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Bad Kissingen buying MDMA pills
Young people taking drugs is nothing new. For as long as partying has existed, so have mind-altering substances. That said, it turns out more young people in the UK are taking drugs than usual. New research from youth charity The Mix recently reported a 50 percent rise in the number of young people taking drugs since , with one in three 16 to year-olds using drugs in the past year. There was also an increase in usage of all class A, B or C drugs from , with methadone, cannabis, amphetamines and tranquilisers showing the highest increases. This marks a 75 percent increase in the number of young people using drugs for escapism in comparison to this time last year. Which is, er, quite a lot. Why are so many young people taking drugs to escape? Sasha, 20, uses ketamine regularly to escape her problems. Like everyone else we spoke to, she asked us to change her name due to the illegality of drugs. The ability to escape from the bad stuff becomes extremely addictive. She takes ketamine a few times a week and also MDMA at least once a week — and not just for fun or partying purposes. Emily says that drugs offer an escape from her anxieties. Life is uncertain right now, especially for young people in the UK who spent their teen years locked indoors and now have adulthood looming ahead. Not exactly cheery stuff. Young people are pretty candid about drugs on social media in ways other generations might not have been. Videos of young people with dilated pupils and running noses flood the creatively named TikTok hashtags pingtok, horsetranquilizer and c0ketok, celebrating or lamenting their dedication to the sesh. I think TikTok has a lot to do with it as I see so many comments of very young people tagging their mates saying they need to try pills. Solomon, 22, found that his cocaine use increased while working at a restaurant where the after-hours culture was often drug-fuelled. It gave me a sense of control or even felt like a natural way of relieving male frustration. Despite drug use among young people increasing, there is still a lack of support available for those who actually need it. According to The Mix report, only 28 per cent of young drug users who have experienced issues with substance use have accessed any support or services. This means that there are likely over 2. It also seems unlikely that things will change anytime soon. We have a Tory government who have spent the past ten years or so completely restructuring how British drug treatment works, moving treatment away from harm reduction and onto the shoulders of the already-stretched charity sector. By Nick Thompson. By Tabitha Britt. By Luis Prada. By Sammi Caramela. Share: X Facebook Share Copied to clipboard. Videos by VICE. Read Next.
Young People Are Taking More Drugs Now Because Life Sucks
Bad Kissingen buying MDMA pills
Or the multiple car pileup caused when a lorry full of bugle jackknifed on the Silk Road? Me neither. Propaganda, myths or completely making things up are all de rigueur when it comes to drug stories. Or you. On drugs. For years this complete asshole has been writing stories making out that various celebrities are drug dealers when they are not, just so he can look good and be mysterious on the back of ruined lives. Tulisa was accused of cocaine supply after an elaborate Sun on Sunday sting last year, in which Mahmood pretended to be a jet-setting movie mogul. He offered Tulisa a chance of the big time, bombarded her with booze and promises—if only she could get him some cocaine. But, in a ruling that will hopefully put an end to this stupid sport, the judge decided that Mahmood, the chief prosecution witness, had lied in court. Now Mahmood faces charges of perjury and entrapment and I sincerely hope he goes down. What is amazing is that for decades Mahmood not only hoodwinked his targets but also the police, the CPS, judges and the public into thinking that these people were big-time drug dealers deserving of a lengthy prison sentence. You would hope that the era of the bullshit drug sting is dead and buried. But as state by state decides to legalize marijuana and reap the taxes from the green dollar, some tokers have seen their hippie dreams turn to dust. In the brave new world of ganja capitalism, pot peddlers are more likely to be venture capitalists than hippie co-operatives, and I suppose this was inevitable. Marijuana has become a commodity like anything else. The people behind the Bob Marley brand of weed are not a collective of expert Jamaican Rasta growers, but a team of white, Yale-educated private equity guys from Seattle. Could be E, could be cat laxatives. Image via Flickr user Me. Not happy with that, kids on