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Monthly archives for November, 2011

Amazon Sells DEA Banned Bath Salts

Nov28
2011
3 Comments Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer
The chemicals found in bath salts have been banned by the DEA, but they can still be purchased on Amazon. 

Bath Salts Sold Online

The Drug Enforcement Agency of the United States has recently banned the three chemicals found in the designer drug “bath salts.” The emergency stopping power was applied to the manufacture and sale of mephedrone, methylenedioxypyrovalerone and methylone. 

Bath salts are marketed as “not for human consumption” avoiding drug laws, but their abuse has become widespread to the point of government intervention.

The emergency ban was activated by the DEA for the next 12 months to give The Department of Health and Human Services time to asses the situation. The chemicals have been placed under class one, the D.E.A.’s most restrictive category. This classification is reserved for substances with high potential for abuse and no accepted use under medical supervision. Other schedule one drugs are LSD, ecstasy, and heroin.

The manufacture and sale of these chemicals is now illegal in the United States.

However, it seems that the law hasn’t yet stopped Amazon.com.

While writing the article Bath Salts Addiction I searched Amazon for “bath salts.” The fourth entry on the first page was for “Ivory Dove.” Ivory Dove’s only description was “500 mg.” The packaging was pictured and looks like common bath salts drug packaging. The list price was $48.99 with free shipping.

There are videos on youtube.com with instruction on purchasing bath salts from amazon.com.

Video: How to Buy Bath Salts on Amazon

The DEA may not have shut down the sale of bath salts on the Internet or in stores, but the government censor of the chemicals is raising public awareness of the danger. Hopefully the trend will start to wane. However with underground chemists finding it easy to get around written chemically specific drug laws there will be new designer drugs on the market soon.

Sources:

  • http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/22/us/dea-bans-chemicals-used-in-bath-salts.html
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e5NLgfsR5wE
  • http://www.amazon.com/Ivory-Dove–Free-Shipping/dp/B006EJ2WB6/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1322506057&sr=8-4

 

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It’s Never To Late: To Traffic Drugs

Nov21
2011
Leave a Comment Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer

80 year olds arrested for distributing cocaine! Grandpa transports 104 bricks and grandma goes to jail, again…

This week an 87 year old man plead not guilty to transporting over 200 pounds of cocaine.Leo Sharp, 87 He says he was forced to carry the $2.9 million worth of drugs at gun point. 

The old man was pulled over for improper lane use and refused to let officers search his vehicle. The officer’s canine searched the car and found the drugs.

The man was silent at his court date. If convicted he faces up to ten years in prison. Which would make him 98 when he got out.

In a similar story an 80 year old alleged multiple offender, grandmother Ola Mae Robinson, was arrested for selling crack. She was arrested six months earlier on the same charges. Maybe her sordid ways are finally catching up to her in her 80s.

Grandmother arrested for crack.“I don’t have no time for crack cocaine” she said. “Wish I was, cause then I’d have money” she told police.

In her defense she said “It wasn’t mine! Til they found me I was sitting up in my chair noddin!” Everyone knows when you’re selling crack you most definitely cannot be nodding.

Video: Crack Dealin Grandma: Arrest of Ola Mae

It may never be too late to traffic drugs, but really it’s never to late to give them up. Whether dealing drugs or just taking them people all over the country are suffering from addiction. All people can recover from the criminal lifestyle, but treating their addiction might need to happen first.

 

Sources:

  • http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-201_162-57324475/87-year-old-forced-at-gunpoint-to-move-cocaine/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+CBSNewsTravelGuru+(Travel+Guru%3A+CBSNews.com)
  • http://hypervocal.com/news/2011/move-over-scarface-alleged-80-year-old-crack-dealing-grandma-arrested-again/#
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You Don’t Need to be on Suboxone Long-Term

Nov14
2011
Leave a Comment Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer
Suboxone is capable of helping addicts detox from opiates. It does not need to be a long term maintenance program to be effective. If fact short term use gives a greater chance of true freedom from addiction.
 

Hexagonal Stepping Stone to Freedom

Use it to your advantage.

Suboxone is the newest major opiate withdrawl prescription. Doctors advise the drug be taken as a maintenance treatment. Long term use however is not necessary. Patients can rapidly detox off opiates using “Subs” as a stepping stone into true freedom from chemicals.
Suboxone works through the chemicals buprenorphine and naloxone. Buprenorphine is an opiate. The buprenorphine bonds stronger than all other opiates to the brain receptors, but doesn’t produce as strong of a noticeable effect or high. 

The opiate receptor bonding effect is why doctors say that Suboxone cuts down cravings for other opiates. (Many patients still try and get high while taking it.) Often they do not explain that it still blocks the patient from their emotions like when they were taking other opiates.

True recovery from addiction requires more than just physical abstinence. Emotional healing from the drugs cannot come fully while the patient is still numbed.

Buprenorphine treatment gives the illusion of sobriety. Suboxone is a great tool to moderate the physical withdrawal from heroin or prescription opiates, but taken over a long period the patient will become dependant on the withdrawal medication. Most long term patients see the drug as their new master. Through continued use the patient’s life will get better because they are not endangering themselves to get high, but they will still be outside of normal human emotional function.

Suboxone is designed for detox: the pills themselves have indications of where to cut them into haves for reduced dosage (image above.) A Suboxone assisted opiate detox can be achieved in as little as a week and most defiantly does not need to exceed 6 weeks. Don’t expect it to be painless. Suboxone can lead you to a free life if you let it. Most doctors see it as a miracle pill, but it has dangerous costs accompanying its benefits. Nothing comes for free. Advocate for your own recovery if you choose Suboxone and tell your doctor that you plan to detox in a set period of time.

