Rule 4: Do not promote or put drugs/alcohol/tobacco/weed/psychedelics/inhalants in a positive light.

Some comrades mentioned in private channels that weed is not addictive, I’m not going to argue on this point because this is a fundamental divide between China and some western countries.

My view is that whether you’re addicted to them or not, you shouldn’t promote these substances or put them in a positive light. It’s fine if you don’t agree with me, but anyone who leaves a comment here arguing the opposite will be banned from the community (30 days for now).

If a lot of people oppose this rule, either by downvotes and/or number of comments, I will willingly step down as moderator of this community.

  • qwename@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 month ago

    After input from various comrades, I’ve decided to improve the rule with some explanation, this is my latest suggestion:

    Rule 4: Do not promote drugs/alcohol/tobacco/weed/psychedelics/inhalants or any other substance that may be abused. We do not discuss the personal use of these substances out of consideration for comrades who might be affected by substance abuse or have bad experiences related to them. We understand that some substances may be used [medically|(for treatment)] in different cultures, but we think that this community is not the appropriate channel to receive medical advice.

  • qwename@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 month ago

    It’s almost 24 hours since I posted this, and the overall feeling I get is that this rule is “ok” only because of China’s history, and not because it makes sense.

    Let’s imagine a scenario where the new rule only mentions “Do not promote or put alcohol in a positive light.” What would be the reactions then? Keep in mind that in China, alcohol is legal for adults and can be advertised on national TV, but has the following restrictions: (from the 广告法 Advertising Law)

    第二十三条 酒类广告不得含有下列内容:

    (一)诱导、怂恿饮酒或者宣传无节制饮酒;

    (二)出现饮酒的动作;

    (三)表现驾驶车、船、飞机等活动;

    (四)明示或者暗示饮酒有消除紧张和焦虑、增加体力等功效。

    (DeepL translate) Article 23 Liquor advertisements shall not contain the following:

    (1) Inducing or encouraging the consumption of alcohol or publicizing the uncontrolled consumption of alcohol;

    (2) Showing actions of drinking;

    (3) Exhibiting activities such as driving a car, boat, or airplane;

    (4) Explicitly or implicitly suggesting that drinking alcohol has the effect of eliminating tension and anxiety, increasing physical strength, and so forth.

    Is it unfair to lump all these substances together as though they have similar levels of influence on a person? Maybe it is, because why didn’t I include games that are designed to be addicting, or mention porn, or other forms of escapism?

    Speaking of porn, why can there be a Lemmygrad instance-wide rule 4 of “No porn or sexually explicit content (even if marked NSFW)”, but I have to be met with a possible majority resistance (hexbear users can’t downvote this post due to how their instance works) for anti-promotion (not a ban on mentioning them) of the listed substances in this community?

    Anyway, this discussion post will be pinned for some time until enough consensus has been made on this new rule, and I will suspend the enforcement of this rule 4 in the meantime (not that there has been any violation yet).

  • qwename@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    Clarification: Comments or posts that violate rules in this community will either be deleted or be given a warning, the violating user would not be banned unless there’s a need to. The 30-day ban mentioned in the post is for people who come into this post and argue for substance abuse, not for people who simply disagree with anti-promotion.

    • LordGimp@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      So where exactly is the line between morphine and opium? As a native American, i can say that my people have used many drugs traditionally for the betterment of our people, as have many cultures around the world. Medicine is distinct and separate from abuse in our culture, as even staples can be abused (eg too much food makes one fat). Is there a specific historic reason for these drugs to be specifically banned or are you just following the popular modern sentiments?

      • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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        1 month ago

        Where in the post and my comments have I said to ban these substances? I find it frustrating that people come to me and mention so-and-so substance can have medicinal properties, because I understand this concept, but I’m assuming this type of medicine is prescribed by a certified doctor or therapist, and not by random people on the internet just because they use it in their culture or country.

        • LordGimp@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          You made the mistake of assumption. Your post specifically bans discussion around these substances in a positive light, which is why I specifically brought up morphine. Nobody is going to argue that morphine isnt an incredibly valuable medical discovery in the context of modern medicine, but that discovery came from opium, which definitely has some extremely negative implications where China is concerned. For all that tobacco causes cancer, it also reduces stress and provides a mild stimulant. Sometimes, that’s important. Further, medicine is constantly evolving. People in Berkeley, CA seem to think that even psychotropic mushrooms have medical value. While that’s not my cultures approach to the subject, we still believe some of the same things, even if we got there by very different paths.

