swilow
Bluelight Crew
I have bought some amanita muscaria "dream pillows" a few months ago...interesting way to sell mushrooms I thought 
antheads said:wow you people are really into cutting your own throats..
this forum is obv meant for people who are into mantaining the status quo. the proffesionals who send things to forensic labratories where the information is shared with LE, the moderators that believe that people who deal illegal drugs should be shot,the people who condem attempts to provide alternatives as illegal before a legal precedent has been set, and the users, who due to certain individuals on this site accept the concept of drug prohibition and just ask questions about whats the best pill instead of actually fighting for alternatives Wake up, under the current laws everything is illegal.
i'll leave this forum to the endless threads of "WHAT IS THIS PILL?" AND "HOW DO I HIDE MY DRUGS?", the idea that individuals should self medicate stays bannished, people keep going to jail for being sad or wanting to feel good and the 'hr proffesionals' keep getting goverment funding..
yay!
Drug squad raids herb franchise
* 19th August 2008
Nell Berry, franchise owner of Happy High Herbs in Nimbin, is unhappy about the police search.
The Northern Star
A NIMBIN business owner claims to have had more than $16,000 worth of stock taken from her shop when the Australian Crime Commission and police from the NSW Drug Squad raided the premises last Thursday.
The franchise owner of Happy High Herbs in Nimbin, Nell Berry, said about 12 police raided the shop looking for illegal substances and products.
Simultaneous raids were conducted on Happy High Herb outlets in Byron Bay and Uki, as well as Newtown and Bondi Junction in Sydney, and several other interstate locations.
Police told Ms Berry that the products were being taken away to be tested because of health and safety concerns, but the basis of the search warrant alleged the shop was involved in the supply of prohibited drugs.
"As far as I'm aware everything was 100 per cent legal," Ms Berry said.
She said that police were particularly interested in products such as 'cherrypop' and 'buzzz' that she described as 'legal party herbs'.
Also taken in the raid was kava, a relaxant derived from the roots of a pepper plant commonly used in the Pacific Islands.
Ms Berry said it was being outlawed by the Therapeutic Goods Administration from September 1, but was still legal to sell at the moment.
"It wasn't even on the search warrant, but they took it anyway," Ms Berry said.
The Northern Star believes that no charges have been laid as a result of any of the raids in NSW.
"I'm passionate about people getting access to safe, non-addictive alternatives. That's why I took over this shop," Ms Berry said. "The banning of herbs and the dominance of the pharmaceutical industry is the real crime."
She said that in the past decade, common herbs such as wormwood, comfrey, borage and lobelia had all been banned from sale for human consumption.
"Theses are herbs that have been used for thousands of years. This [raid] is like witch burning in the modern age," she said. "They create a smokescreen and fear around it. The TGA motto seems to be 'if it feels good, ban it'."
A spokesperson for the State Crime Command said that the seized products were undergoing forensic testing to determine if they contained drugs prohibited under the NSW Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act.
"The search warrants were executed as a result of a drug squad investigation into the production and distribution of products containing banned substances, such as benzyl piperazine and dimethyl tryptamine," the spokesperson said.
http://www.finda.com.au/story/2008/08/19/drug-squad-raids-herb-franchise/
antheads said:wow you people are really into cutting your own throats..
this forum is obv meant for people who are into mantaining the status quo.
antheads said:the proffesionals who send things to forensic labratories where the information is shared with LE
antheads said:, the moderators that believe that people who deal illegal drugs should be shot, the people who condem attempts to provide alternatives as illegal before a legal precedent has been set, and the users, who due to certain individuals on this site accept the concept of drug prohibition and just ask questions about whats the best pill instead of actually fighting for alternatives Wake up, under the current laws everything is illegal.
antheads said:Can you back up your statement?
antheads said:and as the moderator of drugs-forum pointed out, perhaps if you are into harm reduction you should be examining the secret addictive ingredient in coca cola...
Mr Blonde said:^ The secret addictive ingredient in Coca-Cola would be?
In January 2005, Nils Ericsson, president of the National Commission for Life and Development Without Drugs (DEVIDA), issued a 10-point statement intended to clarify the country’s position on the commercialization and industrialization of the coca leaf—a contentious issue in a country where more than a million farmers make their living off the plant. In point No. 5, Ericsson wrote: “Coca-Cola, the globally recognized soft drink manufacturer, buys 115 tonnes of coca leaf from Peru and 105 tonnes from Bolivia per year, with which it produces, without alkaloids, 500 million bottles of soda per day.”
To this day, Coca-Cola uses as an ingredient a coca leaf extract prepared by a Stepan Company plant in Maywood, New Jersey, using a process monitored by the Drug Enforcement Administration.[2][3] Because cocaine is naturally present in coca leaves, today's Coca-Cola uses "spent", or treated, coca leaves, those that have been through a cocaine extraction process, to flavor the beverage. Some contend that this process cannot extract all of the cocaine alkaloids at a molecular level, and so the drink still contains trace amounts of the stimulant.[4][5] The Coca-Cola Company currently refuses to comment on the continued presence of coca leaf in Coca-Cola.[6] [7]
antheads said:and as the moderator of drugs-forum pointed out, perhaps if you are into harm reduction you should be examining......the thousands of adverse reactions of legal perscription medicince as well????
nabollocks said:The lady at the shop was very cautious about mixing different herbs, and even suggested that I should not try any of her caffeine based stimulants due to the fact that I am a nervous person.
That is harm reduction right there.
antheads, your present comments, like many of those in your past posts, indicate you have a serious problem with providing fundamental HR information. You seem to think a better world would be one where hospital admissions increased, long term illness resulted, or death by OD became more common, just so long as formula X isn't revealed.
Well buddy, i've worked in the front line of getting people off addictive drugs as well as seeing the damage done to peoples lives by going to jail for self medicating ,so from my perspective giving the user access to information about effects, usage, addiction pontential is a lot more important than labelling the ingredients, especially by doing that LE is given a free present. Ngnics should have provided this information, which to the discredit they didin'tWell buddy, I work on the front line, dealing with adverse reactions to drugs, so from my perspective knowing what's been taken is paramount.
Well buddy, i've worked in the front line of getting people off addictive drugs as well as seeing the damage done to peoples lives by going to jail for self medicating ,so from my perspective giving the user access to information about effects, usage, addiction pontential is a lot more important than labelling the ingredients, especially by doing that LE is given a free present. Ngnics should have provided this information, which to the discredit they didin't
you are justifying the goverments line that say mdma is 'harmfull' and should be illegal as opposed to something a lot more harmfull like effexor which is 'legal' and does no harm.
Your point is that if a product is not labeled, then who knows whats in it and people could die. My point is the suppliers of 'legals' unlike criminals know that a product must be as safe as possiple for people to send that western union money order again! People in hospital aren't a good profit market so therefore thats a from of harm reduction right there!![]()
esp with research chemicals where the information is next to useless and the fact that anything that is an alternative to illicits is illegal in australia.

Mr Blonde said:I'm not sure what you're point is with this one; PD is saying, I believe, that providing info on effects, usage and addiction is what HR is about as well as knowing exactly what it is in the first place. How can we give the info without knowing what it is we're dealing with?
Not necessarily. Consider the case of 2C-t-2 or 2C-t-7; they are potentially dangerous MAOIs yet few vendors warn their customers about this. Snorting these RCs could kill you, hence the need for information about these drugs to be disseminated amongst users.
If people get on their moral high horse and condem 'legal' highs for not labeling their products as opposed to listing usage, addiction and contradiction details then they are advocating the total elimination of alternatives to street drugs as well as aiding LE to send people to jail.