Synthetic Marijuana New York State has recently experienced a dramatic increase in emergency department visits and poison control center calls from adverse health effects due to synthetic marijuana. Revised: September Your browser does not support iFrames. Now, with a chapel and a cult not recognized by the Catholic Church, people come to ask favors of Malverde, that he might resolve an injustice, and they bring him something, anything, so long as it is stolen.
This saint of illegality was adopted by Mexican drug traffickers who tattooed his image—a mustached man—onto their bodies, built altars to him and paid for chapels.
They associated the verde green of the mal evil or bad with a marijuana leaf. The banned cult became so associated with the trafficking of drugs that in the s, the American Drug Enforcement Administration DEA interrogated anyone with a tattoo of the saint. But now, in the museum, all this imagery of the powerful drug trafficker born in untamed lands and armed because he is brave has been abandoned.
Songs and films about drug traffickers are prohibited on radio stations and in cinemas. Like trafficking itself, they survive thanks to a parallel market: the pirate CDs, the straight-to-DVD movies. The narco film always tell the same story: an honest family goes through financial problems—a bad investment, their sweet corn crop blighted—and ends up helping to traffic drugs.
Narcocorridos are part of a banned culture—drugs—that has to justify itself morally. Through their verses the motive becomes clear: I was very poor and now I have everything and endless amounts of it and, even if they kill me, it was worth living by illegal means. They are songs about those for whom trafficking implied a metamorphosis, not only in terms of material wealth—they never boast about being rich without listing their possessions: houses, cars, weapons, money in cash, women, and alcohol—but rather in terms of power.
They were poor nobodies, and now they have power, while it lasts. This is simply due to the way the search algorithm works. Urban Thesaurus crawls the web and collects millions of different slang terms, many of which come from UD and turn out to be really terrible and insensitive this is the nature of urban slang, I suppose. Hopefully the related words and synonyms for " term " are a little tamer than average.
The Urban Thesaurus was created by indexing millions of different slang terms which are defined on sites like Urban Dictionary. These indexes are then used to find usage correlations between slang terms. Develop and improve products.
List of Partners vendors. Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic that was developed in the early s and used in human and veterinary medicine. The drug is primarily used for anesthesia. In the s, phencyclidine PCP was developed as an intravenous general anesthetic, but because of its severe side effects, ketamine was developed to replace it. MXE methoxetamine is also a similar drug made from arylcyclohexylamines. Ketamine is a Schedule III drug, which means it is approved for use as an anesthetic in hospital and other medical settings.
It is safe and effective when used in a controlled medical setting, but it also has the potential for misuse and addiction. It has anesthetic, dissociative, and hallucinogenic effects. Common Side Effects: Ketamine can have side effects including elevated blood pressure, tremors, hallucinations, confusion, and agitation.
Ketamine usually appears as a clear liquid or a white to off-white powder. It can also be sold illegally in pill or capsule form. It is tasteless and odorless. In medical settings, ketamine is given intravenously to induce and maintain anesthesia. In liquid form, it can be injected into a vein, consumed in beverages, or added to smokable materials. Some people also inject the drug intramuscularly. The effects of ketamine are similar to PCP, but not as severe and with a shorter duration.
People who use ketamine describe the high as a pleasant sensation of floating or a dissociative state of being separated from their bodies. The drug can produce hallucinogenic-like effects, lasting a short period of time, from one to two hours. Some people describe a feeling of complete sensory detachment, which they associate with a near-death experience.
Others describe this experience as being so deep inside the mind that reality seems distant. This state of total dissociation is called the " k-hole. There is little research into the long-term effects of ketamine misuse, but research has shown that chronic use of the drug can produce impairments in memory and reduced psychological wellbeing.
Studies have found that ketamine use can lead to urinary tract problems. People who used ketamine reported an increased urge to urinate, blood in their urine, and pain on urination. For people who use ketamine recreationally, many of the dangers—other than long-term cognitive effects—are associated with the interaction with other drugs the person may be taking, including alcohol. Ketamine can increase the effects of other sedatives like benzodiazepines, barbiturates, and opiates, which can lead to death.
As a street drug, ketamine has become popular as a "club drug," used by teens and young adults at dance clubs and events known as raves. Because it is odorless and tasteless and can be added to beverages without being detected, there are also reports of it being used as a date-rape drug.
In addition to rendering victims immobile, it can also induce amnesia making it difficult to recall events that took place while under the influence.
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