council estates in places like Blackburn started popping 20 a day in stairwells and on street corners alongside cans of cider. Other, more nerdy types started fiddling around with research chemicals and people started buying an E substitute, mephedrone, over the internet—the rest is history. Tests on pills confiscated at festivals and clubs since the summer have revealed that ecstasy purity in the UK is at its highest for a decade. The average pill now contains mg of MDMA, about five times as much as they did in MDMA powder is also becoming more potent. Health workers are worried that people used to popping three weaker pills a night could end up overdosing on the harder stuff. At one two-day festival this summer there were nine cardiac arrests from MDMA and deaths from the drug have been rising. On online drug forums, ecstasy users discuss the easy availability, especially over the web, of pills containing more than mg of MDMA, such as Chupa Chups, Nespressos, purple and orange Magnets, and red Bugattis. Image via Imagens Evangelicas. Our policies are working. As have the number of drug-related hospital admissions and deaths. So what do they say now? But how long can this soft-shoe shuffle, the refusal to accept some stark truths about drugs, carry on if drug use keeps rising? Probably forever. Nancy Lee, who died after prolonged ketamine abuse at the age of An investigation into the circumstances around her death revealed a hidden world of heavy end ketamine use that is far, far removed from its usual reputation as a wacky post-club hallucinogen for intellectuals. In cities like Brighton and Bristol, teenagers are taking so much K that their internal organs are collapsing. A rising number have been forced into bladder-stretching operations and removals, while others have been driven to suicide. This year official figures showed that ketamine was rising in popularity faster than any other drug in the UK. Which is fine. But when he was questioned about it he said it was OK because his coke taking did not harm anyone apart from himself—which was a dumb thing for such a clever man to say. He was fried alive in the media. Did he not know that the drug trade leaves a bloody trail from Dalston to Bogota? But as Fry, those two spliff-smoking One Direction lads, and the X Factor ketamine face bloke found out, in the UK, if you are caught taking drugs or admit taking drugs, you will be reviled. Intoxicants have always been tools of persuasion, intimidation, and sex exploitation. This year, the Cosby allegations aside, we got a grim reminder of that on the streets of Britain. In November, two gangs of Somali men were convicted of the systematic exploitation and rape of vulnerable teenage girls as young as 13 in Bristol. Some of the men groomed the girls by pretending they were their boyfriends and giving them free khat and skunk. Soon, the victims were required to perform sex acts in order to receive the money, drugs, alcohol, and gifts they had been bombarded with before. Then, in August, a report was published into widespread child sexual exploitation of over 1, girls in Rotherham, south Yorkshire. The investigation revealed a familiar modus operandi to many of the grooming cases that have come to light in the last few years: drugs are utilized to control isolated young girls, many of whom had been taken into care because of traumatic childhoods. This year it dawned on us that all the time we were worrying about the overblown scare story of drinks being spiked with Rohypnol or GHB in pubs and bars, easier targets were being picked off at will in the backstreets. This is because—unlike other illegal drugs—it does not come up in prison drug tests. But unlike the usual drugs, such as the heroin and cannabis that inmates have been managing to smuggle into prisons via French kissing, corrupt screws, or getting it thrown over the wall inside dead pigeons, chemabis is far from soporific. The drug, as the Chief Inspector of Prisons has found during virtually every jail visited this year, has been responsible for heating up the notoriously combustible prison drug market and scores of inmates have been badly injured as gangs struggle to dominate the market. On top of this chaos, which has caused one prison in the Midlands to be on lockdown for some months now, some prisoners have been physically and mentally collapsing as a result of caning these nasty concoctions, created in China by spraying rancid research chemicals on bits of grubby foliage. Follow Max Daly on Twitter. What We Learned About London in By Matt Shea and Jamie Tahsin. By Simon Doherty. By Kyle Phillippi. By Sammi Caramela. Share: X Facebook Share Copied to clipboard. Videos by VICE.
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