https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikeada...re-inaccurate/
How would SC Johnson know whether or not smoking household bug spray with street drugs would have the reported effects? Has someone been doing horrible animal experiments like this?
Mar 22, 2018 @ 11:28 AM 7,131 The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets SC Johnson Claims Reports Over Bug Spray Zombie Drugs Are "Inaccurate"
Mike Adams , Contributor One of the latest trends in the deepest, darkest depths of the American drug culture is smoking various substances, including marijuana, that have been sprayed with common household bug killers, like RAID. Earlier this week, the Indianapolis Star reported that emergency responders are at their wits end with addicts and their lust for this street drug called KD or Katie.
Dozens of overdoses have taken place in the past month alone, with users displaying zombie-like characteristics in the streets. Some of them have bounced back without any immediate health issues, while others have been hospitalized for problems ranging from seizures to cardiac arrest.
This weird drug mixture has apparently caught on among parts of downtrodden society because it is relatively inexpensive and it produces a catatonic effect. Indiana officials claim the bug spray additive gives the user a 45-minute high and sends them into whirlwind of bizarre behavior.
Their movements are very slow, lethargic, a lot of drooling, kind of a loss of function overall, Captain Chris Major of the Indianapolis Fire Department told WFSB. We find them with their clothes off, they've done that to themselves, they are eating the grass, pulling dirt off the ground, trying to put it in their mouth," he added...
Mike Adams , Contributor One of the latest trends in the deepest, darkest depths of the American drug culture is smoking various substances, including marijuana, that have been sprayed with common household bug killers, like RAID. Earlier this week, the Indianapolis Star reported that emergency responders are at their wits end with addicts and their lust for this street drug called KD or Katie.
Dozens of overdoses have taken place in the past month alone, with users displaying zombie-like characteristics in the streets. Some of them have bounced back without any immediate health issues, while others have been hospitalized for problems ranging from seizures to cardiac arrest.
This weird drug mixture has apparently caught on among parts of downtrodden society because it is relatively inexpensive and it produces a catatonic effect. Indiana officials claim the bug spray additive gives the user a 45-minute high and sends them into whirlwind of bizarre behavior.
Their movements are very slow, lethargic, a lot of drooling, kind of a loss of function overall, Captain Chris Major of the Indianapolis Fire Department told WFSB. We find them with their clothes off, they've done that to themselves, they are eating the grass, pulling dirt off the ground, trying to put it in their mouth," he added...