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Amauta-- You ask a good

Amauta--
You ask a good question. In response I would say that the use of LSD was not nearly as widespread as you suggest. "Grass" on the other hand was much more widely used. It seemed like everybody smoked grass. It was readily available, relatively cheap and gave a pleasant, relaxing high. For a majority of the generation of the 1960s (those born between 1946 and 1953) grass replaced beer as the "intoxicant" of choice. I would not say that the use of it played a central role in the radicalization of the 1960 but it was definitely a part of the rebellious culture of the 1960s just as was music by Jimmi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Grace Slick, and the Grateful Dead, among many others. A personal disclaimer: the Young Socialist Alliance and the Socialist Workers Party forbade its members to use grass or any drugs because they were convinced that the cops would bust members for using drugs and thereby destroy the organizations.

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