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The Greenest High

Slate is running a thought-provoking piece about the relative environmental impact of several popular (though illegal) mind-altering drugs:

Let's be frank: Most highs for you are kind of a downer for the planet. The conditions under which illegal drugs are produced make it impossible for the government to enforce any sort of clean manufacturing regulations, and the long-standing "War on Drugs" inflicts its own environmental damage. (Think of the RoundUp herbicide sprayed on 120,000 hectares of rural Colombia each year.) There are some ways to measure the eco-credentials of various narcotics, though. To understand how various drugs affect the environment, we need to take a close look at where each one comes from and compare the ways they're harvested or synthesized.

Have a read, find your favorite, and calculate the damage! (Myself, I'm hoping for huge crops of Roundup-resistant cannabis invading your favorite vacant lot...)

Posted By amazingdrx at 2010-05-04 19:14:19 permalink | comments
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Anonymous. : 2010-05-05 07:34:52
It's a shame they didn't cover mushrooms, but I guess they're too green to make it past the JSTF (Journalistic Sensationalism Threshold Filter).
avicenna : 2010-05-05 03:30:32
I thought that this was overall a fine article, but am irked once again at the implication that the cost of the defoliant dumped by government drug warriors should be tallied against the users. I can understand it and it makes a certain amount of sense, but shouldn't that really be considered more part of the environmental impact of voting for hard line candidates rather than the environmental impact of snorting a line.

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