this post was submitted on 15 Feb 2025
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There are just so many holes in that theory that I don't believe it, biochemist or not.
First and unrelated to any biochemical processes being that you claim that "it reacts with alcohol to produce the effects now known to kids all around the world". But kids for sure don't mix these with alcohol, the discussion here was always about marketing the drinks to kids while they have caffeine and high sugar. Not that they mix it with alcohol.
Second, at least for other previously legal substances that evaded existing laws that I read into, molecules were attached to existing substances (e.g. 1p-LSD) which in the body lost the attached molecule. However, the companies producing these had to handle LSD, and for that had a license. If this approach was used here, the energy drink companies would need to have licenses to handle methamphetamine and its predecessors.
Third, most chemical reactions are a bit more complicated than "just add ethanol".
Lastly, it was you who made an unsubstantiated claim and, citing Hitchen's razor, "what can be asserted without evidence can also be dismissed without evidence".
Are you implying tobacco is less bad for your brain than amphetamines?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Erd%C5%91s#Personality
Not that I'm recommending this.
Ok, peace, tell us more about Hitchens :)