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Stim crackdown alert

BeardedBreast

Active member
Published today

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Being covered by major news.

Came up in my alerts
 
Weren't these always kind of gray-area stims anyways? Doesn't really change much.

*Waits for day they ban caffeine as a supplement*
 
examples include deterenol found in i-force dexaprine which i think i-force dc'ed years ago and best of all GREEN TEA EXTRACT, lol....
 
I think that all of these besides Higenamine were already issues anyway.

Then Higenamine and Hordenine were added to an FDA advisory list in the past; but that list didn't necessarily make them illegal, it was just an advisory list. But it led Amazon to not allow them to be sold on there and for most companies to stop selling them.

Any company claiming DMAA to be legal have just been lying to themselves bc there are plenty of people that are already in jail or that have paid fines over that.
 
examples include deterenol found in i-force dexaprine which i think i-force dc'ed years ago and best of all GREEN TEA EXTRACT, lol....
Dexaprine holy chit. When I took that it brought me back to the days of Labrada Charge and Hydroxycut with Ephedra.

Jitter jazzed complete nonsense mode. lol.
 
Dexaprine holy chit. When I took that it brought me back to the days of Labrada Charge and Hydroxycut with Ephedra.

Jitter jazzed complete nonsense mode. lol.
lol...i remember vaughn true warning everyone not to take more than 1 dexaprine 👹
 
Any company claiming DMAA to be legal have just been lying to themselves bc there are plenty of people that are already in jail or that have paid fines over that.

They're posting DMAA supplements as "research - not for human consumption" as it says on the label for Dark Energy.

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Oxilofrine is Adafranil.
Octodrine is DMHA.

β-Methylphenethylamine (β-Me-PEA, BMPEA, or 1-amino-2-phenylpropane) is an organic compound of the phenethylamine class, and a positional isomer of the drug amphetamine, with which it shares some properties. In particular, both amphetamine and β-methylphenethylamine are human TAAR1 agonists.[1] In appearance, it is a colorless or yellowish liquid.

I didn't realize BMPEA was an amphetamine like drug.

So, let's make a list of supplements with these compounds in them and buy them before they get banned.
 
I only found one mainstream article covering it. So, we might be in the clear.

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An article criticizing the FDA for not going after them is definitely not being in the clear.
 
They're posting DMAA supplements as "research - not for human consumption" as it says on the label for Dark Energy.

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There have been multiple convictions of people and companies selling it as a dietary supplement.
There have been multiple conviction of people and companies selling it as a research chemical.

If it was as simple as putting the word research chemical on the bottles, USP Labs would have done that originally.
Or Hi-Tech would have done that rather than spending millions of dollars fighting the government over it.

There are always going to be people and companies that think it won't happen to them until it does. The part that affects everyone else is that it reflects badly on the industry as a whole and gets them looking at more stuff or more broader reaching regulations.
 
There have been multiple convictions of people and companies selling it as a dietary supplement.
There have been multiple conviction of people and companies selling it as a research chemical.

If it was as simple as putting the word research chemical on the bottles, USP Labs would have done that originally.
Or Hi-Tech would have done that rather than spending millions of dollars fighting the government over it.

There are always going to be people and companies that think it won't happen to them until it does. The part that affects everyone else is that it reflects badly on the industry as a whole and gets them looking at more stuff or more broader reaching regulations.

Yeah, I can understand from an industry standpoint it makes the entire supplement industry look bad. But, OTOH, I want my illegal stimz!!!

Oxilofrine

Yeah you're right, it's methylsynephrine. For some reason when I googled it the first time, adafranil came up.
 
Yeah, I can understand from an industry standpoint it makes the entire supplement industry look bad. But, OTOH, I want my illegal stimz!!!

I understand. I just fear that companies are going to keep pushing it until you can't get hardly any stims at all.
 
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Shame they didn't test Excelsior. I've never heard of 90% of these products.

Most of them on there are more well-known mainstream wise than Excelsior. I think that's why Excelsior intentionally tries to keep a low profile.

It's interesting to me that it seems the main reason for them testing it was for the Isopropylnorsynephrine. A lot of companies use that and have tried to make the argument that it was legal.
 
Most of them on there are more well-known mainstream wise than Excelsior. I think that's why Excelsior intentionally tries to keep a low profile.

It's interesting to me that it seems the main reason for them testing it was for the Isopropylnorsynephrine. A lot of companies use that and have tried to make the argument that it was legal.

