It is still used by US combat troops, particularly aircrews who have to stay
aloft for days.

It is used in current medical practice to increase blood pressure.

Heavy use for a few months causes the major vessels to thicken and harden to
deal with the increased BP. It is definitely a young persons drug, and then
only enough to satisfy curiosity.  The come-down is hideous, so one takes
more to avoid it, resulting in days of physical exhaustion with super-high
alertness, great fine-motor control, lightening-fast reflexes and brilliant
mental function.  Stroke occurs for some users.

You could write a philosophical dissertation on the profound religious
significance of  a doorknob on the stuff.

It has no known relationship to colloidal silver use.

James-Osbourne: Holmes


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, September 04, 2002 8:59 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: CS>Re: Glad cow syndrome


> >Barbara: ..."meth" you are referring to methamphetamine?
> >    JOH: Yes.  Invented by the Nazis.
>
Wasn't it also "officially" used by U.S. troops?  Have heard various war
stories of it being included (pill form) with their rations.
Dehydration can also be an overlooked side-effect of drug use.
jr


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