Pubdate: Sun, 4 May 2008
Source: Observer, The (UK)
Copyright: 2008 The Observer
Contact:  http://www.observer.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315
Authors: Jamie Doward and Tom Templeton

HIPPIE DREAM, MODERN NIGHTMARE

It epitomised the hippie dream of free love and easy living in the 
Sixties. Songs, films and books mythologised it. But with the advent 
of powerful new strains such as skunk, cannabis is increasingly 
associated with feral youth, psychosis and violent crime. As the 
government prepares to reclassify the drug, is its decision borne of 
good science or political opportunism?

They are not hard to find. Every few days brings a fresh tale of 
feral youths meting out random acts of violence with unfathomable 
intensity. Apart from the shocking brutality, the speed with which a 
seemingly trivial argument or confrontation can assume murderous 
proportions, the stories have a common theme: the perpetrators of the 
violence, often in their very young teens, were high on 'skunk' at 
the time. The teenagers who killed Garry Newlove, the 47-year-old 
father of three in Cheshire? The attack came after they had binged on 
alcohol and skunk.

Last month three youths were found guilty of kicking to death Mark 
Witherall, 47, after he found them burgling his house in Whitstable, 
Kent. The three were intoxicated by a ferocious cocktail of alcopops 
and cannabis. The judge said the three had 'acted as hyenas'. And 
last week the mother of Sophie Lancaster, the 20-year-old goth 
murdered by two binge-drinking teenagers, claimed the rise of skunk 
was now one of the biggest causes of problems among young people. 
'It's so much stronger now than normal cannabis and young people are 
smoking it from 9am and thinking it's OK,' said Sylvia Lancaster. 'I 
have worked with young people over a number of years and I believe 
that one of the biggest issues facing us is skunk.'

Suddenly, skunk - a high-strength herbal strain of cannabis - is 
showing the darker side of a drug that was once considered to be 
relatively benign. Concerns about its links with mental illness and 
its ability to act as a 'gateway drug', leading users into addiction, 
have prompted a sea change in popular opinion about cannabis.

It's a far cry from the Sixties, when cannabis - chiefly marijuana, 
or 'grass' - promised to open an entire generation's mind to new 
possibilities. As Paul McCartney observed to one of his biographers: 
'We'd met people like Dylan and we got into pot, like a lot of people 
from our generation. And I suppose in our way we thought this was a 
little more grown-up than perhaps the Scotch and Coke we'd been into 
before then... so once pot was established as part of the curriculum 
you started to get a bit more surreal material coming from us, a bit 
more abstract stuff.'

The Beatles followed earlier converts such as America's beat poets - 
people like Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs, who 
extolled the virtues of cannabis and helped consolidate the drug's 
image as a magic door through which users could access a world of new 
experiences. During the Vietnam war, dope-smoking assumed a political 
dimension, a sign that its users were at odds with a US government 
fighting an unpopular war. Cannabis soon became a major component of 
the West Coast counter-culture, a facilitator of free love and a 
return to an almost sybaritic era.

But now the hippie dream of peace and love has turned into the 
nightmare of A Clockwork Orange, in which drug-fuelled youths go on a 
violent rampage.

'The caricature of cannabis has for years equated it with herbal tea 
and hippies,' says Ben Lynam, of the UK Drug Policy Commission. 'Some 
people still believe that, but they are now very much among the minority.'

Prime Minister Gordon Brown is not one of that minority. This week he 
is expected to reject the opinion of the government's own Advisory 
Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), and signal that cannabis 
should be reclassified from a class C to a class B drug, a 
spectacular U-turn from just two years ago and the first time 
ministers have ignored their experts since 1971.

It means those caught in possession of cannabis could face prison 
sentences of up to five years, compared with two now. But the change, 
for the majority of users, is likely to be cosmetic. The police have 
signalled that they will still continue a policy of 'confiscate and 
warn', although persistent offenders will face tougher penalties 
which experts believe will see more ending up in prison. Last year 
police warnings on cannabis rose 20 per cent to 120,000, suggesting 
the new approach is proving popular with officers on the streets, as 
it frees them from the bureaucracy associated with making arrests.

Brown's supporters insist the reclassification will send a signal to 
society and in particular to young people. 'We need to send a message 
out that drug-taking is wrong,' says Vernon Coaker, the Home Office 
minister. 'It's an illegal substance, so it's about ensuring that we 
keep that message strong and powerful.'