Aren't most of these companies owned by HiTech?
 
Here's each of the products in the list.

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  • N'Gorge NOS Extreme by ALR doesn't appear to be manufactured anymore
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  • Lipotherm by ALR seems to be no longer manufactured
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Aren't most of these companies owned by HiTech?

If I'm not mistaken, Hi-Tech either either owns or has investments in a couple of them.
For a couple of them, I'm not sure if Hi-Tech has any ownership in them or just does manufacturing for them.
 
FDA wants to ban stims but the state of Oregon decriminalized all drugs last November. Makes a whole lot of sense.
 
Can't believe nobody liked my list. It took me a good 45 minutes to hunt down those products and put them in order. :cry:

You did a good job finding the list; I hadn't seen it yet I don't think.

There's something on the list very interesting about one particular company but I don't want to be the one to point it out. But hint to anyone - look closely at the what was tested versus what wasn't in the detected column :ROFLMAO:
 
You did a good job finding the list; I hadn't seen it yet I don't think.

There's something on the list very interesting about one particular company but I don't want to be the one to point it out. But hint to anyone - look closely at the what was tested versus what wasn't in the detected column :ROFLMAO:

Well, both the ALR supplements are discontinued, so I can't guess those, and the only other 2 products with 3 other ingredients are 10 Seconds to Launch and Thermo Shock. So I give us. PM me or give us a hint, Let's do charades to try and figure it out.
 
Well, both the ALR supplements are discontinued, so I can't guess those, and the only other 2 products with 3 other ingredients are 10 Seconds to Launch and Thermo Shock. So I give us. PM me or give us a hint, Let's do charades to try and figure it out.

Sorry, I don't speak badly about anyone so I'm not going to comment on it further. I just found it interesting.
 
Cmoooonnn... give us a clue. Or at least tell us what you meant by it's "very interesting".

My hint was in my first post. I said:

But hint to anyone - look closely at the what was tested versus what wasn't in the detected column. - meaning that what was tested for should be in the detected column if it was actually in the product.

I have a policy that I don't talk negatively about companies so I'm not going to say anything else about it.
 
FDA wants to ban stims but the state of Oregon decriminalized all drugs last November. Makes a whole lot of sense.
i remember back in high school all the fat girls got prescription black beauties, once a month those fat girls were very popular, lol.
 
Strangely enough, urbandictionary had a great definition for them.

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CLIFFS: Invalid Link Removed were basically Adderall.

"Invalid Link Removed" was a drug street-name used in the '60s and '70s to refer to a pill of pharmaceutical Invalid Link Removed (aka speed). Strictly speaking, a Invalid Link Removed was a tablet of Biphetamine, manufactured by Strasenburgh Labs, then Pennwalt Corporation, and finally Fisons Corporation, before finally being pulled from the market in 1998. Chemically speaking, it was composed of an even, racemic mixture of dextro- and levo- amphetamine, very similar to today's Adderall. Contrary to what other definitions might say, both the d- and l- isomers of amphetamine are active and "fun." In fact, while d-amp is technically the stronger Invalid Link Removed, the racemic Invalid Link Removed mixtures are actually more stimulating, more abusable, and create more of a drug "high."

The term "black beauty" was also extended to include Biphetamine-T, which was a ridiculously abusable mixture of the aforementioned amphetamines, plus Invalid Link Removed (aka Invalid Link Removed). Both Biphetamine mixtures were available in 12.5mg and 20mg tablets.

