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| ImmyJ |
ˇKIDS!
Cure your relative distaste with a healthy dose of german minimal tech madness:
. Paix. |
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| mmx |
I think I speak on the behalf of everyone here at MTLTA when I say this: you need to post more often.
Welcome back (and thank you). |
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| Spin Laden |
that pic..Candy Divine? Or John Candy?
what a drag. |
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| Alex |
| umm just for the record, Erol Alkan is a British electroclash DJ/Producer :toothless :toothless |
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| Mitsutranza |
John Waters is a maniac
thanks for the songs
MT |
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| Allied Nations |
You're gonna have to take those links down. Sharing sets is one thing- sharing songs is another.
Thanks-
Greg |
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| 404 Science |
| quote: | Originally posted by ImmyJ
ˇKIDS!
Cure your relative distaste with a healthy dose of german minimal tech madness:
Paix. |
indeed. check out justice's latest
justice - phantom
search the blogworld and you will find |
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| ImmyJ |
indeed, indeed. also: proxy - destroy (riot in belgium's serious about dance edit -> !) might make me want to change my name to ill-sa and become the she-wolf of the dance floor. what is there to know about MV? paix.
(note bene: crimes of reference are not crimes per se, just like people magazine isn't actually about people)
also: Dyck, E. (2006). 'Hitting highs at rock-bottom': LSD treatment for alcoholism, 1950-1970. Social History of Medicine, 19(2), 313-329.
Abstract: In the 1950s, researchers in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan began treating alcoholics with d-lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and achieved significant rates of recovery. Psychiatrists, including Humphry Osmond who coined the term ‘psychedelic’ while working in Saskatchewan, believed that the successful treatment of alcoholism with biochemical means would scientifically prove that the condition was a disease and not the result of a weak or immoral character. Initial experiments demonstrated unprecedented rates of abstinence among alcoholics treated with LSD. The approach gained support from the provincial government, local chapters of Alcoholics Anonymous and the Bureau of Alcoholism, all of which collaborated in a public campaign that supported LSD treatments. Although Alcoholics Anonymous endorsed psychedelic therapy, the Addictions Research Foundation did not. The leading Canadian authority on addictions disputed the findings in Saskatchewan and challenged these advocates of psychedelic treatments to conduct trials with proper controls. Despite subsequent efforts to demonstrate that the success of psychedelic therapy relied on both medical and non-medical factors, the treatment failed to satisfy current medical methodology, embodied in controlled trials. By the late 1960s, LSD had become a popular recreational drug and gained media attention for its association with counter cultural youth, social disobedience and anti-authoritarian attitudes. All this served further to erode support for its clinical status. |
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| Marcus007 |
| Got any articles on E and it's previous use in psychology? |
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| 404 Science |
| check out peter jennings documentary on E |
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