About five percent of women who go to the hospital after being "roofied" actually test positive for anything but alcohol, so even if we assume zero of those women took drugs voluntarily, that still means 95% of drink spikings never actually happened. If we take a more realistic view and assume probably 3/4ths of those women took the drug voluntarily and are now lying to get out of trouble, that number jumps to just under 99%.
Roofies exist on a technical level, but on a practical level, no, they really don't. They exist in the same way that being struck by lightning on a sunny day exists: it's possible, but it's so rare it's not even worth worrying about.
About five percent of women who go to the hospital after being "roofied" actually test positive for anything but alcohol, so even if we assume zero of those women took drugs voluntarily, that still means 95% of drink spikings never actually happened. If we take a more realistic view and assume probably 3/4ths of those women took the drug voluntarily and are now lying to get out of trouble, that number jumps to just under 99%.
Roofies exist on a technical level, but on a practical level, no, they really don't. They exist in the same way that being struck by lightning on a sunny day exists: it's possible, but it's so rare it's not even worth worrying about.