#1 2009-05-08 14:04:29

https://cruelery.com/uploads/30_spice_gold01.jpg

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#2 2009-05-08 14:11:47

Germany has already made it illegal.  Boy, that will stop its use!

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#3 2009-05-09 01:01:51

http://ferdyonfilms.com/Dune%20Witt%20edit.JPG

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#4 2009-05-09 03:23:41

There are any number of plants out there with psychoactive properties.  I grew several of them when I lived in Orange County, including one which formed a nice flowering hedge on my property.  Anybody who lives in The South only needs to use a lot of cow shit in their flower beds and wait for the summer rains in order to harvest magic mushrooms.  I will be planting Heavenly Blue morning glorys this weekend; these have been used for mind expansion for many centuries.  And I just discovered a field near my current home that has a native species of poppy in bloom, one that has a long history of medicinal and recreational use.  The authorities may be able to suppress the use of a few easily recognizable or slow growing plants, but many others grow wild or are common plants valued by gardeners for their beauty.

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#6 2009-05-09 09:46:46

His
yellow in this case is not so mellow https://cruelery.com/uploads/30_vita_dominic_mug_shot01.jpg



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#7 2009-05-09 21:52:01

The Guardian wrote:

He added that in the past few years a much more diverse range of substances had appeared, many of them MDMA-like, or stimulants, or, less commonly, hallucinogens. They included plant products such as Hawaiian Baby Woodrose, Kava . . .

Are they considering prohibiting Kava?  It might mellow you out a bit; But, it doesn't really produce much of a "high."

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