

If your teen is wasting his or her time listening to musical tones, well, consider yourself lucky: at least he or she isn’t out there stealing cars or robbing people on the street. I honestly think this is much ado about nothing. I decided to take a (half-way) scientific. Wow the list seems much more extensive after typing that out. You know, because listening to two tones of audio is the same as rolling. I received a copy of I-doser today with the following doses: 5HTP1 A-Migrane A-Bomb (1-3) Absinthe (1-3) Acid (Quick Hit) Adrenaline Adrenochrome Alcohol (and Alochol1) Alpha (1-3) Anesthesia (1-3). The danger of I-Dosing, I suppose, is to to get young people comfortable with the idea of doing drugs, which could make them more willing to actually do drugs later on in life. It’s based on an old audio technique called binaural beats, which was discovered in the 1800s. Open-source I-Doser, using SBaGen data files decrypted from I-Doser - GitHub - brainbang/sbagenidoser: Open-source I-Doser, using SBaGen data files. The actual act of I-Dosing isn’t all that new. This is all basically Reefer Madness for the iPad generation. Because bored teens would never post untruthful videos to YouTube, right? The story, which seems to have originated in The Daily Mail, focuses on YouTube videos that young people have posted, each apparently showing them “freaking out” while I-Dosing.

Well, the science is there, but don’t equate it to “getting high.” Do not call your congressman trying to get it banned or whatever because you’d simply be wasting your time. I tried using I-Doser nearly three years ago, and let me tell you something: it’s bunk. That’s the only way I can describe the story going around talking about how teens are “getting high” while I-Dosing.
