wikiwahwah wrote:soulfood wrote:Anyone else think it's odd that they put it in class B?
When you look at how many deaths it has been linked with and its addiction/abuse potential, it's quite strange that it ranked lower than many less harmful substances that got shoved in the A category.
It seems to me that not only is their legislative reasoning shambolic, but they don't actually have a good method to categorise the substances they've illegalised.
I don't get it.
The categories are next to meaningless; I've never been able to see the rationale behind them. Mephedrone is seen as a stimulant so they're going to stick it in the same category as amphetamines, but cannabis is also a Class B - so how does that work?
Unfortunately restructuring drug policy is such a political hot potato that until someone grows some balls and puts their political weight behind changing things we're stuck with the silly categories we've got.
W
agreed - the categorisation is all over the place. The independent drugs body that everyone is resigning from have a graph, based on actual research that measures substances according to dependency and toxicity. But of course, the govt ignores it; because said graph shows the madness of the legislative structure.
It is precisely this graph that caused prof David Nutt to be forced out - it showed quite clearly that alcohol and nicotine were far more dangerous in terms of both addictiveness and as a health risk than ecstasy or cannabis. That was what he said, and that's why he was pushed out by the government.
UK drugs policy and legislation is an utter shambles. DMT shouldn't even be categorised - it is neither addictive nor, as far as we know, toxic or harmful. Cigarettes on the other hand should be up there with heroin - highly addictive, and the cause of more deaths than any other drug in existence. So it's a complete nonsense.
But the government don't base law on this very sensible approach; they choose instead to decide on categorisation on the basis of how loudly the tabloids scream.
It, as our American friends would say, sucks.
"at journey's end, we must begin again"