Fascinating photo choice for Huffington Post's link on its main page to
the following article:

 
[http://i.huffpost.com/gen/660918/thumbs/s-THE-BEATLES-DRUGS-large300.jp\
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http://i.huffpost.com/gen/660918/thumbs/s-THE-BEATLES-DRUGS-large300.jpg
<http://i.huffpost.com/gen/660918/thumbs/s-THE-BEATLES-DRUGS-large300.jp\
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The Beatles 'responsible for recreational drug use increase'    The
Beatles were responsible for a worldwide increase in  recreational drug
use which continues to harm young people, Russia's top  anti-narcotics
official has claimed.
Yevgeny Bryun told a press conference in Moscow that the consequences of
the    Fab Four's propaganda in the 1960s were still being felt.

"After The    Beatles
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/the-beatles/>  went to expand
their consciousness in India ashrams, they    introduced that idea –
the changing of one's psychic state of mind using    drugs – to the
population," he said. "When business    understood that you could trade
on that – on pleasure and goods associated    with pleasure –
that's probably where it all began." Mr Bryun    said tough measures
were needed to combat mass culture and advertising which    promoted
drug use today.

The Beatles experimented with various narcotics and Sir Paul McCartney
admitted in 2004 that much of their music was "informed" by drugs.    He
said the song "Got To Get You Into My Life" was "about pot"    while
"Day Tripper" was about acid. "Lucy In The Sky With    Diamonds"
famously referred to LSD.

Beatles music was banned as an iniquitous western intrusion in the
Soviet    Union, when the state record manufacturer Melodiya said
"musicians such    as these, who have plunged to the depth of musical
decline, do not deserve a    place on Soviet records".

However, Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, is a fan of the group and
met Sir    Paul when he performed "Back in the USSR" and other tunes on
Red    Square in 2003.





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