mtoner23 14 hours ago

Kratom is banned in Canada. We should at a minimum place it on the schedule list and have it only be prescribed. It's sad that these days all we can think to do with drugs is have them fully commercially legal or completely banned.

tqi 14 hours ago

How does a product like this make it to the market? Is this article overstating the danger, or did everyone involved (scientists, product folks, marketing folks, executives) just ignore it?

  • SpecialistK 13 hours ago

    Drugs are good business, especially if the ones you're peddling are legal (at least gray area) and you're detached from the street dealing.

    Something being highly addictive is also a nice plus. For them. Not the poor victims who get hooked and their lives upended.

  • free_bip 7 hours ago

    It makes it to market because the US Congress is effectively nonexistent. They can't pass a bill, even a simple budget bill. The government is literally shut down.

    • readthenotes1 6 hours ago

      States can also act, and in many ways it's wiser to start there first for many things

0cf8612b2e1e 14 hours ago

  … Florida banned 7-OH in August; in September,…
Banned in Florida? It must be bad.
  • ssl-3 12 hours ago

    Either bad, or insufficiently-taxed.

nullable_bool 12 hours ago

I started taking it and within 6 months I was at $100/day habit just to not feel terrible. I was also experiencing pain in my liver. I had to go to the doctor to get a suboxen prescription in order to get off it. The first few days were hellish even with the suboxen. I got to experience gooseflesh, which as you can imagine, is not a great feeling.

All that to say this, it shouldn't be legal and everyone selling it knows what they are doing. There are A LOT of scumbags out there.

hinkley 13 hours ago

Ever so slightly disappointed that this story ended up being about addiction and not about a strange compounding of kratom that was spontaneously combusting.