Home | Community | Message Board

World Seed Supply
Please support our sponsors.


Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

Shop: Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   Unfolding Nature Unfolding Nature: Being in the Implicate Order   Original Sensible Seeds Bulk Cannabis Seeds   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies

Jump to first unread post Pages: 1
OfflineI_Fart_Blue
Stranger

Registered: 06/25/02
Posts: 3,495
Loc: SItting on the Group W Be...
Last seen: 19 years, 2 months
The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s
    #1475546 - 04/20/03 02:27 AM (19 years, 11 months ago)

Hallucinogenic or psychedelic drugs have predominately been linked to the "hippie" counter-culture of the 1960s and 1970s. Lysergic Acid Diethylamide or LSD as well as many natural hallucinogens such as peyote and psilocybin mushrooms were commonly abused. Following a period of heavy usage the 1980s experienced a sharp decline. Coinciding with the emergence of "raves"; in America during the late 1980s and early 1990s, the abuse psychedelics began a sharp upswing. The 1990s has seen the increase in the abuse of drugs, but the abuse of hallucinogenic drugs has doubled (Hunt, 1997).

In 1974 the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (NHSDA) reported that seventeen percent of Americans had admitted the use of hallucinogenic drugs at least once their lifetime. That figure rose to twenty percent in 1977 and to twenty-five percent by 1979. NHSDA was not alone in their findings. A study called Monitoring The Future (MTF) reported similar numbers. The study by MTF in 1975 stated that the percentage of lifetime users of hallucinogens was at sixteen percent.

The 1980s witnessed a sharp decline in the use of hallucinogens. Since the original report in 1975 by MTF, the percentage of lifetime users had been on a steady decline. A 1982 a study found that only six percent of adults who were older than twenty-six were found to have used hallucinogenic drugs, but fewer than one percent reported use in the year prior to the study. Probably the largest reason for this decline was the increase of the use of cocaine. Cocaine sparked a new interest among drug users and quickly hallucinogens were out of the picture.

In 1992 researchers studying the emerging dance and club phenomena known as raves began to notice that the use of hallucinogenic drugs was prevalent among attendees (Hunt 1997). Although LSD was found to be the most common hallucinogen used. MDMA or Ecstacy, PCP, and natural hallucinogenic were found to be used as well. In 1991 the percentage of lifetime users began to rise. In 1993 it had reached eleven percent. In 1996 it had risen to fourteen percent.

The group of people using hallucinogens has remained the same since the 1960s. Although LSD and other hallucinogens are relatively cheap compared to drugs such as heroin and crack, oddly drug users in the upper class are twice as likely to use hallucinogenic than those in the lowest socioeconomic classes (Hunt, 1997). Middle class white males between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five are the dominate users of LSD and other psychedelic drugs. However, a study done by The Community Epidemiolgy Work Group (CWEG) shows that the number of Hispanic and African Americans as well as the number of women using hallucinogens is increasing. In 1995 CWEG reported that "Over half of the hallucinogen-related deaths in Los Angeles involved African-American males", and that "the majority of primary PCP treatment admissions in that city were female (63 percent) and Hispanic (68 percent)." In Chicago, "Ethnographic reports indicate some PCP use in the black communities on the South and West Sides.[1]" The majority of users of hallucinogenic drugs are teenagers are young adults. King County, the surrounding county of Seattle Washington, reports that "Hallucinogenic drugs such as lysergic acid Diethylamide (LSD), psilocybin mushrooms, and MDMA (Ecstasy) continue to appear in area reports involving primarily younger users." It also reports that Ecstasy is being combined with other hallucinogens, usually LSD, and is known as
"candy flipping.[2]"

But why has the use of hallucinogenic drugs increased in the 1990s? There are many theories. A study done in 1991 suggests that the number of high school seniors has declined who feel that experimenting with LSD or using it for a prolonged period of time is a "great risk." In the 1991 study, ninety percent of all high school seniors disapprove of experimentation with LSD. That figure dropped to eighty percent in just five years. A telephone survey done in 1995 with fifty-nine ";university officials" found that thirty-four percent of the colleges and universities polled showed an increase in the use of hallucinogenic drugs on campus. An unspecified university in the midwest reported that ten percent of the students had reported that they had experimented with hallucinogens. While many university officials may concede to the increase of hallucinogenic drugs on campus, they also stress that the abuse of hallucinogenic drugs is dwarfed abuse of alcohol and marijuana (Hunt, 1997).

