where can i find salvia?
Printable View
where can i find salvia?
any headshop.......or www.salviaworld.com
its legal, shouldnt be too hard to find
k thanks
do mostly all headshops have it?
think so
It's legal some places, illegal others. It's definitely not legal where I am, although I live close enough to the state line that I could probably get it easily enough by driving one state over. The places that sell it online mostly won't ship it to the states where it's illegal either.
says 100% legal everywhere except australia on that site
Well, they're wrong. It's illegal in Missouri, Delaware and Louisiana, and it won't be long before it's illegal elsewhere. And if the feds classify it as a Schedule I drug, which they're likely working on, then it'll be illegal in every state, at least so far as the feds are concerned. Get it while you can!
Quote:
Originally Posted by jamstigator
the DEA has themselves in a screwup here. :DQuote:
Salvia divinorum is uncontrolled in the United States. This means all parts of the plant and its extracts are legal to cultivate, buy, possess, and distribute (sell, trade or give) without a license or prescription. If sold as a supplement, sales must conform to U.S. supplement laws. If sold for consumption as a food or drug, sales are regulated by the FDA.
The federal analog act generally requires that, in order to qualify as an analog, a substance must be chemically similar to a substance which is federally scheduled. Salvia Divinorum is chemically quite different from other scheduled substances and as a plant is quite unlikely to be targeted by this act.
Selling Salvia divinorum for human consumption as a "drug" is probably illegal in the US under the Food, Drug & Cosmetics Act and its sale as a drug would be regulated by the FDA. Selling an unapproved drug in the US can be prosecuted under the FD&C's "misbranding" clause. (FD&C Section 502) The more it is packaged and marketed as a drug (for example a 10x extract hyped as 'the new ecstasy') the more likely it is to be treated as an "illegal drug" by law enforcement agents.
The US Air Force is considering whether to include Salvia divinorum in the list of banned drugs. See Plant could get airmen in legal hot water, Jan 2004.
California Analog Act
Under the strict California Analog Act, salvia could potentially be prosecuted if it is sold for human consumption as a psychoactive drug.
US Federal Analogue Act
Under the Federal Analogue Act, salvia fails to meet the "chemically similar" criteria and thus is not subject to the analogue act provisions. However, the DEA has recently changed their view on this and now states:
"Salvia Divinorum, Salvinorin A, and Divinorin A are not listed in the Controlled Substances Act. If sold for human consumption, Salvia may be subject to control under the Analogue statutes because of its functional pharmacological similarities to other CI hallucinogens like THC."
-- from DEA Diversion Salvia Page Feb 2002
However the DEA's analysis is completely flawed. The Federal Analogue Act, as currently understood requires that a substance be "chemically similar" to a controlled substance not "pharmacologically similar" as the DEA suggests in their quote. Very little is known about the pharmacology of Salvia and there is still much unknown about the pharmacology of THC. Saying the two are 'pharmacologically similar' might satisfy the paragraph II of the Analogue Act test, but its also just wrong. Perhaps the DEA has performed human pharamcology studies on salvinorin that they are keeping secret, but most likely the authors of this article are just trying to use their position to further extend the reach of their power well beyond the scope of the law.
Salvinorin is not a chemical analog of any scheduled substance.
salvia is crazzzy...most headshops and lil african/ghana type stores have it...
Yeah, man, that shit's nuts.