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World Finals |
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Your attendance is desired at the 2006
Beat The Heat World Finals on September
15-16, 2006 at Houston Raceway Park.
Wanted Poster |
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Raid Planned |
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Officers are planning a raid on Houston
Raceway Park.
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Notice |
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Our program is supported only by
donations. If you are interested in
offering support or learning more about
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Hallucinogenic drugs are substances that
distort the perception of objective reality. The most well known hallucinogens include
phencyclidine, otherwise known as PCP, angel dust, or loveboat; lysergic acid
diethylamide, commonly known as LSD or acid; mescaline and peyote; and psilocybin, or
"magic" mushrooms. Under the influence of hallucinogens, the senses of
direction, distance, and time become disoriented. These drugs can produce unpredictable,
erratic, and violent behavior in users that sometimes leads to serious injuries and death.
Drownings, burns, falls, and automobile crashes have also been reported. In 1993,
hallucinogens were associated with almost 10,000 hospital emergency room visits and
approximately 200 deaths.
People under the influence of hallucinogens
frequently cause themselves physical harm or exhibit violent behavior toward others.
WHAT ARE THE PHYSICAL RISKS
ASSOCIATED WITH USING HALLUCINOGENS?
Increased heart rate and blood pressure.
Sleeplessness and tremors.
Lack of muscular coordination.
Sparse, mangled, and incoherent speech.
Decreased awareness of touch and pain
that can result in self inflicted injuries.
Convulsions.
Coma.
Heart and lung failure.
Jimson weed, also known as angel's trumpet,
can cause serious illness or even death.
WHAT ARE THE PSYCHOLOGICAL RISKS
WITH USING HALLUCINOGENS?
A sense of distance and estrangement.
Depression, anxiety, and paranoia.
Violent behavior.
Confusion, suspicion, and loss of
control.
Flashbacks.
Behavior similar to schizophrenic
psychosis.
Catatonic syndrome whereby the user
becomes mute, lethargic, disoriented, and makes meaningless repetitive movements.
Everyone reacts differently to
hallucinogens - there's no way to predict if you can avoid a "bad trip."
QUICK FACTS
Is there any way to predict how I will
react to taking LSD?
The effects of LSD are unpredictable. They
depend on the amount taken, the user's personality, mood and expectations, and the
surroundings in which the drug is used. Usually, the user feels the first effects of the
drug 30 - 90 minutes after taking it. These effects include dilated pupils, higher body
temperature, increased heart rate and blood pressure, sweating, loss of appetite,
sleeplessness, dry mouth, and tremors. Sensations and feelings change much more
dramatically than the physical signs. The user may feel several different emotions at once
or swing rapidly from one emotion to another. Depending on the dose, the drug can produce
delusions and visual hallucinations, which can be frightening and cause panic. Users refer
to their experience with these acute adverse reactions as a "bad trip," and the
effects typically last for about twelve hours. Terrifying thoughts and feelings, fear of
insanity and death, injuries, and fatal accidents have occurred during states of LSD
intoxication. Anyone can experience a bad trip and there is no way to predict what your
own experience will be.
The effect of hallucinogens can last for 12
hours - do you really want to lose control of your body and mind for that long?
I've heard that hallucinogens aren't even
addictive. So what's the big deal?
LSD does not produce compulsive drug
seeking behavior like cocaine, alcohol, or nicotine, but LSD produces tolerance, so that
users who take the drug repeatedly must take progressively higher and higher doses in
order to achieve the same state of intoxication. This is an extremely dangerous practice,
given the unpredictability of the drug, and can result in increased risk of convulsions,
coma, heart and lung failure, and even death.
Don't get doped into thinking that taking
hallucinogens will lead you to self discovery. |