A few reasons as to why the increase in the use of drugs and hallucinogens by young adults may rest with their parents. Most young adults are the children of baby boomers, who lived through the drug revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Before this time very few drugs were being abused. With the variety and the number of drugs being abused addictive once subdued addictive personalities were activated. This elevated addictive personality passed to their children still runs strong in a time when many drugs are available to their children. With cocaine being the drug of choice in the 1980s, the availability of hallucinogenic drugs increased. A cheap high became readily and easily available to anybody who had a few dollars in their pocket. Children of baby boomers may also experience the reduction of the severity in the sanctions placed on drug use, both by authority figures and peers. Although the norms are being broken, many parents may feel that drug use by their children is not a bad thing because they themselves grew up in a time when drug use became common place in society, and that it is common and acceptable for their children to experiment with drugs. Through the 1991 study of high school seniors it can be observed that the use of hallucinogenic drugs is becoming accepted through out high schools. Like their parents young adults may feel that the consequences of drug abuse is not great, and that because their parents grew up in a time when drug use was accepted using or experimenting with drugs is acceptable. As seen by the college officials in the previously mentioned study, colleges and universities do not believe that the use of psychedelics is a problem. Gresham Sykes and David Matza's Drift Theory helps to explain this. Their theory states that a juvenile who is torn between morals and laws will "drift" between delinquency and these morals [3]. Finally a juvenile will "neutralize" their delinquent behavior. One of the techniques of neutralizing of deviant behavior is Condemnation of the condemners. By looking at their parents and other authority figures a juveniles may feel that because their parents used drugs that it is acceptable for them to do so. Further more the juvenile, when confronted by an adult, may condemn the adult for their prior drug use.

It is the break down norms which describe the social condition which Emile Durkheim called anomie. Anomie is "a condition in which social control becomes effective as a result of the loss of shared values and sense of purpose in society" (Kendall, 1999). It is from Durkheim's anomie which Robert Merton developed the Strain Theory which attempts to explain social deviance. It states:
"People feel strain when they are exposed to cultural goals that they are unable to obtain because they do not have access to culturally approved means of achieving those goals" (Kendall, 1999). A person might seek social acceptance from the use of drugs. Rebelling against other a society who does not accept the, one might choose to use drugs to escape reality. Hallucinogens distort reality. Hallucinogenic drugs can produce convincing visual audio distortions which may become attractive to the user. Many users of hallucinogenic drugs often report out of body experiences.

The Opportunity Theory is very similar to Merton's Strain Theory. Developed by Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin in 1960, their Opportunity Theory also explains the deviance in terms of not being able to meet goals, and not being able to meet certain social norms. It states that a person who does not have access to certain things will take illegitimate action to obtain the desired object. Again, a person who is socially rejected may turn to drugs because of the altered reality (Hunt, 1997). Sykes and Matza's Drift Theory helps to explain why the majority of users of hallucinogens are between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five. Drifting between the use of drugs a user may finally neutralize themselves as they grow older and mature, finalizing on a life with out using drugs.


--------------------
"A study of the history of opinion is a necessary preliminary to the emancipation of the mind. I do not know which makes a man more conservative-to know nothing but the present, or nothing but the past." -John Maynard Keynes


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Offlinemonoamine
umask 077(nonefor you)

Registered: 09/06/02
Posts: 3,095
Loc: Jacksonville,FL
Last seen: 17 years, 6 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: I_Fart_Blue]
    #1484244 - 04/22/03 09:02 PM (19 years, 11 months ago)

Quote:

Most young adults are the children of baby boomers, who lived through the drug revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Before this time very few drugs were being abused.




LOL...that's the most ignorant thing I've read in a while. All those drugs must have fallen out of the sky all of a sudden in the sixties.The author seemed to overlook:
a.millions of housewives addicted to barbiturates and benzos a.ks. "mother's little helper"
b.the millions and millions of alchoholics since the dawn of man
c.the poor inner city heroin junkies and the upper/middle class morphine abusers
d.all the bohemians,artists,musicians,and normal everday people who smoked pot


--------------------
People think that if you just say the word "hallucinations" it explains everything you want it to explain and eventually whatever it is you can't explain will just go away.It's just a word,it doesn't explain anything...
Douglas Adams


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Offlinemonoamine
umask 077(nonefor you)

Registered: 09/06/02
Posts: 3,095
Loc: Jacksonville,FL
Last seen: 17 years, 6 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: I_Fart_Blue]
    #1484289 - 04/22/03 09:12 PM (19 years, 11 months ago)

Quote:


The Opportunity Theory is very similar to Merton's Strain Theory. Developed by Richard Cloward and Lloyd Ohlin in 1960, their Opportunity Theory also explains the deviance in terms of not being able to meet goals, and not being able to meet certain social norms. It states that a person who does not have access to certain things will take illegitimate action to obtain the desired object. Again, a person who is socially rejected may turn to drugs because of the altered reality (Hunt, 1997). Sykes and Matza's Drift Theory helps to explain why the majority of users of hallucinogens are between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five. Drifting between the use of drugs a user may finally neutralize themselves as they grow older and mature, finalizing on a life with out using drugs.





