Tuesday 8 June 2010

BEWARE BE VERY CAREFUL WHAT LEGAL HIGHS YOU CONSUME











i just saw on sky news that china are bringin out thousands of new legal highs,i was shocked at the results as the reporter looked around one of the labs,theysed this is our new product n he showed her the bag a white pure powder,i couldntread the name of it,they showed sites that i currently purchase off,now that isjust crazy,when they banned mephedrone aka mcat now theyve got a big problem ontheir hands the government,those two kids didnt die from mephedrone,they nevertook it in their life,i just saw on sky news that china are bringin out thousands of new legal highs,i was shocked at the results as the reporter looked around one of the labs,theysed this is our new product n he showed her the bag a white pure powder,i couldntread the name of it,they showed sites that i currently purchase off,now that isjust crazy,when they banned mephedrone aka mcat now theyve got a big problem ontheir hands the government,Weve already had a dodgy substrance called NRG 1 now alot of people i know wont sell it anymore online because it is very dangerous and i reccomennd anyone whostaken it to seek medical attention,stay away from this evil drug,it cud kill u,meand alot of my friends ave consumed it and we ave to tell u it made us feel horrible,also that new one meo dalt this is all about it i aint even gonna touch itits supposed to be like DMT which is higher than acid and worse than ketamine,The full name of the chemical is N-allyl-N-[2-(5-methoxy-1H-indol-3-yl)ethyl]prop-2-en-1-amine. It is very closely related to the compound 5-MeO-DPT and DALT.[edit] Dosage5-MeO-DALT is usually taken orally at dosages of 12-25mg.[edit] EffectsSome users report 5-MeO-DALT produces rapid, intense entheogenic effects, and it is very short-acting; effects are usually over within 2-4 hours. While other users assert it has absolutely no psychoactive effect. According to many users, the compound is said to be completely void of visual/hallucinogenic activity, unlike other closely related substances.[edit] DangersThere have been no reported deaths or hospitalizations from 5-MeO-DALT, but its safety profile is unknown.[edit] Legality5-MeO-DALT is unscheduled in the United States.

WATCH THIS VIDEO IT WILL SHOCK YOU,THE SCIENTISTS ARE SHIT THEY TAKE AGES TOSORT STUFF N PEOPLE WE CUD BE SAYIN GOODBYE TO LEGAL HIGHS,THE REASON WHY DRONEWAS BANNED WASNT COS OF SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE IT WAS SUM FUCKIN POLITICAL THING,FUCKIN PISSED ME RITE OFF LIKE,LISTEN TO WAT THEY SAY IN DIS VIDEO SUM SCENESMITE SHOCK YOU,THIS IS THE NEW HIGHS THAT ARE COMING OUT,REMEMBER PACE URSELF.












Two months after Britain banned the party drug mephedrone, a Sky News investigation has revealed that Chinese factories are making a slew of new drugs to skirt UK laws.Mephedrone was scheduled as a Class B drug in April.Before the ban, it was openly sold online by dealers who offered express home delivery. In internet chat rooms, users praised its effects which they described as similar to the drug ecstasy.But now the same Chinese companies that used to manufacture mephedrone have come up with a raft of new chemical compounds that are not covered by British law.Filming secretly and posing as customers, a Sky News crew visited the offices of Chemchallenger Biotech in Shanghai. They were given a free sample of a new "legal high" said to mirror the effects of mephedrone."Our British clients really like this one" said the company's director, Jacky Wu. He then offered to sell the crew up to 100kg of the drug, and said it could be sent to the UK by courier.L-Williams-drugs-china-cannA new form of chemical cannabis is availableMr Wu said his company "only operates within the law". But to avoid hold-ups at British customs he said he would mislabel the drug as a more commonly known chemical.His operation is on an industrial scale. During a tour of his factory, Mr Wu showed off a rabbit warren of labs where workers toiled in white coats over vats of colourful substances.He claimed one of them was a new form of chemical cannabis that would also be legal if sold on the street in Britain.Before the ban on mephedrone, some experts warned it would be powerless in the face of Chinese chemical companies who would easily come up with alternative drugs. Mr Wu confirmed that, saying "there are thousands of these substances. There are new ones coming out all the time."L-Williams-drugs-china-cannA new form of chemical cannabis is availableThough he graduated in chemistry from a prestigious Chinese university, Mr Wu was less forthcoming on the effects of his new compounds. "That's still being tested," he said. "We just make them."Dozens of Chinese companies are in the same line of business. A representative from another laboratory told Sky News that he had a distributor in London who supplied smaller dealers. He also openly admitted that the new generation of "legal highs" is dangerous."I was the first one to sell this on the market. But now many people don't like it," he said. "It's not good. It's too strong. Send you to hospital. Make you feel very ill."Manufacturer explains the concerns of a new drugA dealer openly admits the drugs are dangerousThe problem, say scientists, is that nobody knows what effect the new chemical drugs have on the body and the brain. One early forerunner to the current crop of synthetic drugs - a substance known as MPTP - caused dozens of people to develop irreversible symptoms identical to Parkinson's Disease.Under similar legislation in Germany and the US, drugs can be banned on the presumption that they're dangerous rather than waiting for the results of a lengthy investigation.Mephedrone hit the headlines in March after the drug was linked to the deaths of two teenagers in Scunthorpe.However, post mortems revealed no trace of the chemical in the blood of Louis Wainwright, 18, and Nicholas Smith, 19.The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) recommended a ban in March but the decision was criticised for being politically rather than scientifically driven.Some drug campaigners believe that education on the risks of so-called legal highs would be a more effective way of combating the new generation of drugs.

http://www.youtube.com/user/skynews#p/search/0/vxgAfUVzXPw

THIS IS A VIDEO THAT WAS TAKEN 2 MONTHS AGO PEOPLE

http://itn.co.uk/16fc3a596639e18508be0e1e82bac736.html

Police have been put on alert for another dangerous "party drug", just hours after the ban on mephedrone came into force.