          Idk overall you seem too emotionally invested in this argument to handle this topic with any kind of impartiality.

          • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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            1 month ago

            Why did you bring up morphine, to prove that we should be able to discuss morphine or related substances outside the context of medical use or research?

            • LordGimp@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              Morphine is medicine. Nobody is going to argue that it’s a drug with no medical use. Opium is a lot harder to argue for, but it’s still a valid argument because that history is important to the medical context of morphine. “Drugs are bad” is a really immature and shortsighted stance to take when the relationship between drugs and medicine is such a complex interplay with all kinds of overlap.

              And that’s ignoring the extremely important cultural context associated with using drugs OR medicine throughout the history of China, let alone other countries.

              I’m not even trying to ratio you here. You’re doing it to yourself.

        • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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          1 month ago

          Do not promote or put drugs/alcohol/tobacco/weed/psychedelics/inhalants in a positive light.

          Discussing how a psychoactive drug is used regularly and ritualistically would fall into “neutral or positive”, no? As the rule is phrased, it doesn’t matter how the drug is procured.

  • amemorablename@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    I see nothing wrong with this given the context of China, so long as it’s applied with context in mind. It’s hard to think of a specific example and I don’t want to be just inventing wild hypotheticals, but if conversation were to organically go to some country’s drug policy that has a different historical context (such as the US and how it vilified drug use in order to do mass incarceration), I would hope you’d be understanding of the reaction to that in the US context. The same as others being understanding of the reaction to drug use / culture / policy in the China context. I would not expect you to be ok with others actively promoting drug use with such a context as an excuse to do so. I just wouldn’t want someone to get a ban because they come from a different context and don’t know the difference, so I’d hope you at least warn them first in such a case. Hope that makes sense.

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      2 months ago

      I’d be warning them and then deleting their comments if necessary, not ban them, unless they double down. The ban is for people who come into this post and argue for substance abuse, I should probably make that clear.

  • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    substance abuse

    Is there anybody actually arguing that being addicted to something drug-wise is a good thing?

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      I don’t think anyone will do so, but they might instead talk about their experiences with such substances in a neutral or positive tone, they might describe the experience as “interesting” or “cool”. While a person might not be intentionally promoting a substance when they talk about it in this way, what will people who are addicted to the substance think about such opinions? If there’s no opposition raised, the substance might be viewed as any other normal item.

      This is not a rule to ostracize people who are addicted to various substances, it’s to clearly signal that these substances are not cool, not interesting, not something to joke about, not something to try out.

      • D61 [any]@hexbear.net
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        1 month ago

        Maybe change the phrasing of Rule 4 to something that reflects that concern. “We don’t discuss personal drug use out of consideration for comrades who might have substance abuse issues or bad experiences.”

  • gr43mtr@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    sure, i can agree with that. ive had my experience with them but i don’t see why this should be a problem. rules are rules i suppose. its perfectly valid to have negative opinions on drug use, even if i think some arguments are cringe, the same is true for advocates. i didnt come here to promote chemical use or the effects there of, i came to find solidarity. it really shouldn’t be controversial to be asked to keep those topics in other forums.

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      2 months ago

      People have different opinions on each of the listed substances, that’s fine by me. This is an anti-promotion rule that will definitely limit the discussion that people can have about them, including but not limited to:

      • advocacy for these substances
      • comparing pros and cons, then concluding that they’re a net good
      • saying that they have little or no side effects in small doses

      it really shouldn’t be controversial to be asked to keep those topics in other forums.

      I’m not sure what you mean by this last sentence, are there some words missing?

      • gr43mtr@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 month ago

        im sorry it wasnt intentionally vague. im in full agreement with you. despite my personal opinions on drug use, as well as the valid arguments from an american standpoint. ie: drug incarceration rates directly reflecting a white supremacist agenda. the china sub isn’t the venue for this topic. and when i say these topics should stay in other forums, im again agreeing, and saying that there are better venues for that topic. thats all. i see people responding to this as if its as sleight against there free speech and i dont think thats the case, i think you are trying to bridge multiple and vastly different cultures and i think this topic is a good step in doing so.

        • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          1 month ago

          I think you meant to write “to” instead of “in” in your last sentence “keep those topics in other forums”, that’s what confused me.

