Methamphetamine: Built For Speed?
?
Methamphetamine has reclaimed a place in the lexicon of "party" drugs. Hailed by
nocturnal adventurers, condemned by raver idealists, is speed a sleepless dream
or an addictive nightmare?
Here at the end of the millennium, the pace of modern life seems fleeting -- a
whirl of minutes, hours and days. In dealing with the changes, humans have
equipped themselves with the tools to move faster, more efficiently. At the same
time a dependence for the marketing, high-speed transportation and pharmacology
of this modern age has evolved. In a race to outdo ourselves, we have moved
dangerously toward the fine line between extinction and evolution. Therefore,
the human capacity to handle the ...
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trains. However, the limitations of human existence, like sleep, may
still provide the stumbling block for infinite realization. That is, without
chemical aid.
In many ways, capitalism fuels the idea. Our society is based upon the mass
consumption of these substances. Cultural ideals, while seemingly benevolent as
"Have a Coke and a smile" have sold the link to chemical substances like
caffeine and nicotine to "the good life." Today, stimulants are the bedrock for
consumer culture. For our generation, this appeal was heightened by raising the
stakes in the '80s on what it meant to have fun.
Late night clubs, high speed music and 24-hour lifestyles brought the specter of
drugs to the fold as a necessity for being able to attain more. Leaps away from
the psychedelics of the '60s, in the '80s these stimulant drugs became tools --
utilitarian devices to gain wealth, intelligence and prestige. Sleep became a
barrier for success. Dreams were the frivolous luxuries of ...
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likened the rise to the quash of young
newcomers, some equated it with the greed of drug dealers. Judging from today's
roster of events throughout the nation, raves are still alive and well. However,
many old-schoolers have been turned off by the newbie vibe that came with
speed's rise in popularity. Some were casualties themselves of the drug's
addictive nature. Others say that speed alone is what fuels the rave scene,
keeping it from dying.
Amphetamine was first synthesized in 1887. First popularized by pharmaceutical
company Smith Kline & French as the nasal inhaler, Benzedrine, in 1932.
(Amphetamine is widely known as a bronchio dialator, allowing asthmatics to
breathe more ...
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Methamphetamine: Built For Speed?. (2004, May 16). Retrieved November 22, 2024, from http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Methamphetamine-Built-For-Speed/7905
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"Methamphetamine: Built For Speed?." Essayworld.com. May 16, 2004. Accessed November 22, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Methamphetamine-Built-For-Speed/7905.
"Methamphetamine: Built For Speed?." Essayworld.com. May 16, 2004. Accessed November 22, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Methamphetamine-Built-For-Speed/7905.
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