In the US there is one and one only legal drug that
adults are allowed to use and that is alcohol. Is it a safe drug? Some people
become addicted to alcohol. Alcohol withdrawals can actually kill, unlike
narcotic addiction. Millions of people are arrested every year for driving for
being seriously impaired by the use of alcohol. Some people die from alcohol
poisoning.
Some people get liver problems with alcohol. Others have
Hepatitis and can’t drink—high blood pressure, Stroke, Stomach problems,
Harm to unborn children (in pregnant women) and there’s more.
So if a person has a health problem with alcohol, they
may go to coffee or tea. They may go to sugared soda pop. If they can’t drink
soda pop, their choices can get slim.
So for years I had to quit drinking for health reasons.
Then I got diabetes. The problem is I also can’t stomach diet pop. Tea and
coffee are full of acid and caffeine and they can get overwhelming and boring
if that is all I can drink.
Then there are the various herbal teas available on line.
They can be more relaxing, maybe cause a little mild euphoria. The main tea
that comes to my mind is Kratom. I bought that tea and found it relaxing. It
did not affect my motor skills or cause incapacitation as drinking alcohol did,
so it seemed like a great choice.
For now—but maybe not for long.
It seems that members of our press and our DEA (Drug
Enforcement Administration) are obsessed with making sure adults can’t get
relaxing teas they may want to use. They always use the excuse that mostly kids
use these potions and they seem to patronize us with that “we know what is best
for you—you childish dumb-ass” attitude of theirs.
And then there is the press? They can’t resist a lot of
overblown hype and horror stories that are designed to convince the non-user
that this stuff is the most dangerous drug since PCP (Phencyclidine).
The hype is almost identical to that of what we used to get about Marijuana and
it is just as phony.
“It’s always sold as if it’s safe,” said Selby Smith,
Assistant Special Agent-in-Charge of the Seattle Office of the DEA. “But
in all actuality it’s never been tested. It’s never been through FDA
trials and we don’t know what it does to the human body.”
The DEA is studying Kratom as reports of emergency room
visits by users rise. There have been reports of hallucination and
delusions among users.
The DEA also said Kratom is addictive.
But in addition to its possible medicinal uses, kratom
is beginning to show up in U.S. emergency rooms,
with doctors saying they are dealing with people sick from taking it
— especially teens who try it to get high.
"Every month somebody is trying to get a new 'safe
high'," said Frank LoVecchio, medical director of the Banner Good
Samaritan Poison and Drug Information Center in Phoenix, Ariz. "(Kratom)
is definitely not safe."
Estimating usage of the drug is impossible, but emergency
events involving kratom appear to be increasing, he said. In 2005, only two
incidents were reported by poison control centers nationwide. But Banner’s center
dealt with six emergencies involving kratom in 2011, he said.
Some in the news media really know how to pour on the
hype. Take for exampleThe Daily News;
The Cowlitz County Sheriff’s Office warned the public
Tuesday about the potential dangers of a plant
product known as Kratom, which is commonly used for medicinal
purposes in Asia and is sold in at least one Longview store.
Sheriff’s spokesman Charlie Rosenzweig said a 31-year-old
woman was found dead Monday in the bedroom of her Terry Lane home. Rosenzweig
said it will take weeks to determine the cause of death, but deputies found a
pipe near her body and open packets of Kratom scattered around her room,
suggesting she was a heavy user.
Just a day earlier, on Sunday morning, a 27-year-old
Kelso woman was hospitalized after she ran through the street naked, screaming
about Jesus. Police said she swung a hammer at them while holding her
four-month-old baby in her other arm. Police wrested the infant, who was
uninjured, from the woman. The woman’s father said she may have taken Kratom,
and a Kelso police spokesman said Wednesday that police believe the drug caused
her strange behavior.
I have used this stuff and some friends have. We have had
no problems with it, probably because we use it as it is intended—as a mild
tea. Even if it turns out that Kratom is not 100% safe, neither is alcohol.
Adults who can’t drink should have other choices such as marijuana and kratom.
We are not children. Some of us need beverages that can help us relax after a
long hard day. Why does it half to be alcohol or nothing. And some of us just
don’t get much from religion, which is what most of our leaders really want us
to take up rather than alcohol. I for one prefer a relaxing tea over magic
spooks in the sky to make me feel better.
So let us drink our tea and leave us the fuck alone.
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