Meaning of "drug" in British (English) English:
Noun: 1.) Any natural, or artificially, made chemical that is used as a
medicine.
2.) Any natural or artificially
made chemical that is taken for pleasure, to improve someone's performance of
an activity, or because a person cannot stop using it.
3.) ANY ACTIVITY THAT YOU CANNOT STOP DOING.
Verb: 1.) To give a person or animal a chemical that causes him, her, or
it to lose feeling or become unconscious.
ALCOHOLIC=DRUG ADDICTALCOHOL IS THE STRONGEST OF ALL DRUGS,
THANKFULLY, IT CAN NEVER BE MADE 100% PURE
Remember: The stories of hoochinoo and beewhack.
Sourdough beer is simple to make but disagreeable to drink. If consumed in quantity, it will produce any degree of intoxication. All one needs is a barrel, flour, and water. Into this pour some sourdough and Nature does the rest, from there. A little sugar will speed things up." Beewhack" is never bottled-- only a fool would carry a live bomb.
Using an old rifle barrel and a trade pot North American tribal peoples also created a crude “still". The resultant spirits were known by the Tlingit word Hooch-m-noo, from which we get the term "Hootch "Yukon Hootch, or as the Yanks insist Alaskan Hooch.
All of nature’s ground waters contain a certain percentage of alcohol (up to 3%, enough to get anyone intoxicated, if not for the fact that we consume a like concentration eadh and every day of our lives.) and in the fall or early winter wild berries may also contain enough alcohol to get one tipsy—damn well drunk.
If, that is not enough, our bodies also produce alcohol. But any whoooh! Alcohol does have it’s other uses:
1. Alcohol will remove stains from clothes.
2. Stains from clothes are not the only things alcohol will remove.
3. Alcohol will remove the clothes as well. Strange as it may seem, alcohol will do this not only for the man who drinks it, but also for his wife and children as well.
4. Most democratically, alcohol will remove smiles from the faces of wives and mothers. Or husbands and fathers.
5. It will remove laughter from the lips of innocent children.
6. It will remove even the joy of playtime.
Alcohol will remove heat from the home, furniture from its rooms, and food from its table.
Alcohol is a great remover. As a remover of things alcohol has no peer.
7. It removes fine homes and leaves hovels.
8. It removes plenty; and leaves poverty.
9. It removes fame; and leaves shame.
It removes honour; and leaves humiliation.
10. It removes self-esteem; and leaves disgust.
But removing things is not all that alcohol will do. It not only removes stains, but also creates them.
11. Alcohol can quickly stain a reputation. Worse, it can gradually stain and deform a character. It can mar the potential of any man or woman who indulges. And it can ultimately ruin the person caught in its deceptive snare.
12. Alcohol can mark a man for life with its cursed stain. And it can remove from one's experience everything, great or small, that makes life worthwhile.
But that is not the worst that can happen to man. The real tragedy is that alcohol will bar or remove a man's name from the Book of Life. It will remove from his heart all hope of heaven. It will remove from the realm of possibility fellowship with Nature, both now and in the eternal future.
Nature-the Creator of All says, "Be not deceived: neither fornicators . . . nor thieves . . . nor drunkards . . . nor Gods made in man’s image shall inherit MY KINGDOMS.~~~Al (Alex-Alexander) D Girvan
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