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Drugs are substances that cause chemical reactions in the body. Medical drugs relieve disease and illness, and are extensively tested before being used.
Recreational drugs, such as alcohol and tobacco, are taken by people because they like the effects they have on their bodies, but they are addictive. Other change-causing substances, both legal and illegal, include solvents, painkillers, sedatives and stimulants. Opiates (such as morphine) are useful for pain-relief in terminally ill patients, but they can be misused as illegal recreational drugs that are very addictive
Cannabis
Cannabis is an illegal drug that can be smoked, producing feelings of well-being. But like tobacco it can cause lung cancer and bronchitis. Unlike tobacco, it can cause permanent damage to the mental health of its users. Research has shown that cannabis has some useful painkilling properties, but it is illegal to prescribe it for this use.
Caffeine
Stimulants include caffeine - found in cola drinks and coffee, cannabis and amphetamines. They increase the transmission of signals from one nerve cell to the next. This increases alertness, heart rate and breathing rate. However, in the longer term, they can produce 'highs' and then extreme 'lows' or even depression. They can be addictive because the body needs a constant top-up to maintain the effect
Heroine
Painkillers or analgesics include paracetamol, aspirin, heroin and morphine. They block nerve impulses from the painful part of the body, or block nerve impulses travelling to the part of the brain responsible for perceiving pain.
Paracetamol is an effective painkiller but an overdose is very dangerous. An overdose damages the liver and can cause death
Heroin is manufactured from morphine and is even more dangerously addictive. But it is useful to treat severe pain in terminally ill patients, and it causes fewer unpleasant side effects than morphine. Both substances are used illegally as recreational drugs, and this is very dangerous
Ecstasy (also called MDMA) is a drug that blocks the serotonin receptor sites in the synapses in the brain. This prevents the serotonin from being absorbed by the receptor molecules. As a result, the level of serotonin in the synapse increases. This produces a feeling of wellbeing. However, there is evidence to suggest that the use of Ecstasy reduces memory. Ecstasy can also cause severe dehydration which can result in death.

Shia vs Sunni
Shia and Sunni are the two branches of Islam. They share most of the basic tenets and principles of the religion. Differences between Shias and Sunnis initially stemmed from political strife and not any spiritual disagreements. These differences originally appeared after the passing away of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). The so-called division of Muslims between Shia and Sunni is akin to the differences between Catholics and Protestants.
All attributes