But the shift by some is seen as Brown exerting his authority as a 
conviction politician, obeying his own puritanical code rather than 
listening to the experts. Few in the field believe the move is 
justified or indeed will have any effect. In 2006, the House of 
Commons Science and Technology Committee found 'no solid evidence' 
that classification had a deterrent effect on consumption. Only 3 per 
cent of people polled by the mental health charity Rethink said a 
change in classification would deter them from smoking cannabis.

'The cost of reclassification will be more than UKP1m,' says Paul 
Corry, director of public affairs at Rethink. 'Redrafting 
legislation, telling the public about it and retraining police is an 
expensive business. But we know reclassification won't reduce the 
numbers using cannabis, so it will be a waste of money.'

Something strange is happening on Britain's streets: drugs have 
become cheaper. A survey by the charity DrugScope, based on 
interviews with street dealers, reveals the price of a gram of heroin 
dropped from UKP46 in 2006 to UKP43 last year. An ecstasy pill cost 
UKP2.40 last year compared with UKP3 the year before. Ketamine and 
and crystal powder also saw price falls while the price of cocaine 
remained stable. The price of cannabis, however, rose over the same 
period. While an ounce of 'normal' herbal cannabis would set you back 
UKP70 in 2006, last year it would cost you UKP87. And the price of an 
ounce of the stronger strains has risen to UKP134, up from UKP121.

Cannabis is now a big black-market business in Britain. While heroin 
is imported from the east, cocaine from South America and ecstasy 
from the Netherlands, much of the cannabis crop is homegrown. Sir 
Stephen Lander, the head of the Serious and Organised Crime Agency 
warned earlier this year that large-scale cannabis factories - 
producing high-strength strains of the drug and run by Vietnamese and 
Chinese criminals - are appearing across the country.

Charities working with immigrant communities claim that in many cases 
the factories rely on smuggled child labour to maintain the plants. 
What was a cottage industry has become an industrialised cultivation. 
Growers now use state-of-the art hydroponic systems to ensure bumper crops.

'There are wide areas of the country where this is being grown 
commercially,' Lander said. 'It's not as though people are growing it 
in a couple of pots on their window sills.'

Soaring demand for the stronger strains of cannabis is reflected by 
police seizures. The Home Office has been quietly studying the 
results of a survey conducted among police forces across the UK. 
Early findings suggest sinsemilla - the potent herbal leafy variety 
of cannabis made from dried seedless female plants, of which skunk is 
just one of about 100 strains - accounts for 80 per cent of all 
cannabis seizures. Meanwhile, seizures of cannabis resin - which back 
at the turn of the millennium far exceeded the number of seizures of 
sinsemilla - have dropped by more than a third.

This is the trend that has alarmed many health experts. Sinsemilla 
contains far higher amounts of the psychoactive substance 
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the magic ingredient that brings 
euphoria. Unpublished studies suggest the THC content of the 
strongest varieties of herbal cannabis has doubled over the past 10 
years, from seven to 14 per cent. Some strains of herbal cannabis - 
so-called 'super skunk' - now contain as much as 46 per cent THC. At 
the same time, THC levels in resin have been falling, down to an 
average 3.3 per cent last year.

The crucial issue dividing politicians and mental-health experts, 
though, is whether this polarisation of cannabis is having a 
deleterious effect on the nation's mental health. Studies suggest the 
new hybrid strains of cannabis such as skunk, which are believed to 
have originated in the West Coast of the US in the Seventies, contain 
extremely low levels of the anti-psychotic agent, cannabidiol, 
leading to claims they may be more harmful.

A study published in the British Medical Journal found those using 
cannabis before the age of 15 are four times as likely to develop 
psychotic illness by 26. A Lancet study in 2007 estimated that 14 per 
cent of 15- to 34-year-olds affected by schizophrenia are ill because 
of heavy cannabis use. And recent analysis of 35 major studies 
concluded that cannabis use increased the risk of psychotic illness 
later in life by approximately 40 per cent and by up to 200 per cent 
among heavy users.

Many experts in mental health say they now have more than enough 
evidence to understand that cannabis is not the safe drug of popular myth.

'We have been campaigning for many years about the links between 
cannabis and psychiatric illness, and highlighting evidence that the 
drug may not only precipitate psychotic breakdown but cause long-term 
mental damage,' says Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of the mental 
health charity Sane.

