Christophe Stove, a toxicologist at the University of Ghent in Belgium, argued that this predictive work could help shorten the life span of dangerous new drugs by getting them declared illegal more quickly and perhaps discouraging their production.
LIsten you dunce, that’s the problem in the first place and the article states as much earlier, as soon as one of these drugs becomes illegal something else, probably more dangerous, pops up. The only smart move is legalization, education and harm reduction because otherwise it’s just a cat and mouse game until the end of time. You will not get drugs away from people, people love drugs, always have. Animals love drugs too. It’s natural to like drugs.
Also, drug recipes have been on the internet since the Usenet days, there have been massive forums dedicated to it in the last 90s and early 2000s and probably still, the only thing that is actually NEW is the ability to move around massive amounts of money with CRYPTO, which in turn makes it very attractive to frauds and grifters.
LIsten you dunce, that’s the problem in the first place and the article states as much earlier, as soon as one of these drugs becomes illegal something else, probably more dangerous, pops up. The only smart move is legalization, education and harm reduction because otherwise it’s just a cat and mouse game until the end of time. You will not get drugs away from people, people love drugs, always have. Animals love drugs too. It’s natural to like drugs.
Also, drug recipes have been on the internet since the Usenet days, there have been massive forums dedicated to it in the last 90s and early 2000s and probably still, the only thing that is actually NEW is the ability to move around massive amounts of money with CRYPTO, which in turn makes it very attractive to frauds and grifters.
Sorry for her loss :(