Improve this chart | Shia | Sunni | Branches: | Ismaili, Druze, Sufism, Twelvers, etc. | Four Schools of Thought: Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi and Hanbali. Three Schools of Creed: Athari, Ashari and Maturidi | Rites: | Pillars | Pillars | Holy days: | Ramadan, Ashura, Eid al Fitr, Eid al Adha, Eid al ghadeer | Ramadan, Eid al Fitr, Eid al Adha, shab-e-Qadr, shab-e-Miraj, shab-e-barat, 12 Rabi-ul-Awal | Use of statues and pictures: | Permitted in the remembrance of Ahlul-Bayt, otherwise not permitted. | Not permitted | Status of Adam: | Adam was the first man created by God. | Adam was the first man created by God. | Place of origin: | Egypt | Saudi Arabia | Place of worship: | Imam Bargah | Mosque (Masjid) | View of other Abrahamic religions: | Christianity and Judaism are "People of the Book." Baha'i is heresy. | Christianity and Judaism are "People of the Book." Baha'i is heresy. | Scriptures: | The Quran(Believe Quran is changed and original one is with Mehdi.) | The Quran(Believes that can not be corrupt as Allah promises to save his book from corruption.) | Population: | 120 million | 1.2 billion | Resurrection of Jesus: | Denied | Denied | Second coming of Jesus: | Affirmed | Affirmed | Clergy: | Imams, Mullahs, Ayatollah, Sayed | Mullahs and Caliphs. | Birth of Jesus: | Virgin Birth | Virgin Birth | Use of statues: | Strictly forbidden | Strictly forbidden | Belief of God: | One God | One God | About: | Originating with the teachings of Prophet Muhammad, a 7th century Arab religious and political figure, and believe that his son-in-law, Ali, is his successor. | Originating with the teachings of Prophet Muhammad, a 7th century Arab religious and political figure, and believe that his close friend Abu Bakr was his successor. | Prophet: | Muhammad | Muhammad | Marriage: | Man may marry up to 4 women. | Man may marry up to 4 women. | Angels: | Angels are God's messengers. | God created angels from light. They do not have their own free will and always obey the commandments of God. | Prophets: | Muhammad, Jesus, Moses, Abraham, etc. | Muhammad, Jesus, Moses, Abraham, etc. | imams identified as: | Infallible and perfect examples of humanity. Only legitimate interpreters and partners of the Quran. | Human leaders who have strong faith in Islam (Quran,Sahi Hadees etc) and love for God's creatures. | Day of worship: | Friday | Friday | Offshoot religions: | Baha'i - a separate religion | Ahmadiyya (Ahmedi) - a sect of Islam | Virtue in which religion is based upon: | Peace. | Peace. | Death of Jesus: | Denied. | Denied | Temporary Marriage (Muttah) permitted: | Yes | No Strongly prohibbited according to Quran and Sahi Hadees. | Schools Recognized: | None | All four major schools of Muslim law are recognized | Sub-Sects: | Ithna Ashr (Twelvers), Ismaili, Druze | Wahabi, Barelvi, Muqalad, Ahle-hadith, Deobandi, Salafi, Sufi, Hanafi, Hanbali, Shafai, Maliki | Name means: | "party" or "partisans" of Ali | "well-trodden path" or "tradition" | Strength as a percentage of Muslims: | 10% | 90% | Adherents called: | Shiites, Shia or Shii | Sunni | Origin Year: | c. 632-650 CE; killing of Ali | c. 632 CE | Current leaders: | Mujtahids | Imams | Traditions (Hadith): | From the 12 Infallible Imams | From the Companions of the Prophet | Pillars of Islam: | 1. Salat (Worship) 2. Sawm (Fast) 3. Hajj (Pilgrimage) 4. Zakaat (Poor-rate) 5. Khums (One-fifth) 6. Amr-Bil-Ma'rūf (Promotion) 7. Nahi-Anil-Munkar (Dissuasion) 8. Tawalla (Re-affirmation) 9. Tabarra (disassociation from the enemies of Islam) | 1. Shahadah (Testament of Faith) 2. Salah (Prayer) 3. Zakat (Alms giving) 4. Sawm (Fasting) 5. Hajj (Pilgrimage), Jihad(Stuggle in the way of Allah) | Main Books of Narration (Hadith): | 1. Kitab al-Kafi 2. Man la yahduruhu al-Faqih 3. Tahdhib al-Ahkam 4. Al-Istibsar | 1. Sahih Bukhari 2.Sahih Muslim 3. Sunan al-Sughra 4. Sunan Abu Dawood 5. Jami al-Tirmidhi 6. Sunan ibn Majah | Estimated no. of adherants: | 120 million | 940 million | Actual successor of the Prophet: | Ali ibn Abu Talib | Abu Bakr | Intercession permitted: | Yes (12 Infallibles ONLY) | No | Self Flagellation (Lattum) permitted: | Yes | No | Qualifications for ruler: | Belonging to the family of the Prophet | Qualified ruler; chosen by the Ummah | Did Muhammad designate a successor?: | Yes (Ali ibn Abu Talib) | No | Geographic Presence: | Majority in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Bahrain, Azerbaijan, Lebenon; Minority spread across the world | Majority in all Muslim countries; Minority spread across the world | Building/Visiting Shrines permitted: | Yes | Yes | Articles of Islamic: | 1. Tawhid (monotheism) 2. Qiyamah (Day of Judgment) 3. Nubuwwah (Prophethood) 4. Imamah (Leadership of the Twelve Imams) 5. Adl (Justice) | 1. Allah. 2. His Angels. 3. His Messengers. 4. His Books. 5. The Last Day. 6. Divine Preordainments good or bad. | Successors after the Prophet: | 12 Infallible Imaams from the Prophets Progeny | Hazrat Abu Bakr(father of the Prophet's favoured wife),Hazrat 'A'ishah (elected by people of Medina),Hazrat Ali,Hazrat Umar,Hazrat Usman,Hazrat Imam Hussain & Hazrat Imam Hassan. |

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