LSD sticker

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

According to a modern legend, LSD adhesive pictures are decal stickers for children who are supposed to be prepared with the drug LSD , which is supposed to get into the body by sticking the pictures on the skin. This false report arose from an unknown source at the latest by the end of the 1970s and spread in the USA and also in German-speaking Europe. At the time, anonymous leaflets were circulating warning about these stickers. These allegedly have motifs popular with children and are distributed to unsuspecting children by drug dealers in schools and playgrounds.

This message lives on again and again. Leaflets of this type are distributed both by concerned parents and by strangers who knowingly want to spread the hoax. In some cases, unsuspecting school principals have disseminated the warning they had received from their parents in official newsletters, leading to epidemic-like spreads. Since the end of the 1990s, however, the spread has ebbed, presumably also through the Internet as a source of information.

Web links