There'll be a quick (15-minute or less) downtime at 5:30 p.m. MST today as we upgrade our community package to the latest version. I'll update this message once it's complete. I'm assured it's totally badass and definitely worth the wait. Thank you for your patience.
UPDATE-1 6:30 p.m. -- Okay, Jom…
Since the 1960s, two diametrically-opposed views of drug use have appeared.
The view represented by the government and medical establishment has largely regarded all drug usage outside the realm of the medical activity to be considered an abuse with a negative impact on society (Martel 59), while critical perspectives have argued that the rationale for using drugs cannot be reduced to mere abuse or addiction (60). Instead, many have argued that drugs are an intrinsic part of spiritual experiences (i) or can be used to expand and better understanding of the human condition (ii). Central to this discussion are concerns about the health of drug-using individuals, especially since the start of the modern War on Drugs in the 1970s.
Most notably with regards to the question of cannabis prohibition, professional experts have thus been employed in varying capacities by both sides in an attempt to discredit the other. Looking through the lens of these differing professional opinions, we can begin to see many of the socio-political factors contributing to a public “credibility gap” in contemporary discussions on both the legalization and medicinal use of cannabis. As a result of this “credibility gap,” critical voices may emerge from non-professional bodies (Epstein 411).
It is in constructing a base of “lay-experts” willing to debate the effects of cannabis on health while simultaneously using the language of expert and professional bodies that medicinal cannabis advocacy groups are achieving a degree of credibility on an issue that in the past has largely been restricted to professional and government discussions.
With sharp riffs and speakers pumping enough decibels that to raise the dead for one massive zombie mosh pit, Fucked Up blew their way into the Legion #1 and brought the noise to Calgary Saturday, April 11. The show, a fundraiser for Calgary-based music festival Sled Island, was the perfect example …
And now for a topic a little closer to my heart: Lasers. The always-terrifying Wired had a write-up a few days ago about a new technology that sounds just swell, the laser-controlled man. The essential idea is that by introducting a very carefully-constructed virus into a person's b…
Recent video coming out of the Coachella shows a naked man being forced to the ground for refusing to cooperate with police and put on his clothes, then being tasered — to the booing of a large crowd that had gathered and was filming the entire thing. As the violence escalates, the videographer can …
There's an interesting new article at the New Yorker on the recent collegiate trend of "neuroenhancer" use. The piece, despite it's balanced presentation, reads a little like a warning of another plague of forthcoming horrible addictions. The numbers are legitimate and spooky en…