Park Life 71 Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 He was actually employed by the authorities in the USA (California iirc) and was permitted to make the stuff for 'research'. No doubt similar to the LSD and Viet war soldier experiments the US conducted in the 60/70's. "I see a great deal of danger in the air. Teenagers are not screaming over pop music anymore, they're screaming for much deeper reasons. We're only serving as a means of giving them an outlet. Pop music is just the superficial tissue. When I'm on the stage I sense that the teenagers are trying to communicate to me, like by telepathy, a message of some urgency. Not about me or my music, but about the world and the way they live. I interpret it as their demonstration against society and it's sick attitudes. Teenagers the world over are weary of being pushed around by half-witted politicians who attempt to dominate their way of thinking and set a code for their living. This is a protest against the system. And I see a lot of trouble coming in the dawn." Mick Jagger 1967 Last spotted at the World Cup sat next to Bill Clinton. They all got dosed in the 60's being the point. It's not that Govt are afraid of public outcry, they know full well that liberal mass use of recreational drugs endangers their hold on things amonst the youf. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest alex Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 I reckon there were far fewer drugs around in the 60s than there is now tbh. Lower quality too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Park Life 71 Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 He was actually employed by the authorities in the USA (California iirc) and was permitted to make the stuff for 'research'. No doubt similar to the LSD and Viet war soldier experiments the US conducted in the 60/70's. I think he conducted his own research though, so to speak. I.e. invited guests round and all that. Supposedly very civilised, controlled affairs though rather than warehouse raves, which is probably how he got away with it for so long. Think the cia took lsd to college campuses to break the happy happy grass vibe as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anth 113 Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 I reckon there were far fewer drugs around in the 60s than there is now tbh. Lower quality too. I read that todays Skunk and the various strains are 10x stronger than the weed of the 60's. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
manc-mag 1 Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 (edited) He was actually employed by the authorities in the USA (California iirc) and was permitted to make the stuff for 'research'. No doubt similar to the LSD and Viet war soldier experiments the US conducted in the 60/70's. "I see a great deal of danger in the air. Teenagers are not screaming over pop music anymore, they're screaming for much deeper reasons. We're only serving as a means of giving them an outlet. Pop music is just the superficial tissue. When I'm on the stage I sense that the teenagers are trying to communicate to me, like by telepathy, a message of some urgency. Not about me or my music, but about the world and the way they live. I interpret it as their demonstration against society and it's sick attitudes. Teenagers the world over are weary of being pushed around by half-witted politicians who attempt to dominate their way of thinking and set a code for their living. This is a protest against the system. And I see a lot of trouble coming in the dawn." Mick Jagger 1967 Last spotted at the World Cup sat next to Bill Clinton. They all got dosed in the 60's being the point. It's not that Govt are afraid of public outcry, they know full well that liberal mass use of recreational drugs endangers their hold on things amonst the youf. Yeah I understood the point. Just enjoyed the example of Sir Mick Jagger, railing against the system. Edited July 20, 2010 by manc-mag Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest alex Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 I reckon there were far fewer drugs around in the 60s than there is now tbh. Lower quality too. I read that todays Skunk and the various strains are 10x stronger than the weed of the 60's. Aye, they were fucking lightweights. Basically getting trolleyed off Cowgate Council Tack. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Park Life 71 Posted July 20, 2010 Share Posted July 20, 2010 He was actually employed by the authorities in the USA (California iirc) and was permitted to make the stuff for 'research'. No doubt similar to the LSD and Viet war soldier experiments the US conducted in the 60/70's. "I see a great deal of danger in the air. Teenagers are not screaming over pop music anymore, they're screaming for much deeper reasons. We're only serving as a means of giving them an outlet. Pop music is just the superficial tissue. When I'm on the stage I sense that the teenagers are trying to communicate to me, like by telepathy, a message of some urgency. Not about me or my music, but about the world and the way they live. I interpret it as their demonstration against society and it's sick attitudes. Teenagers the world over are weary of being pushed around by half-witted politicians who attempt to dominate their way of thinking and set a code for their living. This is a protest against the system. And I see a lot of trouble coming in the dawn." Mick Jagger 1967 Last spotted at the World Cup sat next to Bill Clinton. They all got dosed in the 60's being the point. It's not that Govt are afraid of public outcry, they know full well that liberal mass use of recreational drugs endangers their hold on things amonst the youf. Yeah I understood the point. Just enjoyed the example of Sir Mick Jagger, railing against the system. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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