          Whatever the situation is regarding drug incarceration in America, it is not contradictory to my anti-promotion stance. My view is that anti-promotion should be encouraged to stop more people from becoming possible victims of substance abuse. As for people that are currently undergoing issues with substance abuse, they should at the minimum not be discriminated against, and if possible be helped into a better situation.

          • gr43mtr@lemmygrad.ml
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            1 month ago

            im with you. im a recovering addict myself. one of the first things you learn is not to glorify past experience. and anyone who struggles with those things should be surrounded by encouragement.

  • pudcollar [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    So anything that’s psychoactive is banned? How about caffeine? That’s got a higher effective dose to lethal dose ratio than substances you’ll ban me for mentioning. Will you ban people for mentioning therapeutic applications of these substances? This is an ignorant proposition.

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      I’d be glad to include caffeine in the list of substances too, this anti-promotion rule is not a ban on mentioning them. As many others have pointed out, certain substances have positive effects, in fact I’d say all of them have positive effects one way or another, whether medically or not. That’s why I think having positive effects is not a reason to exclude a substance from the list.

  • Lurkerino [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    I start by saying Im a nobody here but Im gonna leave my opinion, if there is a scientific undertanding that some of these drugs may have a positive outcome I think some discussion should be allowed, I have succesfully treated my depression with proffessional therapy and psychodelic mushrooms, I would not be alive if it werent for this substance, and as there is scientific claims that show the same results in many people, and it can potentially save lives, a ban on talking about it would be harmfull in my opinion.

    I undertand chinese drug history and I get why you are doing this rule too, maybe add a allow a purelly scientific and data driven discussion?

    • Pili@lemmygrad.ml
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      2 months ago

      I can concur with that. Ayahuasca, in a ritualistic setting under the supervision of a trained professional, is really the only thing that provided me with long lasting relief from my depression. I tried various medications and therapists before that, with no success.

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      2 months ago

      Some of these substances might indeed have medicinal use, this does not contradict the idea of anti-promotion. The rule can thus be improved by making more clarifications with the input of other comments here, something like:

      Do not promote the use of drugs/alcohol/tobacco/weed/psychedelics/inhalants (for non-medicinal purposes).

      The phrase “for non-medicinal purposes” might be open for interpretation so I am against it, but it can be added if needed. I’d also like to add that online forums without verified experts are not the best places for medical advice. Any scientific discussion should be held elsewhere, or strictly limited to information from authoritative sources without subjective opinions of those involved.

      Note that there can be ads for alcohol in China but not for tobacco, and both substances are legal for adults. This community rule goes further than the current legal situation in China.

  • LeniX@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 month ago

    My suggestions: 1) make an exception for using (psychedelic) drugs for medical purposes, provided there’s sufficient scientific understanding of their efficacy; 2) clearly define what “put in a positive light” means - for example, the word “based” afaik comes from the word “freebase”, referring to the purified form of cocaine; the word itself in my opinion have long become a harmless expression of approval, it’s an old meme. 3) I think it’s obvious to everyone, still - the context under which similar phrases are said matters. Saying things like “you are alienated, go ahead and try some MDMA” or something is unambiguously clear in its intent, that would go against the rule.

    • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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      1 month ago

      I was considering adding “(for non-medicinal purposes)” to the rule, but people who mention medical purposes have proved to me that this is unnecessary. I’m going to repeat this again, online spaces are not a good place to receive advice on medical prescription from others just because they use it in their culture or country.

      • LeniX@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 month ago

        That’s not to say people should give medical advice on the internet, especially if they’re not professionals - I’m against that. But saying factual phrases like “ayahuasca is currently being researched for its potential to treat PTSD and other related illnesses” is pretty neutral - it is not advice, I think it’s fine.

        • qwename@lemmygrad.mlOP
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          1 month ago

          I’d like to add that such phrases should be backed up with sources and details, and not just as a matter-of-fact statement. Other factual statements like “X substance is legal in Y country” or “X substance is proven scientifically to have Y properties and Z effects” might not be fine depending on the context, like if the statements are used to justify promoting the substance in a person’s comment/post.

  • Arachno_Stalinist@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    Considering China’s history regarding drugs, this is a reasonable rule for this community. Also, I believe there should be a separate community for those who still wish to discuss recreational drugs, so that discussions about said topics may be directed there.