this post was submitted on 09 Mar 2026
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More drug war propaganda zZzzz
Just a reminder that the truth is the most effective propaganda.
Yeah, because it's not about what you say, it's about how you say it. Or in this case, what you don't say. Mainly that in comparison to alcohol these risks are ridiculously low, and we still deem alcohol to be acceptable in society.
So if this post and the "truth" in it is to be believed, the implication is that the war on drugs is good because it would seek to lower the usage of these implicitly risky substances.
But alcohol is more risky, we tried banning it as well, but had to stop because prohibition creates far more issues than it solves. In the case of alcohol it was so bad it became clear in a matter of a few years that society won't survive it.
With less risky and less uses substances, the prohibition is still making things worse, but not as apparently, so there's not as much pressure politically to fix it.
What exactly is "mental impairment" in that chart? Is it permanent impairment or does it include temporary impairment, as in, being high as intended? LSD and Mushrooms sure look enticing with the UK's endorsement, but I'm not clear on their "health, mental impairment, and dependence" concerns
I take it to mean how fucked up one is from an moderate dose.
"propaganda" from University of Cambridge?
I don't get your meaning.
I believe you're thinking "propaganda" means "bullshit."
They're not synonyms.
Do you believe that there has been a war on drugs? Do you believe that there has been propaganda in that war? Something like, say, "reefer madness"? Do you think that universities are ideologically pure institutions with no ties anywhere?
A scientist may check on a thing just because "yeah, lets do science". But that thing they're checking may be something someone wants to use to imply that a position they hold on something — ideologically — is the correct one.
Imagine that I'm a billionaire, no limit on my funds. Do you think it would be impossible for me to get someone to study whether too much water is bad for you? Obviously not. Could I then pay the press (or use some presshouses I would own as a billionaire with no fund limits) to circulate the study with dubious headlines which imply water is bad for you? Ofc I could.
Would it be factually wrong? Nope. It would just be like "if you drink too much water without any salts in it, you die, basic fact of medicine", which is true. But ofc you'd understand that my implication isn't about making people aware that drinking 10l of distilled water everyday without eating even a morsel of food is bad, obviously.
Propaganda isn't just someone writing straight up lies and trying to make you believe it.
It's implication and eliciting feelings.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ehrlichman#Drug_war_quote