'The front-line experience of organisations such as ours is that use 
of the drug can cause harm, not only to young people but to their 
families, making the outcomes worse for those with mental illness and 
robbing young people of their motivation and future.'

Wallace accepts some of the research appears to be conflicting, but 
says we ignore the worst-case scenario at our peril. 'We consider 
that until we conduct more studies to establish the effects of the 
drug on developing brains and minds, the strongest signals must be 
given that it can be disproportionately dangerous to those who may be 
at most risk,' Wallace says.

The problem for the anti-cannabis camp, however, is that cases of 
psychosis have actually been falling. Research presented to the ACMD 
- - and considered instrumental in persuading it that there is no need 
to reclassify cannabis - have shown incidents of schizophrenia have 
declined between 1996 and 2005.

And claims that Britain is in the grip of a cannabis epidemic also 
look flawed. According to government surveys, reported use of 
cannabis among 11- to 15-year-olds dropped from 13.4 per cent in 2001 
to 10.1 per cent last year. Over the same period, reported use of 
cannabis among 16- to 24-year-olds slid from 27.3 per cent to 20.9 per cent.

Significantly, the decline in reported cannabis use continued to fall 
after the drug was reclassified from class B to class C. 'The gentle 
decline is something we have seen in other countries, too,' said Ben 
Lynam, of the UKDPC. 'It's difficult to say what is driving this. It 
may be that people are switching to something else, like binge-drinking.'

Likewise, the number of children who believe it is 'OK' to do 
cannabis has dropped dramatically - from 17 per cent in 2003 to 9 per 
cent in 2006, according to the Department of Health.

And yet you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise, given the lurid 
headlines about a skunk-induced orgy of violence. 'There is a media 
generalisation about cannabis,' Lynam said. 'You read about people 
going on an all-night bender on cider but the focus in the reports is 
on the fact they had a spliff. That's not to say some people don't 
achieve psychosis through a spliff - in some isolated cases that will 
be the case. But it all helps to create some ridiculous image of 
cannabis as the evil weed.'

Talk to practically any expert in the field and though they may 
disagree on the relative dangers of cannabis use, they will agree on 
one thing: the debate about reclassification has dangerously stymied 
the wider debate about drugs. Instead, experts complain the focus on 
whether cannabis should be class B or C has blinded the politicians 
to the real issue - whether classification works at all.

'It is important that policy is grounded in evidence,' says Martin 
Barnes, chief executive of DrugScope and a member of the ACMD. 'But 
the concern is now that policy is being driven by political 
considerations and headlines.'

The UKDPC will issue a briefing paper to politicians next week that 
quotes Professor Colin Blakemore of the Science and Technology 
Committee. 'If it took so much effort to consider one particular drug 
and whether it should be placed on one side or other of a boundary, 
does it not imply that the entire mechanism for classifying requires 
a new look?'

A small but increasingly vocal band of experts would go further and 
see all drugs legalised. They say the experience of the Netherlands, 
where people are allowed to smoke cannabis in licensed bars, suggests 
legalisation does not increase usage.

And they claim it would break the links between organised crime and 
drugs. As a 2004 unpublished Home Office briefing to Tony Blair 
suggested: 'There is a strong argument that prohibition has caused or 
created many of the problems associated with the use or misuse of 
drugs. One option for the future would be to regulate drugs 
differently, through either over-the-counter sales, licensed sales or 
doctor's prescription.'

But instead of the wider debate many had hoped for, the government 
seems to be retrenching. In addition to getting tougher on cannabis, 
its long-awaited 10-year drugs strategy is, according to experts, 
simply a replica of the previous strategy.

'This is all smoke and mirrors,' said Danny Kushlick, director of 
Transform Drug Policy Foundation, the drugs think-tank that advocates 
legalisation. 'It is time for Brown and Cameron to stop the Dutch 
auction on who can be toughest on cannabis and begin a genuine 
exploration of alternatives to prohibition which costs UK taxpayers 
UKP2 billion to enforce and has created a drugs market worth UKP5bn.'

That it has come to this, a furious debate about the merits of 
reclassification of a single drug, is a singular failure of the 
government, Kushlick believes. He points out that five years ago, the 
Home Office select committee went as far as to debate openly the 
merits of opening up a comprehensive discussion on alternatives to 
prohibition. A then relatively obscure Tory MP, David Cameron, backed 
the move while a shadow minister, Alan Duncan, supported the idea of 
full legalisation.