Find 12 step meetings, sober living, or other sober support so you can connect with other addicts who know what you’re going through and who can help you navigate your detox. They will also help you fight the cravings for opiates that all addicts are bound to have during and after a detox.

If others have done it you can too. Good Luck!

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Krokodil: Flesh Eating Homemade Russian Heroin!

Nov09
2011
2 Comments Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer
A new homemade compound opiod is killing mass numbers of Russian heroin addicts.
Russia Swamped with Heroin Addicts
Russia has more heroin users than any other country in the world. One-third of worldwide heroin deaths are Russian. Due to a cut off Afghan supply the drug’s cost has risen to up to 60 euros a dose. Junkies are being forced to find cheaper means of getting their fix.
Russians have begun to manufacture a synthetic heroin known as “Krokodil” or crocodile.
Krokodil is desomorphine, a synthetic opiate many times more powerful than heroin. Addicts generally make their own krokodil instead of buying it from a dealer. The ingredients are household chemicals and OTC codeine pills. Russians can buy the ingredients for about 2 euros. The cooking of the chemicals takes about as long as the high lasts (2 hours) and the physical withdrawl symptoms are worse than heroin. Those factors create a night and day cycle for all who are addicted.
This drug produces horrific effects in its poor addicted users. It quickly turns the skin scaly- hence its reptilian name. Addicts can be identified by their iodine smell. Rotting sores develop all over the body and skin can literally start to fall off the bones.
The life expectancy of anyone who starts to use the drug is less than one year.
The use of the drug is steadily on the rise despite the death sentence it carries. Small towns where heroin is not easily imported are being overrun with Krokodil. Addicts who cannot afford heroin anymore shot the desomorphine until they die.
Despite rising addiction and death rates the Russian government has not done anything to stop the sale of OTC codeine pills.
Source:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/krokodil-the-drug-that-eats-junkies-
2300787.html
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A Little Honesty Would Help the Marijuana Legalization Cause

Nov04
2011
Leave a Comment Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer
Pro-pot people could make their case much stronger if they stopped asserting that weed is harmless; it is not.

Another Bad Habit

Another Bad Habit

 

Potential Harmful Effects of Smoking Weed:

  • Laziness
  • Addiction
  • Effected sexual drive/performance: “stoner softie”
  • Unhealthy lungs
  • Also; pot is not the only answer to chronic pain issues.

Marijuana legalization would give Americans more freedom. Freedom to choose the lives they want for themselves. Even though marijuana use has a number of negative consequences so do many other legal habits. Is smoking pot any more harmful than eating fast-food, watching TV, gossiping, or smoking cigarettes? People usually only harm themselves when smoking weed, therefore regulation shouldn’t be the government’s responsibility.

The fact is that the banning of any substance is unconstitutional. The prohibition of alcohol in the early twentieth century required that an amendment be made to the United States Constitution. The Eighteenth Amendment is the only attempt ever made to strip away Americans’ rights in the form of a constitutional amendment. Congress knew that this was unconstitutional and did not pass it. Thus, the Eighteenth Amendment is the only amendment ever ratified via state-level expositions. The prohibition of liquor did not stop the demand for it. Courts and prisons were overwhelmed, and the scope of organized crime and corruption among law enforcement exploded. The Eighteenth Amendment was then repealed only fourteen years after its inception by the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment.

Sources:
http://www.radicalparenting.com/2008/12/18/marijuana/
http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/if-marijuana-is-legal-will-addiction-rise/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-first_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution

 

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Pharmaceutical Drugs Are the Same as Street Drugs

Nov02
2011
Leave a Comment Posted by Ryan Glassmoyer

Street drugs have roots in the pharmacy. Some drugs like heroin and cocaine which today carry a strong stigma were once mass prescribed. Meth is still manufactured by pharmaceutical companies. Xanex, Oxy-Contin and Methadone are prescription drugs sold in the streets.

Pharmceutical Cocaine Syringe

Pharmceutical Cocaine Syringe

Street drugs have always been made in the pharmaceutical lab first. Heroin and aspirin were invented by the same guy. A few days after aspirin went on the market he trademarked heroin as a cure for morphine addiction and as a cough syrup for children. Parker Davis a subsidiary of drug giant Pfizer was the first to sell cocaine. They even sold a cocaine injection kit.  LSD was born as a psychiatric drug. MDMA was first sold by Merek, the drug company which first marketed morphine. Meth is a notorious street drug. It originated in drug companies and is still issued to children in the form of Ritalin. Meth was given to soldiers during WWII. Hitler as well as many soldiers were addicted by the end of the war. Today street meth is made from over-the-counter cold medicines.

Many cry out that America is over-prescribed. 40% of Americans ingest prescription chemicals daily. Some people believe that drug companies support anti-drug legislation because they don’t want their customers buying from the little guy on the street. 10% of America’s written perscriptions are for painkillers making the legal drug dealer’s corner nationwide. There are enough painkillers available in the Unted States at this moment that every American could take a standard dose of Vicodin every four hours for a month before we’d run out (Center for Disease Control and Prevention.) Many of the 40% taking prescriptions do not take Ritalin or drugs with similar effects to common street drugs. However when heroin and cocaine were first sold they were advertised as new frontiers of medicine not addictive substances. Drug companies goal is to sell a product. The drug company’s history of repeatedly manufacturing drugs which are now considered highly dangerous and addictive make some ponder how many of the drugs America is taking now will one day be seen differently.

Source:
http://www.naturalnews.com/021768_street_drugs_illegal.html
http://www.disinfo.com/2011/11/painkiller-overdose-epidemic-hits-united-states/
http://drvitelli.typepad.com/providentia/2011/09/chronic-pain-drug-war.html

 

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