I don't see why they bother distinguishing between types of substances by naming new ones legal. Surely this is just masking the bigger picture and this kind of legislation should be applied to all substances?
I'm a strong believer in getting together a bunch of avid RC enthusiasts, studying the effects of their use as they use it and then making a decision based on the findings, but just declaring new, nonlegislated substances just seems like... well it's handing in unfinished homework, right?
Maybe politicians have less trouble getting their heads round substances they haven't already been demonizing for 40+ years?
Theory -> Animal -> Human -> Profit?
Isnt that usually how new substances are treated in the pharmaceutical biz?
It seems weird that the powers that be would allow shortcuts for experimental chemists to make a profit. Even household non-consumables are tested for toxicity.
But if this is in fact all kosher, I'm going to design and distribute a car with 1 wheel, write my own review under a different name, tell everyone it's fine and then distribute it without testing, get a plane to guam... then just coast.
stalepixel wrote:
less mxe more ketamine
Different kettle of fish.