Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In late 2002, Rep. Joe Baca (D- California) introduced a bill (Congress bill HR 5607) to schedule salvia as a controlled substance at the national level. Those opposed to Joe Baca's bill include Daniel Siebert, who sent a letter to Congress arguing against the proposed legislation, [1] and the Center for Cognitive Liberty & Ethics (CCLE), who sent key members of the US Congress a report on ...
Illegal: Illegal: Illegal: In October 2004, "salvorin A", a misspelling of salvinorin A, was added to the Belgian list of illegal products, so the law was actually banning a non-existent substance. [43] Two years later, in October 2006, the mistake was corrected, and the whole Salvia divinorum plant was made explicitly illegal. [44] Brazil ...
Illegal: Illegal: Illegal: Illegal Italy Illegal except Peyote: Illegal except Peyote: Illegal except Peyote: Legal: Mescaline is listed under Table 1 of Italy's "Tabelle delle sostanze stupefacenti e psicotrope" making it illegal to purchase, transport or sell. However, psychoactive cacti (with the exception of peyote) can be legally purchased ...
UN World Drug Report 2016. In Peru, coca-bush cultivation jumped 44% between 2000 and 2011. While cultivation fell 31% between 2011 and 2014 (back to 2000 levels), it still accounts for 32% of ...
Widely used illegal stimulant, produces hallucination in overdose, native to South America. [citation needed] Unknown Fittonia albivenis. Nerve or mosaic plant, said to produce vision of eyeballs Himbacine. Galbulimima belgraveana: Galbulimima belgraveana is rich in alkaloids and twenty-eight alkaloids have been isolated including himbacine.
Kava or kava kava (Piper methysticum: Latin 'pepper' and Latinized Greek 'intoxicating') is a plant in the pepper family, native to the Pacific Islands. [1] The name kava is from Tongan and Marquesan, meaning 'bitter.’ [1] Other names for kava include ʻawa (), [2] ʻava (), yaqona or yagona (), [3] sakau (), [4] seka (), [5] and malok or malogu (parts of Vanuatu). [6]
Notes: · Reflects laws of states and territories, including laws which have not yet gone into effect. Does not reflect federal, tribal, or local laws. · Map does not show state legality of hemp-derived cannabinoids such as CBD or delta-8-THC, which have been legal at federal level since enactment of the 2018 Farm Bill
In these traditions, taking kava is believed to facilitate contact with the spirits of the dead, especially relatives and ancestors. [36] There are no known uses of entheogens by the Māori of New Zealand aside from a variant species of kava, [37] although some modern scholars have claimed that there may be evidence of psilocybin mushroom use. [38]