FDA Cracks Down on Poppers

arrall

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FDA crackdown on poppers prompts rush on popular gay party drug​

  • The FDA is cracking down on alkyl nitrites, a quasi-legal inhalent commonly known as poppers.
  • Users have scrambled to buy up supplies in stores across Los Angeles and elsewhere.
  • Some fear the move is part of a larger anti-LGBTQ+ agenda by the Trump administration.
There’s a rush on Rush.

Stores up and down Santa Monica Boulevard have seen a run on the iconic red and yellow vials this week, as the Food and Drug Administration cracks down on poppers, a product that has long existed in legal limbo.

The active ingredient in Rush and other poppers is alkyl nitrite, a chemical that instantly dilates blood vessels when inhaled, producing a brief but intense feeling of euphoria. It also causes a loosening of smooth muscle tissue, including the anus, an effect that has made it a staple of gay sex for generations.


Although officially banned for human consumption by the FDA, poppers have been sold openly in thumb-sized bottles marketed — with a wink and a nod — as nail polish remover, liquid incense or VHS tape cleaner.

But after the FDA raided a popular brand called Double Scorpio this month, many fear the Trump administration is ending the era of tolerance.

Within days of the Double Scorpio raid, rival brands such as Pig Sweat, Brown Bottle and Dumb Bitch Juice have also become scarce, many retailers said.


“People are calling asking if we’re out,” said Sandy, a cashier at Smoke 4 Less, who gave only her first name because she wasn’t authorized to speak to the press. “They’re stocking up. Right now we’re capped at 10 at a time, just to keep it fair.”
Similar buying frenzies have been reported around the country, with some worried it’s the opening of a new front in a broader campaign against LGBTQ+ people by the federal government.

“It’s a hit on the community,” said Edward, a clerk at Circus of Books in West Hollywood, who declined to give his last name, citing concerns about the drug’s legality since the FDA raid. “If that’s taken out, they don’t know what’s next.”

Roughly a third of gay men have used poppers, and about 20% have used them in the last three months, according to a 2020 report in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs and a 2018 study in the Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services.

“I describe it to people as a muscle relaxant,” Edward said. “It helps with anal sex for people whose bodies are more sensitive.”

The bottles are popular enough to enjoy pride of place beside the cash register, and top billing on Circus of Books’ Instagram grid. Still, no one asking for poppers is likely to get them.


“You can call it so many things, but you can’t call it poppers,” said Jay Sosa, an associate professor of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at Bowdoin College in Maine and a scholar of the drug.

Everett Farr III, a longtime maker of Rush-branded nail polish remover, is credited as a pioneer in rebranding. He noted there have been several past crackdowns, and cautioned one FDA raid doesn’t necessarily spell the end.

“This is not my first rodeo,” said Farr. “It’s been pursued religiously before.”

But to many, this moment feels different.
 
I thought they did this in the 70's, then 80's. They always "pop" back up. I am sickened by the article in that they took a drug and made it a political thing that also involves hate. Any move that is hateful these days sickens me. But I also know the media stirs stuff up too. So what we read may have the writers slant. ;) And they can be hateful too just for click bait.

I remember the first time I did Rush. Was sitting in a car in the back seat. A friend was blasting Black Sabbath (1978, they were hot at that point) . We just finished a joint. And wham. Was fun the first two times.

Can we really ban anything these days? I mean weed and cocaine was banned for years, yet anyone with a little street savy could get it easy enough. Weed was all over even before it was legalized. Now I see it everywhere. Even stores that do not have a license sell. The corner store has 20 different kinds of THC-A bud but he told me some were regular THC bud.
 
Poppers have a checkered history with legality, this is not the first time they were made illegal. Up to the mid 70's you could get them in head shops, etc but were outlawed sometime around 1975. People still got it, it was sold as "tape head cleaner", etc . Like @JackARoe says, it's pretty hard to make it go away.
 
wow. that's crazy. how have you been @arrall ? long time.
I've been pretty good, moved cities for work and strongly prefer where I am temporarily living now so I am hopefully going to move here for good in a few years.
Just getting over a bad bacterial infection rn that has had me out of work for 2 weeks.

How have you been @RUC4?

Can we really ban anything these days? I mean weed and cocaine was banned for years, yet anyone with a little street savy could get it easy enough. Weed was all over even before it was legalized. Now I see it everywhere. Even stores that do not have a license sell. The corner store has 20 different kinds of THC-A bud but he told me some were regular THC bud.
Poppers have effectively been banned over the past decade here in Canada.
Our Conservative government made them "prescription-only" in the early-2010s, and there are no approved prescription poppers, making them illegal to sell for human consumption.
They get seized at the border now, and they've cracked down recently to the point that my supplier stopped being able to import them and went out of business.
I tossed my bottle last year when I moved because it was quite old and almost empty, so hopefully I am able to find some again soon.
 