But instead, experts believe the renewed focus on cannabis has now 
turned the clock back, with worrying implications. 'Resources could 
be put to much better use educating young people and the public about 
the physical and mental health risks associated with cannabis - we 
know education, and health warnings are a cost-effective way to get 
results,' said Paul Corry of Rethink. 'We urge Gordon Brown to 
consider the facts and do the right thing with tax payers' money - 
don't waste time tinkering around with classification - invest in 
drugs education.'

A decision to reclassify cannabis this week will also have 
repercussions across the criminal justice system and end up hitting a 
disproportionate number of young people, according to those working 
at the frontline of the drugs war.

'If you reclassify cannabis, that will put pressure on the police to 
bring more charges,' said Harry Fletcher, of the probation officers' 
union, Napo. 'That will put more pressure on the Crown Prosecution 
Service and more pressure on the courts. You will have more people 
going down. You will have more people receiving sentences because 
they are addicted, not because they are core criminals.'

Instead of tougher penalties, most experts would prefer the 
government to spend its money trying to understand the more potent 
forms of cannabis that are emerging on Britain's streets. Although 
the government will this week bolster its argument for the 
reclassification of cannabis by publishing evidence that skunk is now 
the strain of choice among cannabis smokers and that the average 
spliff contains 16 per cent THC, the jury is still out on what this means.

There is evidence that users are moderating their consumption, aware 
of the drug's increased potency. Equally there is evidence cannabis 
can have some positive health effects for cancer sufferers. But 
despite the fact that cannabis consumption can be traced back to the 
Neolithic age, it is still a little understood drug.

Britain's increasingly hardline approach seems at odds with many 
other countries. There is a worldwide trend towards decriminalisation 
of cannabis. Holland, Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Portugal, western 
Australia, the Russian federation, and some Canadian and US states 
have moved to civil penalties for drug possession. Barack Obama - who 
said of his youthful cannabis use, 'I inhaled. That was the point' - 
has pledged to decriminalise cannabis if he becomes US president.

But in Britain experts fear the cannabis debate is simply the start 
of a series of skirmishes between Gordon Brown's government and its 
advisers. The Observer understands that the ACMD is soon to start 
looking at whether ecstasy should be reclassified from a class A drug 
to a class B drug. The evidence base seems to support the move, but 
it seems incomprehensible, given the current febrile climate, that 
the government will sanction the move. Instead it will once again 
defy the experts, a move that will trigger further accusations that 
the issue is simply a political football.

The great irony is that the debate around cannabis - the drug of 
choice of the flower-power generation, the narcotic which in the 
Sixties and Seventies promised to open people's minds and spark a 
cultural revolution - is now restricting understanding. It is not 
just Britain's youth that may have been damaged by skunk.

The User: A Young Man's Style

William is 20. He began smoking cannabis at the age of 14, at his 
public school in south London. 'Cannabis runs through the whole class 
system,' he says. 'There was a large group of people smoking 
regularly by the time we were 15, and there was a boy, a good friend, 
selling it in class. By the time I was picking up regularly, when I 
was 16, it was all skunk.'

Why did he start smoking? 'To get a buzz, to have a giggle and for 
recreation. Every party I went to revolved around skunk. When you 
become a teenager, friends become the most important thing in your 
life. I had always been the "good first son" and this was something 
my parents knew nothing about.'

At the height of his habit, William was smoking UKP10-worth a day, 
around 12g a week. He says it was an important factor in him losing his family.

'It gave me a shorter fuse; my morals seemed to leave me. We would 
argue all the time over the most trivial of things, but I knew it was 
over my smoking.'

'He became a stranger in our midst,' William's mother, Debra Bell, 
says. 'Aged 14 he was pleasant, optimistic, thoughtful. He loved 
reading. Then he became depressed, upset with himself and very upset with us.'

According to Bell, by the time William was 16, he was refusing to go 
to school, would get verbally abusive and violent.

'When he started to steal from us and his brothers, that was just a 
huge betrayal,' Bell recalls. 'Money, CD players and PS2 games would 
go missing: it was like living with a burglar. We had to put our 
cash, jewellery and cheque books in a safe. Any sense of respect had 
gone on both sides.'

