On Web sites touting the mind-blowing powers of Salvia divinorum,
come-ons to buy the hallucinogenic herb are accompanied by
warnings: "Time is running out!" and "stock
up while you still can."
That's because salvia is being targeted by lawmakers concerned
that the inexpensive and easy-to-obtain plant could become
the next marijuana. Eight states have already placed restrictions
on salvia, and 16 others, including Florida, are considering
a ban or have previously.
"As soon as we make one drug illegal, kids start looking
around for other drugs they can buy legally. This is just
the next one," said Florida state Rep. Mary Brandenburg,
who has introduced a bill to make possession of salvia a felony
punishable by up to five years in prison.
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Some say legislators are overreacting to a minor problem,
but no one disputes that the plant impairs judgment and the
ability to drive.
Native to Mexico and still grown there, Salvia divinorum
is generally smoked but can also be chewed or made into a
tea and drunk.
Called nicknames like Sally-D, Magic Mint and Diviner's Sage,
salvia is a hallucinogen that gives users an out-of-body sense
of traveling through time and space or merging with inanimate
objects. Unlike hallucinogens like LSD or PCP, however, salvia's
effects last for a shorter time, generally up to an hour.
It is not the same as the ornamental garden plant known as
Salvia.
No known deaths have been attributed to salvia's use, but
it was listed as a factor in one Delaware teen's suicide two
years ago.
"Parents, I would say, are pretty clueless," said
Jonathan Appel, an assistant professor of psychology and criminal
justice at Tiffin University in Ohio who has studied the emergence
of the substance. "It's much more powerful than marijuana."
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