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SOFT DRUGS
Hard and soft drugs are loose categories of psychoactive drugs. This distinction is used in both official and casual discourse. The term hard drug generally refers to drugs illegal for nonmedical use that lead to profound and severe addiction, as opposed to soft drugs that are either only mildly psychologically addictive or non-addictive.
Hard drugs
Cocaine (in powder form or in smokable form as crack), the amphetamines, and the opioids such as heroin and morphine, are most commonly referred to as hard drugs. According to researchers, medical evidence indicates that alcohol and nicotine, while freely available for sale in many countries, should be described as hard drugs as well because they are both addictive, associated with high mortality rates, and cause significantly more damage to the body than virtually all illegal drugs when compared scientifically (for example pharmaceutically pure or even reasonably purified street heroin, when consumed following a few basic safety rules, actually causes no harm to the body, even when taken over years or decades, while the non-prescription painkiller Aspirin, and all other non-prescription painkillers, when taken in normal doses over extended periods of time, in most cases cause moderate to severe liver damage, not to mention alcohol, which does just the same, and both substances are not even scheduled or their trade or use restricted). In most popular discourse, however, hard drugs refers to drugs illegal for nonmedical use associated with highly visible problematic users, in the United States these are predominantly heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.
Soft drugs
The term soft drug is most usually applied to cannabis (marijuana or hashish) because it is not associated with deaths, crime or violence amongst users and is without evidence of physical addiction. This distinction between soft drugs and hard drugs is important in the drug policy of the Netherlands, where cannabis production, retailing and use come under official tolerance (NL gedoogbeleid), subject to certain conditions.
Hallucinogens
Some consider certain hallucinogens to be hard drugs, but as most hallucinogens are non-addictive, nor are they known for causing deaths, such drugs generally occupy a middle ground - neither hard nor soft[citation needed]. The possible exceptions are PCP, DXM and the phenethylamine-based empathogens such as MDMA, many of which are closely related to amphetamines; being relatively new to the drug culture more research is needed to ascertain the addictive potential and potential harms of these drugs.
The drug policy of the Netherlands classifies synthetic hallucinogens such as LSD (acid) and MDMA (ecstasy) as hard drugs, although they have very similar action to naturally occurring drugs such as mescaline, which is considered a soft drug in its natural form of peyote, or psilocybin in its natural form as psilocybe (magic mushrooms). Both are sold legally in the Netherlands in their unprocessed natural form.
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