When William was 16, they asked him to leave home and set him up in a 
flat on his own. 'And all of the time there was the sense of what's 
going on, is it just us?'

Bell began keeping a diary of her experiences. Last year she 
published them on a website (talkingaboutcannabis.com) and received 
hundreds of emails from parents who had been through a similar 
experience. Together they formed a pressure group called Talking 
About Cannabis. 'There wasn't an understanding about how strong skunk 
was and what it would mean in these crucial teenage years,' Bell 
says. 'If you drop out or screw up at school you're leaving yourself 
a mountain to climb.'

William scraped through his GCSEs but gave up on A-levels. He now 
works in a pub and has got himself a flat in south London. He has 
reduced his cannabis smoking considerably, and tries to steer clear 
of skunk. His mother's work has made him thoughtful about the effects 
of cannabis, and he has canvassed his friends' opinions.

'Surprisingly, everyone accepts that it has had a negative, 
depressing effect on them but it varies massively from person to 
person. One friend had a smoke the other day and within minutes had a 
paranoid episode; he saw spiders crawling out of the lamp. But he 
felt fine the next day.'

Cannabis Sativa: Facts and Figures

The Statistics

. 2.7 million Britons aged between 16 and 59 say they smoked cannabis 
in the last month, making it the UK's second favourite intoxicant 
after alcohol.

. In 1995, the average number of plants seized in police raids on 
cannabis factories was 15. By 2007, this had increased to 900 which 
would give an annual yield to growers of UKP300,000.

. Sinsemilla - the potent variety of cannabis, of which skunk is just 
one of about 100 strains - accounts for 80 per cent of all cannabis seizures.

. Levels of THC , the major psychoactive component of cannabis, are 
around 3.3 per cent in resin. THC levels in some varieties of skunk 
can be as high as 46 per cent

. A British Medical Journal study found those using cannabis before 
the age of 15 are four times more likely to develop psychotic illness by 26.

. More than 13,000 adults and 11,000 children received treatment for 
the effects of cannabis abuse in the UK in 2006-7.

. In 2007, police warnings on cannabis rose 20 per cent to 120,000.

. Use of cannabis among 11- to 15-year-olds dropped from 13.4 per 
cent in 2001 to 10.1 per cent last year.

. The Netherlands, Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Portugal, the Russian 
Federation, and some Australian, Canadian and US states have moved to 
civil penalties for drug possession.

The Science

. Sinsemilla is produced through selective breeding. Female cannabis 
plants are grown without a male so that the plant produces more of 
the crystal-coated filaments that cause the high.

. Cannabis smoke contains 483 chemicals, of which 66 are 
cannabinoids, unique to the drug

. The effects of the drug are felt as the cannabinoids fit on to 
thousands of receptor proteins in the brain. This causes a series of 
commands to be relayed to the central nervous system and the body: 
lowering body temperature, impairing memory and movement control and 
releasing dopamine to the brain.

. The effects of THC take hold within seconds of inhaling cannabis 
smoke and are at their strongest after a few minutes.These include 
fits of laughter, and enhanced audio and visual sensation. Ally Carnwath

The Psychiatrist: Reefer Madness

Halfway down south London's Landor Road - notorious in recent years 
for teen shootings and police raids - sits Lambeth Hospital. Dr 
Zerrin Atakan worked as a consultant psychiatrist at the intensive 
care unit here for 13 years.

Throughout the Eighties and Nineties patients came and went and came 
again through Lambeth Hospital's mental health wards. To end up in 
Atakan's intensive care ward they would be in an extreme state, and 
were often violent. Atakan began to observe that most of them smoked cannabis.

Psychiatric intensive care wards are locked wards but, if a patient's 
mental state has stabilised, after a few weeks they are allowed out 
to shop for a newspaper, to see how things are going.

'Some would celebrate their freedom with a joint,' Atakan recalled, 
'and psychologically they'd be straight back to square one.

'It became such a regular situation that we'd guess it straight away, 
and then it would be confirmed by urine analysis.

'What we know for a fact from epidemiological studies is that if you 
smoke long enough and strong enough, there is an increased risk of 
psychotic outcomes,' says Atakan. Two in every 100 frequent cannabis 
users will suffer schizophrenia.

'We also now know that if you happen to have psychosis and carry on 
smoking, your progress outcomes are worsened.

