AND AIDS FROM SALVIA? Sweet mother, that's so damn disrespectful and ignorant that I don't know where to begin. Hell, let's go ahead and add rape to the side-effects list while we're at it! And...schizophrenia? Isn't schizophrenia genetic? I guess they meant schizophrenic side-effects or some such nonsense...
Well, schizophrenia was pretty much the only thing listed there that could potentially be true. Yes, it is apparently genetic, but if someone is predisposed to a mental illness like schizophrenia, it is highly recommended that they do not attempt to use psychedelic or entheogenic drugs. This is because it has long been suspected that in some people with a predisposition to mental illness, the intensity of the experiences that these drugs produce can
very rarely trigger the onset of symptoms of that mental illness. They used to think LSD produced an accurate model for schizophrenia in normal people for example (now it's believed that a combination of mind altering and dissociative substances is better), and LSD was studied extensively in the 60's in relation to schizophrenia.
I would submit for argument that whenever an individual that already has an unstable mind undergoes an experience that is profoundly earthshattering, often completely replacing and destroying all vestiges of former reality, that the possibility exists that they cannot integrate the experience afterwards. Thus triggering a psychosis. However, a cause and effect relationship between triggering the onsets of mental illness in predisposed people and psychedelic drugs has never been scientifically observed. I would believe it though. Wherever Salvia is sold they have to sell it as "incense". Arguably the most powerful psychedelic drug on the planet, sold as incense? I think this is highly irresponsible. There should be a warning on the box about potential risks for people that have a history of mental illness in their family.
And on the topic of drug laws and government overstepping, it becomes even more rediculous when you consider the chemistry of psychedelic substances. The famous organic chemist Alexander Shulgin (author of PiHKAL and TiHKAL) has synthesized hundreds of novel psychedelic drugs, most of which are still technically "legal". But you see, a slight modification to a chemical which already has psychoactivity will just produce another chemical that is less, more, or equal in psychoactivity. For example, the drug 2C-B (4-bromo, 2,5 dimethoxy phenethylamine) is illegal, but the drug 2C-E (2,5 dimethoxy, 4-ethyl phenethylamine) is not. However, by the Analog Drug Law, if you are caught with possession of 2C-E you can be prosecuted for it.
This law is particularly rediculous in that it is hugely ambiguous and pays no heed to biochemistry of the nature of individual substances. For example, the drugs 5-Methoxy DMT (dimethyltryptamine), 5-Methoxy DIPT (diisopropyltryptamine), 5-Methoxy MIPT (methylisopropyltryptamine) are all potent psychedelic drugs, but the chemical 5-Methoxy AcT (acetyltryptamine) is not. The common name for 5-Methoxy AcT is
melatonin. You may have heard of it. It is the body's natural sleep hormone which regulates circadian rhythm and it is a sleep aid sold over the counter at CVS.
You cannot 'trip' on melatonin. The acetyl group apparently conveys so much polarity that it either has great difficulty crossing the blood brain barrier or does not fit into the active site on the serotonin receptors in the brain that the other drugs do. But by the Analog Drug Law melatonin should be illegal. Technically melatonin
is psychoactive. But the extent of it's psychoactivity is that it makes you sleepy.
With enormous ambiguity in already ineffective drug laws, I predict that things will get much, much worse before they get better.