'Synthetic highs' = big business
| Business Week takes a look at the business of selling "incense" and "bath salts" - you know, for money:
While untracked in the U.S. until a few years ago, the market for the kind of "incense" sold by Upchurch now generates close to $5 billion annually, according to Rick Broider, president of the North American Herbal Incense Trade Assn. (Nahita), which represents more than 650 manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers. (Broider says his number is based on self-reported sales statistics from members.) Daniel Francis, executive director of the Retail Compliance Assn., another trade organization, founded to help inform and protect the rights of merchants, says he hired an independent analyst who came up with a similar figure.
Following this to its already foregone conclusion, the article notes:
Society may just be beginning to understand the implications of a developing class of drugs that deliver highs like the organic product without the hassle of farming, that can be transported in small bricks and not bales, that dogs can't or don't yet know how to smell, and that leave no trace on drug tests. There is every indication that synthetic replicas of farmed drugs, legal or not, have arrived for good. As Collier puts it, "the race is on."
Rusty Payne, a spokesman for the DEA, agrees that outlawing substances doesn't mean they will disappear. Banned blends might return to shelves or be sold underground. "A logical assumption is that the bad guys see this as a good market," he says of the synthetics. "If the way they can make the most money is smuggling drugs, there's going to be smuggling drugs."
It's just that simple, ladies and gentlemen! Cute how the article considers these "synthetic highs" as opposed to the apparently all natural highs of such greatest hits as LSD and MDMA, but you get the point - "the bad guys" are on the prowl.
[Thanks, Sam Hell!]
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Apparently DEA laymen think the incredibly expensive race can be won. They've failed in the past with drugs that have existed for thousands and even less than a hundred years without success. These days a new drug pops up every month, and they honestly think they can get a handle on this? Unbelievable.
Seizing one billionth of the global supply and broadcasting it along with a hefty dose of fear-mongering is enough the pacify the quivering conservative public and keep them in business though. Nuke the mid-west and wait for the ironic pill popping baby boomers to die and maybe we'll all have some hope for rational policy in the future.
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