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  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. Participants inhale the gas.
    lon-9260_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. A protester inhales the gas.
    lon-9277_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. A protester inhales the gas.
    lon-9289_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill
    lon-9198_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. Filling balloons with nitrous oxide.
    lon-9208_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. A protester laughs after inhaling.
    lon-9283_1.jpg
  • London August 1st 2015 Nitrous Oxide Parliament Square, protest against the proposed Psychoactive Substances Bill. A protester inhales the gas.
    lon-9298_1.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-07-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Nitrous oxide Mosa cream charger canisters lie in the gutter of a surburban south London street, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England. Nitrous oxide is illegal under the 2016 Psychoactive Substances Act but laughing gas is now the fourth most used drug in the UK, according to the Global Drug Survey 2015.
    nitrous_oxides-01-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6238_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6213_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6204_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6191_1.jpg
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