There's lots of info here about it, but you'd be quicker searching the Web than someone explaining it!New here, sorry if everyone knows but me!
@mammajo It's a leafy plant originally from Asia that just this week the DEA announced is making the illegal equivalent of heroin starting September 30th. That's less than 28 days away.What is Kratcom? New here, sorry if everyone knows but me!
The people using it for fun, as always, ruined it for everyone else.@mammajo It's a leafy plant originally from Asia that just this week the DEA announced is making the illegal equivalent of heroin starting September 30th. That's less than 28 days away.
I've been a partaker of Kratom for a couple of years before discovering this forum, but some of the most sound, rational and experienced advice regarding Kratom was what I read right here on DBG in the Kratom discussion thread(s). I initially used Kratom to ease sudden wicked withdrawals from opiates, as do a lot of other folks. Some use it to ease chronic pain or anxiety. Some use it just for fun.
As is always required when discussing Kratom, the most important advice is avoid the extracts at all costs. The physical price one pays for extracts is very high indeed and not in a good way.
Its getting scheduled, its just a matter of what schedule I'm afraid. I am pretty well-versed on legal arguments.If and When the dea bans it .i guarantee there is going to be every farm animal and every other normal to abuser test subject showing up at the "er" throughout the country i hope there ready for that.it is what my test subject is going to do.
Same can be said about Tramadol as far as I know under the law.Kratom is not an opiate.however it binds to the same receptors that opiates bind to
Same can be said about Tramadol as far as I know under the law.
If it binds to opiate receptors, its an opiate. In this case I believe rather, that the correct term would be opioid. Its definitely an opioid because it binds to opioid/opiate receptors.
Sounds like a fancy way to say its not an opiate to me boss. Sure its not an opiate, but if it binds to opioid receptors predominantly, that makes it an opioid at least I'm pretty sure.