Pubdate: Wed, 01 Aug 2001
Source: WorldNetDaily (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.worldnetdaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/655
Author: Joel Miller

STRAIGHT DOPE - STIFF JOINTS

Dead Dope

While looking for new ways to get high, some marijuana smokers have decided 
to get low, six feet under to go metaphorical on you. Taking the expression 
"stiff joints" in a whole new direction, some pot users dip their marijuana 
cigarettes in embalming fluid to increase the potency and length of the high.

A mixture of alcohol, moisturizers and anti-clotting agents, among other 
things, embalming fluid's most important ingredient is formalin, 
formaldehyde diluted in water. A blunt treated with the fluid is commonly 
dubbed an "illy," "wet" or "fry."

San Francisco College Mortuary Science President Jacquie Taylor told me 
she's heard about the practice before but never really followed up on it. 
After all, she said, smoking anything with formaldehyde is "an incredibly 
stupid thing." Formaldehyde is really dangerous stuff. "It burns your eyes, 
burns your nose." And as for smoking it, "I can't imagine this is a 
positive thing."

Depends upon whether your last name is Kevorkian, I think.

According to a 1998 paper by Dr. William N. Elwood for the University of 
Texas School of Public Health, smoking illy can result in "bronchitis, body 
tissue destruction, brain damage, lung damage, impaired coordination, and 
inflammation and sores in the throat, nose, and esophagus." And don't 
forget "high fever, heart attacks ... kidney damage ... coma, convulsions, 
coughing, pneumonia, anorexia, and death."

Always looking on the bright side, a benefit of smoking fry is that if you 
get enough formaldehyde in your system, you might save the mortician some 
work. You'll be nicely preserved when you arrive.

So-so minds think disalike

The Aug. 16 issue of Rolling Stone has a great symposium on the drug war, 
with voices from all sides and angles, however poignant, smart, stupid or 
irrelevant. Some keepers:

Bernard C. Parks, chief of police, L.A.: "It's a failed policy to call 
anything a war when you're addressing issues in the community - when you 
declare war on your own community." Agreed. In fact, I said the same thing 
a couple months ago.

Rep. Asa Hutchinson, R-Ark., nominee for head spot at DEA: "The War on 
Drugs has been successful in terms of individual lives saved and the 
billions of young people who have declined to use drugs. We're sending the 
right message to kids: Drugs are very bad, they're illegal, and don't 
experiment or use them." Billions? America only has 275 million citizens of 
any age, let alone runny-nosed urchins diverted from drug use. Yet another 
fuzzy-math drug warrior. Thank goodness Hutchinson isn't being asked to 
head up the Department of Education.

Gary Johnson, governor of New Mexico: "If I ... had to set up a 
distribution system for marijuana tomorrow, it would be similar to liquor. 
I'd allow sales at liquor establishments. People say, 'There will be 
bootleg pot.' And there probably would be for a little while. But then it 
would die out. Why would you buy bathtub gin when you can buy Tanqueray?" 
Come to think of it, you don't see many Mafiosi involved in shooting rival 
booze sellers, either.

David Crosby, musician: "Personally, I think we should send some very 
serious lads from the Army down to the fields where coca is being grown. 
... [S]end somebody down, take it out of the ground and say, 'Look: Plant 
coffee; we'll buy it directly from you, we'll pay you three times as much 
because we won't go through a middleman, and you'll be fine. Plant coca 
again, and we'll be back again next year and somebody will get hurt.'" Oh, 
joy: The guy who co-wrote "Eight Miles High" (not a song about aviation) 
for the Byrds is now encouraging pharmaceutical colonialism.

Norm Stamper, former chief of police, Seattle: "The biggest obstacle to a 
saner drug policy is that the current one has become so rigid and 
unassailable in the circles in which it must be discussed flexibly and 
intelligently and with open minds. It's a religion. We've accepted on faith 
that if what we're doing isn't working, let's do more of it." To filch a 
phrase from WND's Geoff Metcalf, "Don't confuse me with facts that 
contradict my preconceived opinions." Bingo.

Way the wind blows

Something's rotten in Denmark, er, England. While not strictly new, this 
news is "breaking." A handful of police are under investigation by Scotland 
Yard for "allegations of assault and uncivility," according to the June 6 
Sky News. "The detectives will all be investigated ... after a complaint 
was lodged that one of them broke wind in front of a family while carrying 
out a drug raid in Chingford, Essex."

Sky slugged the story, "You have the right to remain silent ... and deadly."

Downplaying the matter, Chairman of the Metropolitan Police Federation Glen 
Smyth charged that the "allegations ... border[ed] on the ridiculous. ..." 
But I guess that depends on whether you were standing downwind and what the 
officer had for lunch, no?

Mild wilds

When people think of drugs, they typically think of powerful narcotics or 
other illegal substances like cocaine and marijuana. Rarely do they think 
about that cup of Starbucks or pint of Guinness they just downed. But with 
the probable exception of tobacco, caffeine and alcohol are the world's 
most widely used drugs.

The average cup of coffee contains about 100 milligrams of caffeine. The 
world per-capita java jones, according to David T. Courtwright's "Forces of 
Habit," results in daily consumption of 70 milligrams. In places like 
Britain and Sweden, it's "well over 400 milligrams a day." For me, it's 
about 500 to 600 milligrams - before lunch.

Moving from hot to cold (or room temp, depending on tastes and styles), at 
little beer trivia: Who drinks the most beer in the world? Forget U.S. 
fraternities; we're talking nationwide per-capita consumption. According to 
the Associated Press, Germans come in third, Czechs in second and - Erin go 
beer! - the Irish take the gold.

To give you a taste of the quantities were talking about, in 2000 Germany's 
per-gullet beer gulping topped off at about 33 gallons, or 528 pints. In 
1970 it was greater still, 37 gallons. That's nearly 600 times you'd have 
to ask the pubkeep to pass another pint. How many trips to the head that 
amounts to was a figure left unfactored.
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