Sorry buddy.Drug abuse is not limited to any one social,economic,political,cultural, or social group.Any human with a brain (animals too) has the potential to use or abuse drugs.I hate it when one of these know it all,asshole Dr's tries to come up with a theory to explain something as complicated as drugs use and addiction in a few sentences in black and white language like this.This is reductionism at its worst.This is the kind of shit that made me drop my psychology classes.


--------------------
People think that if you just say the word "hallucinations" it explains everything you want it to explain and eventually whatever it is you can't explain will just go away.It's just a word,it doesn't explain anything...
Douglas Adams


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflineI_Fart_Blue
Stranger

Registered: 06/25/02
Posts: 3,495
Loc: SItting on the Group W Be...
Last seen: 19 years, 2 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: monoamine]
    #1484447 - 04/22/03 09:59 PM (19 years, 11 months ago)

I wrote the paper when I was 16 for a high school sociology class. Forgive me, I was not highly atuned to the drug culture at that point in time.

I don't think that I ever said that the use of halucinogenic drugs was limited to any socioecnonmic class. If you actually read what I wrote you will see that I made mention of various cultures experimenting will halucinogenic drugs. However the data which I found, as well as many studies which I found, supported the fact that the majority of halucinogenic drug users are roughly 16-25, white, and come from a middle class background. I don't think that anybody would deny the fact that any person has the potential to use drugs, which is what you wrote. Thank you for pointing out the obvious.

If I remember correctly, as it has been a number of years, these theories were not proposed to explain drug use, but were my thoughts and applications of theories on the subject matter at hand.


--------------------
"A study of the history of opinion is a necessary preliminary to the emancipation of the mind. I do not know which makes a man more conservative-to know nothing but the present, or nothing but the past." -John Maynard Keynes


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Offlinemonoamine
umask 077(nonefor you)

Registered: 09/06/02
Posts: 3,095
Loc: Jacksonville,FL
Last seen: 17 years, 6 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: I_Fart_Blue]
    #1487052 - 04/23/03 05:37 PM (19 years, 11 months ago)

I apoligize.I thought this was a college level sociolology or psychocology paper, or something written by a professional journalist.However,when someone posts something like that it usually means they wan't some feedback or criticism.If I was aware it was a highschool sociology paper,I would have been less harsh in my tone

I still stand by my 1st post though.I don't remember the exact quote,but it was something like "drug use was rare before the emergence of the sixies drug culture".Now that's just so blatantly untrue,I see it as almost unargueable.

The way the paper was worded,it just seemed kind of anti drug,even though it didn't flat out say it.The theories presented,again don't flat out say,but they seem to view drug use as morally wrong and done by social deviants.One of the theories of drug use presented is that people who use drug are somehow trying to escape an unfulling reality (the be fair,this sentence it self is pretty neutral),but that the unfulfulling reality necessarily was caused by a lack of values,social support,and feelings of inadequency.It basically looked like the "users are loosers", thing,but shaded in jargon-kind of Puritanical.The thing is,these half assed overly simplied theories can strongly influence political,social,and criminal policies,that's why they piss me off so much. Usually these theories are coined by people who have never taken drugs,automatically see drug use as "bad",and arbitrarily label what is and isn't a drug (I wouldn't be suprised if a lot of these pricks were alcoholics.

BTW,I was mainly referring to the strain theory and the opportunity? theory.I actually thought your paper was pretty unbiased,until the last few paragraphs.I know you just quoted other people's theories at this point,it's just you didn't present any opposing viewpoints or many comments of your own,which would tend to make the average reader think you agree.

Besides that,it was pretty well written (besides that I disagree with a lot of it,but that's just my opinion).I probably wouldn't have been able to write anything much better than that when I was 16.Afterall,you were probably being spoonfed a lot bullshit at the time.


--------------------
People think that if you just say the word "hallucinations" it explains everything you want it to explain and eventually whatever it is you can't explain will just go away.It's just a word,it doesn't explain anything...
Douglas Adams


Edited by grandmasterfat (04/23/03 05:48 PM)


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
OfflinePlasmanta
Sporekeeper
Male


Registered: 08/01/16
Posts: 12
Loc: United States Southwest P...
Last seen: 6 years, 5 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: I_Fart_Blue]
    #23703662 - 10/03/16 01:34 PM (6 years, 5 months ago)

While i don't agree with a few things you wrote i am happy that you posted it. Atleast you took some intrest in this subject. Im so sick of people that try to make the author feel like shit just for posting something they don't agree with. If something is wrong tell the author, don't sit there and run your mouth with your fingers.


