Illegal and Legal Drugs....
Mmmm- I find this rather interesting as I majored in drug studies at uni and we looked at the uses for medicinal cannabis - (which is a centuries old practice I might add!). It's most common medicinal use today is to releive pain and increase appetite in AIDS patients.
Here is an extract from the Wikipedia for medicinal cannabis:
Medicinal use of cannabis is legal in a limited number of territories worldwide, including Canada, Austria, the Netherlands, Spain, Israel, Finland and Portugal. In the US, fourteen states have recognized medical marijuana: Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington;[6][7] although California, New Mexico and Rhode Island are currently the only states to utilize "dispensaries" to sell medical cannabis.
There are currently seven US states considering medical marijuana bills in their state legislatures: Illinois, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey New York and North Carolina.[8] South Dakota also has several petitions in interest of medical marijuana legalization.[9]
Cannabis has a long history of medicinal use in many cultures. The US Government as represented by the Health and Human Services Division, holds a patent for medical marijuana.[10] Yet, medical cannabis remains a controversial issue worldwide.
I am not 'pro-cannabis' - and I choose not to use it, but I believe society is a bit out of balance when it comes to the stigma associated with illegal as opposed to legal drugs - the former which are formulated using extracts of natural drugs and adding a few synthetic chemicals so that they can be patented for a very large profit. Pethidine, for example, is an opiate drug. It has been chemically altered or synthesised, but by structure and action it is classified as an opiate drug - it has the same effect on the brain, central nervous system and the baby in the womb as heroin and its patented counterparts do - methadone, morphine etc. The use of pethidine during labour is actually extremely controversial and many health professionals advise against it due to the risks posed to the unborn child.
Similarly, athletes are forbidden from taking cough medicine for months leading up to competition, for if traces of it are still in their system they will test positive to heroin. And most of us know that the magic ingredient pseudoephedrine in cold and flu tablets is basically legalised, medicalised amphetamine, or speed. Hence why we are now required to show identification and have our details recorded if we purchase drugs with this ingredient at a chemist- as many people now use crushed pseudephedrine to sell illegally as speed. A regular speed user wouldn't know the difference.
Another example is the current treatment for Swine Flu - the Tamiflu drug. This is derived from the ancient Chinese herb Star Anise - which has been used for centuries in China as natural anti-viral medicine. You can buy it in the supermarket and add it to your cooking. However, now that big pharma has bought hoardes of it and is modifying it and adding a couple of synthetic chemicals in the mix, it can be patented as an entirely new 'wonder drug' and a small bunch of people will become very rich indeed!!!
Sorry to rave on, but I just wanted to extend this interesting topic a little further.....:lol: