always been successful.
Other fatalities associated with MDMA have been due to an overdose, the signs of which include vomiting, dizziness, head pains and strong muscle cramps. The most common cause of MDMA-related death, however, is due to the drug inducing a rise in body temperature to the point of hyperthermia (overheating).
The potential danger of hyperthermia is all the greater for clubbers. Part of the drug's appeal to clubbers is that the paradoxical relaxation effect, the unawareness ingredient, allows them to dance for a long time without feeling tired. But in doing so they are pushing their body temperatures up further.
The loss of body fluids through sweating and the often crowded, perhaps airless environment are factors, too. The result can be extreme heatstroke. To add another possible problem to the pile, the paradoxical relaxation effect also means that most of those in danger of overheating don't even realise it.
In the same way that their legs don't seem to feel tired, they're oblivious to the normal warning signs that their temperature is soaring and their pulse is racing.
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so maybe his post isn't all that stupid.
ETA: these were the most "credible" sites i could find for the time being.