Posted on 08/11/2010 2:51:03 PM PDT by Andrea19
...The hearing, focused on the cough suppressant Dextromethorphan, is another crusade in the latest battle by nanny-staters to overregulate and overreach into the private and informed decisions of consumers.
Read more: http://www.atr.org/regulatory-overreach-making-fda-sets-sights-a5300#ixzz0wKsR8JDq
(Excerpt) Read more at atr.org ...
Help promote Conservative activism here & here & here & here
I dunno, robotripping comes up pretty often with yoot. I think it’s pretty common. The high-dxm meds are behind-the-counter only at CVS and Walgreen near me, I’ve been waiting for more government regulations to keep me safe from, um, what are they protecting me from here?
According to wiki below, FedGov has considered regulating DXM off and on for a while.
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No legal distinction currently exists in the United States between medical and recreational use, sale, or purchase. Some states and/or store chains have implemented restrictions, such as requiring signatures for DXM sale, limiting quantities allowable for purchase, and requiring purchasers to be 18 or over.
The sale of dextromethorphan in its pure powder form may incur penalties, although no explicit law exists prohibiting its sale. There have been cases of individuals being sentenced to time in prison and other penalties for selling pure dextromethorphan in this form, because of the incidental violation of more general laws for the sale of legitimate drugs such as resale of a medication without proper warning labels.[3]
Dextromethorphan was excluded from the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) of 1970 and was specifically excluded from the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. Dextromethorphan is still excluded from the CSA (as of 2010), however officials have warned that it could still be added if increased abuse warrants its scheduling.[2] The motivation behind its exclusion from the CSA was that, under the CSA, all optical isomers of listed Schedule II opiates are automatically Schedule II substances. Since dextromethorphan is an optical isomer of the Schedule II opiate levomethorphan, an exemption was necessary to keep it a non-controlled substance. [Wikipedia]
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