Black Beauties were popular in the 60s and 70s, especially following post-war eras, when it stopped being shipped to our soldiers overseas and suddenly built up as a surplus on the home front. This amphetamine surplus eventually Invalid Link Removed out onto the streets where it was consumed recreationally. Amphetamines were not made illegal to buy without a prescription until 1965, so amphetamine use at the time was widely considered a cheap, legal alternative to cocaine, and its abuse wasn't considered taboo. It wasn't uncommon for housewives of the '50s and '60s to secretly pop speed pills and proceed to go on marathon 8-hour cleaning sessions. Invalid Link Removed use continued rather uninhibited until that asshole Nixon came into office and passed the Controlled Substances Act in 1970 (aka the law under which all street drugs are now illegal) and "The War on Drugs" was born. Pharmaceutical amphetamine abuse dwindled after that, and all the speed pills of the '60s and '70s began to disappear Invalid Link Removed. By the late '90s, most pills were just a distant memory. Of course, the past decade has brought a sudden rash of Invalid Link Removed cases (or diagnoses rather), so now we're in the middle of a new speed "epidemic." Kids everywhere are once again abusing uppers (Ritalin/Adderall/Invalid Link Removed) just like your parents abused Invalid Link Removed in the early '70s.
The term "Invalid Link Removed" specifically refers to Biphetamine, but more loosely refers to the myriad of amphetamine combo pills that your Invalid Link Removed abused when they were young. The definition can be further loosened to include the amphetamine + barbituate combos of the day. Fun notables include Desbutal (methamphetamine + pentobarbital) and Dexamyl (dex-amphetamine + amobarbital). With the modern-day legal Invalid Link Removed on amphetamines, and the near complete extinction of barbituates (after the introduction of benzos), all these wildly abusable pills have ceased to exist, and remain only as figments of your parents' memories.

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My hint was in my first post. I said:

But hint to anyone - look closely at the what was tested versus what wasn't in the detected column. - meaning that what was tested for should be in the detected column if it was actually in the product.

I have a policy that I don't talk negatively about companies so I'm not going to say anything else about it.

I saw one that looked up as “vonedrine” in the article. Anyone know what that is?
 
Already banned ingredients. I'm sure there are some shady places where you can still obtain 1,3 DMAA just like you can still find some places that sell ECA and all sorts of other stuff.
 
I saw one that looked up as “vonedrine” in the article. Anyone know what that is?


Appears to be a nasal decongestant, like most of these are.

Vonedrine (phenylpropylmethylamine). Clinical study of a new nasal decongestant, Looks like an old one from the 30s or 40s.

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Already banned ingredients. I'm sure there are some shady places where you can still obtain 1,3 DMAA just like you can still find some places that sell ECA and all sorts of other stuff.

The only one I found surprising on there at all was Higenamine, because it and hordenine were added to the advisory list, but its on the same list as Laxogenin, for example. And that wasn't presented as a ban list.

Agreed on what you're saying about the DMAA. Something about that that surprises me is that its likes people don't stop to think that they really have no idea what they're getting - its not like companies quality test their illegal ingredients lol.
 
The only one I found surprising on there at all was Higenamine, because it and hordenine were added to the advisory list, but its on the same list as Laxogenin, for example. And that wasn't presented as a ban list.

Agreed on what you're saying about the DMAA. Something about that that surprises me is that its likes people don't stop to think that they really have no idea what they're getting - its not like companies quality test their illegal ingredients lol.

Why is Laxogenin on the ban list? I thought that was just a hoaky ingredient that didn't do anything?
 
The only one I found surprising on there at all was Higenamine, because it and hordenine were added to the advisory list, but its on the same list as Laxogenin, for example. And that wasn't presented as a ban list.

Agreed on what you're saying about the DMAA. Something about that that surprises me is that its likes people don't stop to think that they really have no idea what they're getting - its not like companies quality test their illegal ingredients lol.
before it got banned guys kept saying that the dmaa wasn't as good as it had been before.
 
Why is Laxogenin on the ban list? I thought that was just a hoaky ingredient that didn't do anything?

You quoted my post saying that wasn't presented as a ban list but as an advisory list to ask me why its on the ban list? I'm just pointing that out because I never said it was on any ban list. I said it was on the same list as Higenamine, which was an advisory list and not specifically a ban list. That is why I was surprised that Higenamine was listed on the test results.

As to the reason it's on there - most likely because most of it is a synthetic ingredient and some companies say on their supplement facts that its derived from an herb when most of it isn't.

And I wouldn't call it hokey. There is a lot of raw material discrepancies on it and its also an example of an ingredient that seems to work well for some people but not others.
 
You quoted my post saying that wasn't presented as a ban list but as an advisory list to ask me why its on the ban list? I'm just pointing that out because I never said it was on any ban list. I said it was on the same list as Higenamine, which was an advisory list and not specifically a ban list. That is why I was surprised that Higenamine was listed on the test results.

My mistake.

As to the reason it's on there - most likely because most of it is a synthetic ingredient and some companies say on their supplement facts that its derived from an herb when most of it isn't.

And I wouldn't call it hokey. There is a lot of raw material discrepancies on it and its also an example of an ingredient that seems to work well for some people but not others.


I see. Very interesting.
 
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