--------------------
If you use yet refuse to show respect to the drug you love you have already signed the rights away to your soul.


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Invisiblenooneman
Male

Registered: 04/24/09
Posts: 13,973
Loc: Utah
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: I_Fart_Blue] * 1
    #23703695 - 10/03/16 01:40 PM (6 years, 5 months ago)

Did you copypasta that from somewhere? LSD use is probably linked to availability. LSD became more available in the 90s because reasons.

Anyway, the 90s didn't have anywhere near the availability and use of LSD as right now thanks to DNM. Also, surveys of the shroomery have shown a huge portion of our users are 30 or older. The whole myth of people trying out psychedelics in their 20s and then abandoning them is just that, a myth. Even the hippies of the 60s who tried LSD continued to be interested in it long after the 60s were over. You only have to ask some of our members who were there at the time.

The main factor in LSD use is availability, not age or any of the other things you suggested. Young people are more likely to try drugs simply because they're wildly more immature, stupider, and irresponsible and are thus more likely to do risky things like seeking out and trying drugs.


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Invisiblevinsue
Grand Old Fart
Male User Gallery


Registered: 02/17/04
Posts: 17,953
Loc: The Garden State(NJ) Flag
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: Plasmanta]
    #23703801 - 10/03/16 02:07 PM (6 years, 5 months ago)

13 year old thread.:wtf:
:bumpthread: . . . :peace:


--------------------

"All mushrooms are edible; but some only once." Croatian proverb. BTW ...
  Have You Rated Ythans Mom Yet ?? ... :taser:  ... HERE'S HOW ... (be nice) .  :mod: ... :peace:


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Invisiblesh4d0ws
LSx
I'm a teapot User Gallery

Registered: 02/26/08
Posts: 12,086
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: vinsue]
    #23703893 - 10/03/16 02:30 PM (6 years, 5 months ago)

Same member did an 11 year old thread too. Haha :vaped:


--------------------


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Offlineg00ru
lit pants tit licker
Male User Gallery


Registered: 08/09/07
Posts: 21,088
Loc: georgia, us
Last seen: 4 years, 3 months
Re: The Rise in the Use of Hallucinogenic Drugs in the 1990s [Re: sh4d0ws]
    #23704229 - 10/03/16 04:31 PM (6 years, 5 months ago)

it rose for my generation too in the 2000's, but TBH a lot of it was still a rehashed 90's style. Still had a blast tho.

PHISH TOUR 2010 YEAHHHH :rockon:


--------------------
check out my music!
drowse in prison and your waking will be but loss


Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Jump to top Pages: 1

Shop: Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   Unfolding Nature Unfolding Nature: Being in the Implicate Order   Original Sensible Seeds Bulk Cannabis Seeds   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies


Similar ThreadsPosterViewsRepliesLast post
* Was Lewis Carroll on LSD, Shrooms or A Musc?
( 1 2 all )
GabrielKnight 27,987 37 12/05/09 11:02 AM
by kaste
* What happens when drugs are legalized? ( DEA arguments) AnnomM 2,093 4 09/08/04 03:42 PM
by BleaK
* Clarence Tom Ashley - "Rising Sun Blues" (mp3) LearyfanS 2,269 0 08/08/04 09:11 AM
by Learyfan
* Breittenbush Shroom Conference 2000 mjshroomer 1,003 3 11/29/03 02:32 PM
by mjshroomer
* Career In Halucinogens
( 1 2 all )
Shamberlain 3,006 22 03/03/07 09:59 PM
by Shamberlain
* drug related superstitions?
( 1 2 3 all )
kotik 5,180 57 07/04/04 02:37 AM
by kadakuda
* favorite drug related film
( 1 2 3 4 5 6 all )
n0xious 11,943 105 08/31/16 03:34 PM
by BANANA.MAN
* Genetically Modified Cocoa Plants will render the drug war against Cocoa useless! blink 2,814 16 12/07/04 10:43 PM
by Jim

Extra information
You cannot start new topics / You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled / BBCode is enabled
Moderator: Entire Staff
2,720 topic views. 9 members, 32 guests and 29 web crawlers are browsing this forum.
[ Show Images Only | Sort by Score | Print Topic ]
Search this thread:

Copyright 1997-2023 Mind Media. Some rights reserved.

Generated in 0.03 seconds spending 0.008 seconds on 14 queries.