Methylenedioxymethamphetamine
(street names Ecstasy,
MDMA, E or X
)
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Amphetamine
MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxy-N-methylamphetamine), most commonly known by the street names Ecstasy, E or X.
MDMA was legal in the United States until May 31, 1985 [2]. Before then, it was used both as an adjunct to psychotherapy and as a recreational drug. MDMA began to be used therapeutically in the mid-1970s after the chemist Alexander Shulgin introduced it to psychotherapist Leo Zeff. As Zeff and others spread word about MDMA, it developed a reputation for enhancing communication, reducing psychological defenses, and increasing capacity for introspection. However, no formal measures of these putative effects were made and blinded or placebo-controlled trials were not conducted. A small number of therapists–including George Greer, Joseph Downing, and Philip Wolfson–used it in their practices until it was made illegal.
London Riots, 7–11 August 2011 – An Insight from those who Control Same “Concerned Special Intelligence Operations personnel should acquaint themselves with project hightone and project xeno. Personnel in OM level Special Projects Operations are already aware of the Human Frequency operations and testing procedures which proved to be a great success on large population base capacities in Los Angeles, Calif. in April 1992 [L.A. Riots, Apr 29, 1992]......“It is interesting that the so-called Drug War has had little effect on the supply of cocaine and methamphetamines as these can only enhance the effects of the manipulation instead of decreasing it as opiates will.