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And responders were tied up when they had to take these POS to the hospitals. People should have left them flopping on the ground and just stepped over their worthless a****.

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NEW YORK -- We were reminded again of the nightmare of drug abuse Tuesday when synthetic marijuana seemed to turn people into zombies on a New York City street.

It was a bizarre scene: Dozens of people with blank stares stumbling around a Brooklyn neighborhood. Brian Arthur live-streamed it on Facebook.

"As I was walking up a block, I see anybody laying out on the floor, and everybody's just stumbling all over the place," Arthur said. "It looked like a scene out of a zombie movie."

Emergency workers sent 33 people to area hospitals, saying they appeared to be under the influence of the synthetic drug known as K2 or spice.

Designed to mimic marijuana, the man-made drug has far more powerful effects.

"What K2 does is puts you in a world, a delusional world, have your mind spinning," said Andrew, who said he's used synthetic marijuana. "It's mind altering."

K2 is made by spraying various legal chemicals onto plants. It's then ground up and smoked. Many users experience confusion, hallucinations, rapid heart rate and even seizures.  

Police say it's sold at small neighborhood grocery stores. An undercover CBS News producer found it at a Brooklyn corner store last year for $5.

K2 usage is growing nationwide. The CDC reports more than 3,500 calls of synthetic marijuana use to poison centers over a five-month period last year -- a 229 percent jump from the year before.

Drug dealers have managed to stay one step ahead of federal law enforcement. No sooner do authorities outlaw one recipe for K2, manufacturers come up with another -- making it virtually impossible for the ingredients to be banned.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/sy...into-zombies-in-nyc/

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“It’ll ruin your life,” says 22-year-old Staci Bickerstaff.

She started using “Spice” when she was 18. Four years later she’s in a recovery program and says smoking the drug was one of the biggest mistakes of her life.

“My bones weren't healing,” says Bickerstaff. “It ruined my hair, it ruined my teeth, it ruined my skin, it ruined all of my relationships.”

Like many young adults, Bickerstaff turned to the synthetic substance as a substitute for marijuana. Bickerstaff says the only similarities are the temporary high.

“You can hallucinate, you get sick, especially trying to come off of it," says Bickerstaff. “I had the worst withdrawals, comparable to heroin withdrawals really.”

http://fox13now.com/2012/12/19...ing-problem-in-utah/

 

These people can read, they've read these same stories many
times before, but the old "that won't happen to me" kicks in...

 

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