Officers from around the country have flashed warnings about the rise of a legal high known as "sparkle" in recent months, as a series of deaths connected to mephedrone brought the synthetic stimulant to national attention.

Users report that sparkle, also dubbed "legal MDMA", provokes effects including euphoria and increased brain activity similar to the Class A drug ecstasy. The UK's biggest online "head shop", selling drug paraphernalia, herbal stimulants and plant cultivation equipment, reported it had sold out of sparkle, which sells for £40 a gram.

However, the content of the drug is shrouded in mystery – and even police and government experts admit they were unaware of the full details of its ingredients and effects.

Details of the gap in the authorities' understanding of the latest legal high emerged as internal documents reveal that a government drugs helpline was unable to warn callers of growing fears over mephedrone because it lacked information on it.

The Independent on Sunday has established that experts answering calls on the killer drug warned their bosses about the rising tide of concerns over legal highs almost 18 months ago – but later complained they did not have any information or advice to offer worried young people and parents.

The Home Office has now acted to make mephedrone a Class B substance. West Mercia Police arrested and charged a man in Bewdley, Worcestershire, with possessing the drug just hours after it was made illegal. The drug has been linked to a number of deaths, although there is no conclusive scientific proof yet that it has been solely responsible for any of them. The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) recommended a ban. People possessing it now face up to five years in jail.

Law-enforcement attention has now switched to the potential dangers of more legal highs, notably sparkle, which is already being marketed as a legal alternative to mephedrone. "We have had emails about this one from operational cops all over the country for the last few months," said Mal Taylor of the Police Federation. "We have had all sorts of slang names given to these substances in different parts of the country. We are looking into sparkle, but we just cannot say yet what is involved or exactly how dangerous it is."

An adviser from the Frank drugs helpline last night admitted they had no official information on sparkle. "We are not fully aware of the full risks because there has been no research into them. There is a risk of death," she said.

Papers obtained by the IoS show as recently as eight months ago, with anxiety over mephedrone escalating, the Department of Health had still not equipped its front-line drugs advisers with information to ease public fears. Despite the former home secretary Jacqui Smith ordering a review into legal highs, Frank staff were not given information to allay callers' fears.

A document from April 2008 reported "an increase in calls about legal highs regarding risks and effects as callers often state 'they're legal so they must be OK'". However, later in the year, the helpline's experts reported that "parents [were] asking why Frank does not give information or advice on specific legal highs".

PEOPLE I WAS SO EXCITED ABOUT SPARKLE I THOUGHT IT WAS GONNA BE LIKE DRONE
BUT NAH BASICALLY DONT GET MDAI AND SPARKLE MIXED UP IVE BEEN TOLD THAT THEY ARE EXACLY THE SAME SUBSTANCE MDAI IS RUBBISH,I AM RESEARCHING NRG3 AND 5IAI I WILL REPORT ON ERE WEN IVE DONE MY RESEARCH,I AM GONNA DO A SECTION OF EVERY LEGAL HIGH AND WRITE UP WAT I KNO OF THE EFFECTS N ALL,

NRG-1 may be next legal high to face ban by ministers

Government advisers to investigate possible ban on NRG-1
NRG-1, a synthetic chemical suppliers have called the new legal high
NRG-1, a synthetic chemical suppliers have called the new legal high and which government advisers are considering banning
The government's official drug advisers are to look at banning a synthetic chemical marketed as NRG-1 that they fear will become the next popular legal high when mephedrone is banned in a fortnight.
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs is also to launch an urgent investigation into the whole range of legal highs now available in Britain. It will look at setting up an early warning system to identify new drugs that emerge on the market and quickly limit their spread.
The ACMD's chair, Professor Les Iversen, has also made clear to the home secretary, Alan Johnson, that their recommendation to ban mephedrone, the imitation amphetamine, as a class B drug does not rest on its possible link to 25 deaths in England and Scotland.
In its report publishedtonight on mephedrone and related compounds, the ACMD also cited the risk of dependence because of re-dosing or "fiending", the involvement of organised crime groups in its supply, its widespread and sudden popularity amongst youths, and its price – £10 a gram – as reasons for the ban.
Iversen has told the home secretary that the ACMD will issue advice on another legal high marketed as NRG-1. The chemical description of this drug is the "napthyl analogue of pyrovalerone". Pyrovalerone is already a banned class C drug in Britain. It is widely prescribed in France as an appetite suppressant. The south-east Asian chemists who have flooded the market with mephedrone and with Spice, a herbal high similar to cannabis which was banned last month, have synthesised this new legal alternative, suppliers said.
A British supplier based in Belgium was quoted by Sky News as saying NRG-1 was being marketed as a mephedrone replacement and could cost as little as 25p a hit.
The early warning system to identify emerging drugs will include analysis of examination of "drug amnesty bins" in clubs. A Home Office spokesman said: "We continue to monitor the emergence and harms of new legal highs to ensure that our approach is proportionate and evidence based."
The ACMD's mephedrone report acknowledges the only evidence so far that it could kill rests on the fact it has been found present at seven out of 18 postmortems into suspected deaths in England. "That mephedrone may have been involved in a death cannot be confirmed until the relevant coroner or procurator fiscal has concluded his inquest," it says.

ITS ABOUT TIME IT WAS BANNED PEOPLE ITS EVIL AND IT WONT BE LONG BEFORE
WE HAVE OUR FIRST DEATH NRG 1 IS NOT THE SAME CHEMICAL STRUCTURE AS
NRG 2 IVE YET TO TRY OUT NRG 3,

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