OHRoadwarrior
Senior Member
That sounds really good for a press release. The truth of the matter is that Federal law prohibits making scientifically unproven claims about supplements. A retail distributor, testifying a natural substance does something is illegal absent documented scientific proof. It is not only unsubstantiated by scientific evidence, it is assuming the fact they are professionally educated, with a medical degree, to testify on a products efficacy, based on their experience. The only thing a business owner could testify about was that they bought it from company X.
For ****x n giggles, go into any health food store and start discussing herbs and supplements. Any properly trained employee will have been taught phraseology that indicates what people use it for, without directly making a claim it does something, unless there is scientific documentation it actually does.
For ****x n giggles, go into any health food store and start discussing herbs and supplements. Any properly trained employee will have been taught phraseology that indicates what people use it for, without directly making a claim it does something, unless there is scientific documentation it actually does.
GHB's Day(s) in Court
The FDA's national press release of 8 November 1990, which declared that GHB was a drug, marked the beginning of a series of law-enforcement actions and court cases. At that time, GHB was being sold in health food stores on an over-the-counter basis. With that press release, the FDA and federal and local police began to threaten businesses with legal prosecution for selling GHB. They arrested business owners and told them that they would be prosecuted unless they testified against their wholesale suppliers.
The FDA succeeded in driving the GHB business underground. They began legal proceedings against GHB distributors and manufacturers. They charged them with labeling and drug violations. The FDA provided expert witnesses who testified as to the serious dangers of GHB. During the trials, the Federal prosecutor and FDA blocked the court's and defense's access to GHB INDs which were represented to "contain no relevant information." The GHB distributors and manufacturers were convicted and sent to prison.
PHENIBUT--
Law #
Phenibut is not a controlled substance in the United States, where sales, distribution, and labeling are regulated by FDA rules if it is sold as a dietary supplement.
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