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When I was 15 I got a bottle of Rush just to use to get high. We went on a family vacation, mom, dad, 6 kids and out in the middle of the desert the bottle started leaking. While I'm getting so dizzy that I almost passed out, my mom shouts "what's that smell!!!". I tell my dad to pull over and I walked out in the desert and threw the bottle as far away as I could, walked back, got in the car, and off we drove with no discussion of what just happened.
My family was a little weak on communication
 
said Jay Sosa, an associate professor of Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies at Bowdoin College in Maine and a scholar of the drug

"and a scholar of the drug" when his degree is in anthropology. I don't have an opinion on the "ban" but thought that part shows that I should be skeptical about the slant of this article
 
"and a scholar of the drug" when his degree is in anthropology. I don't have an opinion on the "ban" but thought that part shows that I should be skeptical about the slant of this article
I mean he's a anthropologist focused on women's studies and sexuality so it's not surprising that his work would intersect with their use in sex.

He wrote a paper about their history last year: https://thepolyphony.org/2024/05/15/poppers-pharma-govern/

(Admittedly, I can't tell the publication was peer reviewed, though it passes the bullshit test and I'd be surprised if it wasn't.)
 
"and a scholar of the drug" when his degree is in anthropology. I don't have an opinion on the "ban" but thought that part shows that I should be skeptical about the slant of this article
This article was not the best, and I didn’t include some very unlikely statements they added at the end about women taking poppers as an alternative to cannabis/alcohol before going out (given the short duration, I REALLY doubt this)…
 
This article was not the best, and I didn’t include some very unlikely statements they added at the end about women taking poppers as an alternative to cannabis/alcohol before going out (given the short duration, I REALLY doubt this)…
Interestingly, at the music festival I work at in Portugal each year, I pretty regularly see people using poppers while dancing. It seems like it's more common to inhale through the mouth than the nose, though I don't actually know how most people inhale it normally since I haven't really used it outside of... specific and private circumstances.
 
This article was not the best, and I didn’t include some very unlikely statements they added at the end about women taking poppers as an alternative to cannabis/alcohol before going out (given the short duration, I REALLY doubt this)…
Mrs Kat used poppers quite a bit in the late 80's -90's, as did the circle of gals she was hanging out with. It's was a thing whether you believe it or not.
 
Mrs Kat used poppers quite a bit in the late 80's -90's, as did the circle of gals she was hanging out with. It's was a thing whether you believe it or not.
I was surprised when I saw my friends using them at the festival and I gave it a shot, though went much easier than I would if using for chemsex. I can see how they're appealing with the right dose, in different contexts like Mrs. Kat or my friend were using them in, rather than only in chemsex. I believe there was a time they were fairly big in Discos back in the 70s, though I always assumed it was related to their sexual vs. recreational effects.
 
I know for me it was just a legal high that you could buy in a headship. I was pretty surprised to hear later on that it was used sexually. It never made me feel " good", I just got dizzy and a horrible headache. Maybe my dosage was off somehow, but I have zero desire to do them.
It seemed kind of unhealthy to me, in the same category as sniffing glue or gasoline (neither of which I ever did, though I once sniffed ether)
Still, the timing of the sudden enforcement seems kind of suspicious.
 
Mrs Kat used poppers quite a bit in the late 80's -90's, as did the circle of gals she was hanging out with. It's was a thing whether you believe it or not.
Oh I absolutely believe that women used poppers, I just would be surprised to hear that they are taking them as a SUBSTITUTE for cannabis given the extremely short duration and the fact that you probably can’t bring them to a club.

I exclusively use poppers in a non sexual context myself.
 
Used them for the mega-orgasms with a partiular girlfriend in my late teens and not really since then

We did discover though that if a few of us got seriously wasted on numerous hotknives of stong high quality hash and then sniffed poppers we'd have a serious and seemingly unstoppable group laughter fit, and I mean howling.

Now, that's all well and good and great fun. But it's not that great when your mates landlord gives a cursory knock on the door and then pops his head round it, and five 18-yr-olds are screaming in laughter at him and completely unable to stop. Yeah, someone got kicked out of their lodgings next day, oops.

I also remember we got some 'proper medical' ones once, apparently. With these, you squuezed the little capsules into some tissue or onto your sleeve than inhaled from there, and when the capsules split they 'popped', which is where the name 'poppers' came from or so I was told. This was the mid 1980's.
 
Poppers are a victimless crime leave poppers alone. What are they going to do next stop us from stealing computer duster? Crazy this world we live in.
 
Back in the day, the cheapest version of butyl-nitrate I could find was "Joc Aroma", I believe. Anyway it was a play on "jock aroma". Got it from an ad in High Times magazine. The catalogue that came with it also had elaborate male masturation machines with a tube that fit over your cock going to a box with all kinds of dials and switches. 1 hundred dollars and up in the 70's 😲
ANYWAY
I had been doing it sexually with my lady one day and was sitting on the couch sniffing it afterwards (the butyl-nitrate, that is) and I spilled the whole bottle directly onto Roscoe.
I immediately jumped up, ran into the bathroom, and showered it off. All in the space of less than one minute I'm sure.
I was till bright red inflamed down there for a while.
Good times.
 
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