TF Archives

Bites: Groove Armada's Ecstasy Sense: Britney vs Kylie- Round 1: Everybody Wants to Be a DJ, Part, 993369: Busta Rhymes' Prophecies: War on Drugs a "Fundamentalist Crusade"

Author: Jonty Adderley
Friday, February 1, 2002
"It's a much less dangerous drug than alcohol and if you are prepared to have state sponsored drinking of alcohol then people should have the right to have ecstasy too. My personal thoughts would be to decriminalise everything and use the money you get from that to educate people about drugs." (3D World)

Groove Armada's Tom Findlay admits he's "a bit of a liberal" concerning the war on drugs.


Britney Spears' response when she was asked at a trade conference what she thinks of Kylie.

http://www.liquidgeneration.com/poptoons/britney_breasts.asp (The mystery of Britney's breast size: fast internet connection required)



"People are obviously gonna' think that I jumped on the bandwagon doing DJing but no, I've always wanted to be a DJ, since the very early days. Every week I used to go to Shellys in Stoke where Sasha used to play." (DJ Magazine)

Howard Donald from 90s boy band Take That takes a different route from his former side kick Robbie Williams.

http://www.robbiewilliams.co.uk


"I didn't predict anything intentionally. I've just always been attracted to a lot of the 'What if-' elements of the world. Sometimes we vibe certain things, and then, after the fact, you realise that the vibe was right." (Guardian)

Busta Rhymes attributes his prophetic September 11 vision in "Everything Remains Raw" to "Rasta Culture" and "wanting to know and understand things a little deeper."

http://www.busta-rhymes.com


"The Bush administration's war on drugs is a fundamentalist crusade so irrational it resembles the failed jihad of Afghanistan's Taliban. Just as the Taliban forbid music, kite flying, close shaving and female education purely in the service of religious fanaticism, America adheres to an anti-drug dogma that similarly defies logic." (Chicago Tribune)

Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor at In These Times.

http://www.chicagotribune.com
">http://www.groovearmada.com/index.asp

http://www.threedworld.com.au



"Who-" (Music Week)

Britney Spears' response when she was asked at a trade conference what she thinks of Kylie.

http://www.liquidgeneration.com/poptoons/britney_breasts.asp (The mystery of Britney's breast size: fast internet connection required)



"People are obviously gonna' think that I jumped on the bandwagon doing DJing but no, I've always wanted to be a DJ, since the very early days. Every week I used to go to Shellys in Stoke where Sasha used to play." (DJ Magazine)

Howard Donald from 90s boy band Take That takes a different route from his former side kick Robbie Williams.

http://www.robbiewilliams.co.uk


"I didn't predict anything intentionally. I've just always been attracted to a lot of the 'What if-' elements of the world. Sometimes we vibe certain things, and then, after the fact, you realise that the vibe was right." (Guardian)

Busta Rhymes attributes his prophetic September 11 vision in "Everything Remains Raw" to "Rasta Culture" and "wanting to know and understand things a little deeper."

http://www.busta-rhymes.com


"The Bush administration's war on drugs is a fundamentalist crusade so irrational it resembles the failed jihad of Afghanistan's Taliban. Just as the Taliban forbid music, kite flying, close shaving and female education purely in the service of religious fanaticism, America adheres to an anti-drug dogma that similarly defies logic." (Chicago Tribune)

Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor at In These Times.

http://www.chicagotribune.com
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