• @force
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    167 months ago

    I can’t seriously believe that Chinese people didn’t abuse psychoactive substances before they discovered the joy of British opium

    • @woelkchen
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      107 months ago

      British

      Also Imperial Britain was a monarchy, not a free country. Brunacho’s comment makes zero sense.

      • @force
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        7 months ago

        To be fair just before the time of the opium wars they were relatively far along in their process of converting to a democracy.

        • @woelkchen
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          37 months ago

          they were relatively far along in their process of converting to a democracy.

          A country with an unelected House of Lords is still not a free democracy.

          • @[email protected]
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            97 months ago

            The wackiest thing is that it’s often the Lords who have stopped the Commons enacting some really authoritarian stuff!

    • @Meron35
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      37 months ago

      Chinese people enjoyed opium for centuries before the Opium wars. Opium was a legal and commonly traded item, and it was only since the 1790s that the imperial court started to worry about the effects of abuse.

      And even ~1000 years before then, Wu Shi San was a popular, but toxic psychoactive drug used by the elite in China.

      COPY - CES_WP136.pdf - https://ces.fas.harvard.edu/uploads/files/Working-Papers-Archives/CES_WP136.pdf

      Cold-Food Powder - Wikipedia - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold-Food_Powder

    • Brunacho
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      27 months ago

      they probably did, but there wasn’t an abuse epidemic before