Is Kratom next up in the controlled substance cavalcade?
The battle usually begins with an outrageous anecdote. A shady doctor prescribing pain pills from a golf course; a deranged man spiked up on some “bath salt” derivative and chewing off someone’s face; or a shocking suicide by a young man with a bright future.
First, it was the fight to shut down pill mills. Then, in 2012 lawmakers cracked down on so-called “bath salts” and related quasi-legal drugs by making them a part of the Schedule I suite of drugs. (Schedule I meaning, of course, that even docs can’t write a prescription for it.) Each of these fights was preceded by a rise in the level of use and then abuse – and then the headline quaking anecdote follows.
Is Kratom next?
There have been reports of so-called kava bars serving up Kratom cocktails and the web is starting to become populated with sites promoting the health benefits (“it will give you energy” and “it will calm your nerves.”) and how it eases the transition off more widely-known and highly addictive drugs. These “all natural” tea shops are popping up next door to urban rehab centers in South Florida and, as a result, the locals are trying to do what the U.S. military has already done: shut down access to what is known in some circles as “nature’s speedball.”
But so far, only one county (Sarasota) has succeeded.
In the Legislature, Senator Greg Evers and Representative Kristin Jacobs are now pushing respective bills to make Kratom the 176th item listed among Florida’s Schedule I drugs, effectively making it illegal.
If you’ve watched this drill before, you know this will spur the usual back and forth: ”the drug is extremely safe” versus “it’s a killer”…”it’s all natural” versus, “so is arsenic”…”it is legal in many parts of the world” versus “so is prostitution”…”it’s an over-reaching nanny-state trying to over-regulate perfectly safe behavior among adults” versus, “tell that to the parents of a dead child” and so on.
The feds are weighing in and are seizing large caches of the stuff (last fall, the U.S. FDA seized 25,000 pounds) calling it, “a botanical substance that poses a risk to public health and has the potential for abuse.” And here at home, with the introduction of these two bills, we should expect this back-and-forth to commence any day now.
Look for the Kratom Wars to soon get underway.
FloridaPolitics.com will be keeping a close eye on this issue and would welcome any additional input about Kratom.
4 comments
Pingback: Tampa Bay Times finally arrives at the Kratom party - Florida Politics
Pingback: Tampa Bay Times finally arrives at the Kratom party - SaintPetersBlog
Pingback: Just Florida News / Tampa Bay Times finally arrives at the Kratom party
Pingback: Powdered alcohol ... the next date rape drug? - Florida Politics
Comments are closed.