• @givesomefucks
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    576 months ago

    Even if that existed, it wouldn’t work like that…

    Even if it did, the person coming out of it would be absolutely insane or comatose.

    Which is probably why the article is a decade old and we haven’t heard of it

    • @[email protected]
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      26 months ago

      Yeah it pops up every month or so in these communities.

      There’s no connection between the perceived passage of time and the penal system.

    • @Dicska
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      106 months ago

      White Christmas is one of my favourite episodes.

  • @[email protected]
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    446 months ago

    Times I’ve seen this headline: too many to count

    Times I’ve seen any evidence at all that anything like this is even theoretically possible or that anyone on Earth, including any government, actually desires it: 0

  • @FangedWyvern42
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    366 months ago

    So much dystopian fiction has used this idea that it’s hard to list them all. Let’s not do this.

    • NickwithaC
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      56 months ago

      And that black mirror.

  • @Drusenija
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    6 months ago

    Even if this worked as promised, if someone just murdered your child for example, and they got given a 1000 year sentence that was over in an afternoon from your perspective, would you feel that justice had been done?

    You can argue that yes, of course it has, they’ve lived a millennium being punished for their crime, but I feel the vast majority of people would feel short changed by the process.

    Whether that in itself is right or wrong is a completely separate discussion. But you’d have to have it if this tech actually existed and was used as they’re suggesting.

    • @NateNate60
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      306 months ago

      1,000 years imprisonment would drive that person insane.

      Not figuratively. The human mind was not built to comprehend such timescales.

      • @CheeseNoodle
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        166 months ago

        Yeh the person would either die halfway through or come out incurably insane and potentially incredibly violent.

    • Echo Dot
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      246 months ago

      You have to decide whether imprisonment is about punishment or rehabilitation or removing threatening individuals from society.

      The problem is I don’t think the court system really knows what it wants to achieve either. Although it certainly didn’t want to rehabilitate anyone thank you very much.

      • @Dicska
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        76 months ago

        Plus another question is whether the punishment should make the family of the victim feel better or not - should it be a factor, at all? If you could literally turn someone into an OK person with the help of a 10 minute (3 day, 30 days) treatment, should we still make their suffering longer just for the family to feel they got their revenge?

    • @KISSmyOSFeddit
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      6 months ago

      You can bet a lot of people would demand a 20-year sentence with the drug.
      So it feels like 20 million years for the criminal.

  • @SteveNashFan
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    136 months ago

    Ah sweet, manmade horrors beyond mortal comprehension.

    • Transporter Room 3
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      76 months ago

      Hey I remember that one!

      Its a chilling concept, for sure but I don’t think anyone could truly understand how much someone would be begging for death by the time they pulled out their phone, let alone finished typing.

      By the time anyone did or worse yet by the time it wore off, there would be nothing left of the person from the day before.

      Like damn that would be the one time I wish I had a concealed carry weapon. If there is a deity that abhors such things, I think they’d understand the mitigating circumstances. If not, then it’s not a deity I’d like to spend another eternity with.

      • @0laura
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        25 months ago

        I think it’s actually a plot point that eventually your brain would turn to mush. iirc he’s special or something and that’s why he didn’t die? not sure. there’s a part two that’s a lot weirder but also an awesome read.

    • @Yggnar
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      26 months ago

      Reminds me of that Junji Ito story about the dreamer. Don’t remember what it was called off the top of my head.

    • @0laura
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      15 months ago

      one of my favorite nosleep stories. I wonder if there’s a nosleep Lemmy community? 🤔

  • @HootinNHollerin
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    6 months ago

    I mean I’ve experienced creating the Big Bang and watching the formation of stars and galaxies on a full blast of 5-MEO DMT combined with peaking on a heavy dose LSD and wasn’t even human or ‘me’

    Then my friend said he was trapped in a windowless and doorless room for what felt like decades, but he was very depressed going through a divorce

    The drug exposes you to what you need and is there to help imo. I don’t see how they could ensure you have a bad experience but I’m sure they’ll try

  • @[email protected]
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    106 months ago

    I love how the title doesn’t frame this idea as the worse thing we could try to design and engineer as a society.

  • Not a replicant
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    96 months ago

    This is not a new concept. That was a plot line in an episode of an obscure British dystopian-future tv series called “1990” starring Edward Woodward - made in the late 1970s. The general premise was that the public service bureaucracy had taken over and lives were lived according to a great deal of surveillance and oversight.

    Prisoners had the “option” of misery pills to shorten their sentences. Designed to reduce the prison population by getting prisoners through their sentences faster.

    Quite an interesting show IIRC - I haven’t managed to find it while out sailing.

  • @[email protected]
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    76 months ago

    Bromo Dragonfly.

    I’ve read some horror stories about Bromo Dragonfly… Lasts for days and one person described it as hallucinating that the devil was constantly dragging him into hell, over and over again, for hours.

  • @edgemaster72
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    76 months ago

    And they called it “working in retail”

  • @Mango
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    -26 months ago

    DMT is not like that.

    If there is something like that and I hear about any authorities trying to use it to harm people, I will be doing everything in my power to kill those authorities.