07-18-2012, 03:46 PM
Why 'zombies' all at once? Doesn't make sense.
There are worldwide reports of assholery every day.
But, is this really what's making people instantly de-evolve? Damn.
Where are the compounds you mentioned in this? Seems so harmless.
"Ingredients: Sodium Chloride (Sea Salt), Fragrance, Glycerin (Vegetable Glycerin), Tocopherol (Vitamin E), Aloe Barbadensis (Aloe Vera) Leaf Juice, FD&C Yellow 5 Lake, FD&C Blue 1 Lake."
(Fox News)
One man, Neil Brown, of Fulton, Miss., got high off the bath salts and then slashed his face and stomach. He survived, but authorities said other people have not been so lucky.
In Brown's case, he said he had tried every drug from heroin to crack and was so shaken by terrifying hallucinations that he wrote one Mississippi paper urging people to stay away from the advertised bath salts.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/01/24...z210QfXilZ
![[Image: Zombie-Bath-Salts.jpg]](http://www.geekalerts.com/u/Zombie-Bath-Salts.jpg)
There are worldwide reports of assholery every day.
But, is this really what's making people instantly de-evolve? Damn.
Where are the compounds you mentioned in this? Seems so harmless.
"Ingredients: Sodium Chloride (Sea Salt), Fragrance, Glycerin (Vegetable Glycerin), Tocopherol (Vitamin E), Aloe Barbadensis (Aloe Vera) Leaf Juice, FD&C Yellow 5 Lake, FD&C Blue 1 Lake."
(Fox News)
One man, Neil Brown, of Fulton, Miss., got high off the bath salts and then slashed his face and stomach. He survived, but authorities said other people have not been so lucky.
In Brown's case, he said he had tried every drug from heroin to crack and was so shaken by terrifying hallucinations that he wrote one Mississippi paper urging people to stay away from the advertised bath salts.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/health/2011/01/24...z210QfXilZ
![[Image: Zombie-Bath-Salts.jpg]](http://www.geekalerts.com/u/Zombie-Bath-Salts.jpg)
(07-18-2012, 03:34 PM)Pickle Wrote: Tetrodotoxin is known to be used for Haitian voodoo zombification.
A zombie (Haitian Creole: zonbi; North Mbundu: nzumbe) is an animated corpse brought back to life by mystical means, such as witchcraft.[1] The term is often figuratively applied to describe a hypnotized person bereft of consciousness and self-awareness, yet ambulant and able to respond to surrounding stimuli.
Midazolam, marketed in English-speaking countries under the trade names Dormicum, Hypnovel, and Versed, is a short-acting drug in the benzodiazepine class. The anterograde amnesia property of midazolam is useful for premedication before surgery to inhibit unpleasant memories...