'But to be convinced that there is a direct link we have to have 
biological evidence.'

To her amazement Atakan found that there were hardly any studies 
about the links between psychosis and cannabis use. It took her and 
collaborator Professor Philip McGuire 15 years to get funding and cut 
through the red tape to run a study. 'It wasn't considered a sexy 
drug,' she recalls, 'and medics can't buy drugs on street corners.' 
But finally, using an oral cannabis medication from a government 
pharmacy, they are beginning to get answers.

One test Atakan ran was a response inhibition task to measure how 
well people stop themselves from doing something. When people stop 
themselves the cortex area of the brain fires up, and in people with 
schizophrenia, cortex function is reduced. This 'attenuation' of 
activity is linked with paranoia or suspiciousness. In other words we 
are hardwired to feel paranoid or suspicious, and our cortex has to 
work to keep these feelings in check.

A group of volunteers were shown a series of images of arrows. They 
were asked to press a button if the arrows were horizontal - whether 
they pointed left or right - but to stop themselves if the arrows 
were at an oblique angle. The group undertook the test twice, once 
following an oral dose of THC and the second time having been given a placebo.

'Activity in the cortex was quite significantly attenuated by THC 
[the main psychoactive substance found in the cannabis plant] 
compared to the placebo,' says Atakan. In other words, THC made them 
bad at stopping themselves.

Atakan's team also measured the group's psychotic state - their 
anxiety levels, sense of alienation, intoxication and general 
wellbeing. The psychotic symptoms appeared more pronounced the less 
well the subjects were able to 'inhibit' themselves, in line with THC 
consumption.

A current Institute of Psychiatry study has healthy adults injected 
intravenously with THC and observed. It has found that THC introduces 
psychotic symptoms. Paranoia is increased, as is misinterpreting the 
environment. Reasoning is impaired and there is a disconnection 
between thinking about moving and moving, and thinking about speaking 
and speaking.

It seems incontrovertible that THC pushes people up the psychotic scale.

'But cannabis doesn't cause psychosis in everyone,' says Atakan. 
'There are young people who smoke every day but just get mild 
paranoia, and when they stop smoking, that goes away too.'

Why do some people return to normal and others stay down in the dark?

'We are at a premature stage in our knowledge. Especially in genetic 
terms. Some people think there may be a gene or combination of genes 
that makes you vulnerable. I think there may be protective genes that 
stop certain people becoming too psychotic.' TT

The Dealer: Growing Demands

Carl works in the film industry. He is in his early thirties and has 
been a chronic cannabis smoker since he was 18. About five years ago 
he 'found himself' becoming a dealer.

'I was holding pretty regularly, and friends would smoke a lot of my 
stuff. The more I smoked and gave to my friends, the more it made 
sense to buy a nine bar and sit on it for a month or so. I make 
enough to fund my own use.'

Suppliers sell skunk in 6kg loads which are split into 1kg bricks, 
then quartered into 'nine bars', which then provide nine single-ounce 
bags which are then split into eighths. The drug often changes hands 
at each stage.

'Once I've got this stuff it's been across the country three times,' Carl says.

The buzzer sounds and Carl lets in two of his friends, or friends of 
friends - skinny, pale men in their late twenties. Len hands Carl a 
UKP20 note and receives an eighth of skunk in return. We adjourn to a 
living room adorned with Kubrick film posters and Dali prints. Pete, 
a heavily side-whiskered musician, gets rolling: crumbling the dried 
skunk buds on to a net of three cigarette papers. There is no typical 
'smoke-up' or 'blaze' because there is no typical cannabis smoker.

Cannabis is Britain's second favourite intoxicant after alcohol. 
Doctors, down-and-outs, lawyers, criminals, police, journalists, 
celebrities, pen-pushers, thugs, peaceniks and traffic wardens are 
all among the 2.7 million or so Britons aged 16-59 who report having 
smoked in the last month. Anecdotal evidence suggests the demand for 
skunk grew in the late Nineties as middle-class smokers became wary 
of smoking resin. 'Soap bar' was hash resin that tripled in weight on 
its journey from Morocco to Britain through adulteration.

'I knew a guy who worked in a cannabis factory in Spain,' Carl says. 
'They'd melt the resin down, throw all kinds of shit in it - coffee, 
aspirin, asphalt - and then add boot polish or paint for the colour.'
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