Holy ****. That stuff sells for the same price per gram as high grade marijuana. I can't imagine enjoying a "light sedation" that much.
Neither I nor Google know what an LGH drug is, but I can guarantee it doesn't have any more than an incredibly tiny amount of thujone in it. It's found in lesser quantities in a variety of common herbs. Seeing as Absinthe can't be sold in the US specifically because of its small thujone levels it'd be very surprising to see it shipped legally into the States.
I suspect like some provinces up here you can buy absinthe with limited thujone content. B.C. however is unregulated. Also buying low thujone absinthe and adding a bunch of wormwood to it and letting is sit for a few months.....bad idea. Wormwood is bad. Like Datura bad.
"We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary." — James D. Nicoll
The Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs (“EACDâ€) is established under section 5AA of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 to advise the Minister of Health on drug classification issues. The EACD:
* conducts reviews of controlled drugs and other narcotic or psychotropic substances * recommends to the Minister of Health whether and how such substances should be classified * increases public awareness of its work by (for instance) releasing papers, reports and recommendations.
The EACD is chaired by Dr Ashley Bloomfield, the Ministry of Health’s Chief Advisor on Public Health. Other clinical members of the EACD include:
* Dr Keith Bedford, the Institute of Environmental Science and Research’s General Manager Forensics; * Associate Professor Tim Maling, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Otago’s Wellington School of Medicine; * Dr Geoffrey Robinson, Chief Medical Officer at the Capital and Coast District Health Board; and * Professor Doug Sellman, Director of the National Addiction Centre at the University of Otago’s Christchurch School of Medicine.
The EACD carried out a Formal Assessment of two synthetic cannabinoids, JWH-018 and JWH-073, on 11 November 2010, and concluded that:
* Synthetic cannabinoids such as JWH-018 and JWH-073 had only entered the market after another substance, CP 47,497, was banned on the basis that it was a chemical analogue to cannabis; * There was sufficient evidence to suggest that the consumption of JWH-018 and JWH-073 do have the potential to cause harm, despite the lack of robust scientific data on the harm caused by JWH-018 and JWH-073 to date; * Given the lack of detailed evidence of harm, it was appropriate to restrict, rather than ban, the sale and supply of JWH-018 and JWH-073; and * JWH-018 and JWH-073 should therefore be made restricted substances, and should not be banned outright.
The Associate Health Minister, Hon Peter Dunne, accepted this recommendation on 30 March 2011, and it is expected that the required legislation will be in place by 2012
The EACD have therefore assessed synthetic cannabinoids as having a lower potential for harm than cannabis, codeine, or Ecstasy. Nevertheless, we think that the Government has made the right decision in moving to stop under-18s from being able to purchase products like Kronic. Kronic is not for under-18s and should never be supplied to under-18s. We are also in favour of controls on the packaging of synthetic cannabinoids and limits on where they can be sold. While the from synthetic cannabinoids are lower than many other substances, safety should always come first.
For the record, I still have no idea what Kronik is, what it does, or where to get it. Google turns up nothing for me besides energy drinks, crappy bands, and urbandictionary, which says it's weed when you're too high to spell correctly.
For the record, I still have no idea what Kronik is, what it does, or where to get it. Google turns up nothing for me besides energy drinks, crappy bands, and urbandictionary, which says it's weed when you're too high to spell correctly.
Kronic It's legal "weed" basically inert plant matter infused with a synthetic chemical that is analogous to canabanoids. It seems to go for double the street price of real weed and is a based on a man-made chemical as oppose actual weed. I suppose it has its merits in a society that likes to jail pot heads and since Bill C-10 is about to pass that will included canada as pot smokers will soon have a more severe minimum sentence then pedophiles.
For the record, I still have no idea what Kronik is, what it does, or where to get it. Google turns up nothing for me besides energy drinks, crappy bands, and urbandictionary, which says it's weed when you're too high to spell correctly.
Kronic It's legal "weed" basically inert plant matter infused with a synthetic chemical that is analogous to canabanoids. It seems to go for double the street price of real weed and is a based on a man-made chemical as oppose actual weed. I suppose it has its merits in a society that likes to jail pot heads and since Bill C-10 is about to pass that will included canada as pot smokers will soon have a more severe minimum sentence then @#%^philes.
Ah, the name was different... that would explain it. I've tried K2 and Spice, which I believe are similar.
Not as good as the real stuff, kinda pricey, and made me paranoid that I would get cancer from using it. I don't really like pot though, so YMMV.
The label states it contains no JWH at all. I brought up the thujone because one of the listed ingredients is wormwood.
There are a lot more synthetic cannabinoids than the JWH family, and with JWH coming under fire I wouldn't doubt that they switched to another family of chemicals.
The formulations of synthetic cannabis change very frequently.