Posted on 01/26/2011 8:01:28 PM PST by Libloather
Or B. Do this?
Or C. Both?
Answer: The state can't take the risk.
Bump
...a new trend MTV will be pushing soon.......
We still have "Mental Hospitals"? Seriously, I did not know that. Thank ya!
The children!
I’m sure there’s no hysteria involved here!
Gosh, those 80s crack babies are causing so much trouble! /sarc
I have a relative who was hospitalized a couple of weeks ago, infection from injecting the “bath salts”. Wouldn’t be enough salts to soak a pinky finger. I am glad they have done this.
Where can I buy some?
LOL.
Utopia will only be achieved when everything has been banned, because everything is capable of being misused. There are some who say freedom gives people the opportunity to make mistakes, but the alternative is worse. I guess you’re not one of them.
I wonder who the brain dead idiot was that first tried to snort salts. Darwin awards candidate..
With all the potential hallucinogens found growing wild in nature and all the potential hallucinogens found in valid and useful products sold at retail, this is a foolish and losing battle, banning anything that people might abuse.
The problem is the desire to abuse their bodies for a high. It’s a moral problem, in other words, not a legal one. Somebody’s going to get arrested because of their flower beds one of these days, when some dolt steals salvia or any number of other ornamentals out of it, if this idiocy doesn’t stop.
The government should just ban Utopia.
This gives a whole new meaning to the old commercial slogan, “Calgon take me away!”
So what’s the next naughty injectable — cocoa? coffee?
I was told by a police officer that another way kids are trying to get high is by huffing human feces that has been sealed in a bag for a while. Kids are defecating in the bag, and when the “party” is in full gear, they will huff the bag. He said they have taken these kids to the hospital that “literally smell like sh**.”
Niiiiice.
(So I guess we’ll all have to stop pooping. For the children.)
Does anyone know what these bath salts are made of? I saw some pretty flowers growing in front of an apartment occupied primarily by hispanics. I looked up the flowers and discivered they were datura stramonium (sp?). Datura has been used for thousands of years as a hallucinogen. Did the planters of those flowers know this?
It isn’t bath salts. It’s some kind of chemical concoction like meth or coke sold in very tiny amounts for big money. They also sell “incense” which is pot sprayed with something to fool drug tests for 200.00 an ounce at the tobacco shops here, that was made illegal a month ago.
The “incense” you are talking about is not pot. It is flowers and herbs sprayed with a chemical that is very similar to THC but is missing the molecule that causes it to bind to the fat in the body, which makes it not show up on a drug test. I think the “bath salts” are a similar chemical in its pure powder or crystal form. These “incense and bath salts” were never intended to be used as their name implies, they were made knowing to get “high” and cleverly packaged and labeled so they could be sold anywhere.
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