Congressmen Introduce Designer Steroids Bill in House

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Congressmen Introduce Anabolic Steroids Bill in House

May 30, 2014

WASHINGTON—Reps. Joe Pitts (R-Penn.) and Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) have introduced legislation in the House designed to crack down on anabolic steroids masquerading as dietary supplements, according to the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN).

The legislation serves as a companion bill to the Senate’s Designer Anabolic Steroid Control Act (DASCA) of 2014, which was introduced in February by Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Orrin Hatch (R-Utah).

“The introduction of the House bill is the next step toward full passage of a much-needed law that will further empower the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) with new tools to identify and quickly respond when new designer anabolic steroids are introduced and falsely marketed as dietary supplements," said Mike Greene, CRN’s vice president of government relations, in a statement.

The Senate bill, introduced amid the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, would classify "designer anabolic steroids" found in gyms, retail stores and over the Internet as controlled substances.

According to Hatch and Whitehouse, the products are made by reverse engineering illegal steroids and slightly changing their chemical composition. Such reengineering avoids placement on DEA's list of controlled substances, posing a dilemma for federal authorities. According to a DEA official in 2009 testimony on Capitol Hill, if products containing designer steroids meet the definition of a dietary supplement, FDA must demonstrate that they are "adulterated"—presenting "a significant or unreasonable risk of illness or injury"—before they can be removed from the market.

Hatch and Whitehouse warned that designer steroids can cause such harm as liver injury and an increased risk of a heart attack and stroke, and may lead to addiction and aggression.

The Senate's legislation will "allow DEA to respond faster to stop those criminals who create new anabolic substances closely resembling listed ones, but tweaked just enough that they are not identical to the ones listed," CRN president and CEO Steve Mister wrote in a March 10, 2014 article for Natural Products INSIDER. "The misbranded steroids, illegally sold as dietary supplements, are not only dangerous for consumers, but also unfairly damage the reputation of responsible dietary supplement companies that provide consumers with legitimate, high-quality and beneficial supplements for sports nutrition and performance."
 
I lol'd at the last comment in the article.

"The misbranded steroids, illegally sold as dietary supplements, are not only dangerous for consumers, but also unfairly damage the reputation of responsible dietary supplement companies that provide consumers with legitimate, high-quality and beneficial supplements for sports nutrition and performance."
 
Honestly the whole thing is a joke. Trying to regulate what sups grown adults want to put in their own bodies.
 
So...the Council for Responsible Nutrition (CRN) - the organization applauding this bill, is led by Chairman John Blair of NSA/Juice Plus. I find it ironic that the guy looking to "protect" us from the evils of PH's is all for overcharging the public for fruit and vegetable powdered extracts via multi-level marketing.

Next we have Steve Mister (President and CEO) - apparently an attorney who is looking to put some teeth into the CRN agenda. It appears CRN's motivation is to protect their own company members; many of which are MLMs and be a self-proclaimed watchdog "looking out for the common man".

Also on board is Sr. VP Duffy MacKay - a licensed Naturopathic Doctor who has worked in the past with Nordic Naturals. He currently practices alternative medicine and integrative medicine (nothing controversial about that...lol).

CRN's member list includes AdvoCare, Amway, Avon, Herbalife, Juice Plus, Nu Skin, POM, Shaklee and SmartyPants Vitamins among many others. I'm not entirely sure if those particular companies need to be helping me make my supplement decisions to be quite honest.
 
Addiction!! LOL.

I just sold my body and then pawned a stolen TV to get myself a new 30 day run of Halo Extreme.:rolleyes:
 
The supplement industry is worth billions every year. Seems like when a product actually works, high priced lawyer get involved to eradicate the product. They will find something wrong with it (look at every drug ad on TV). Why can't we make decisions for ourselves? Because we take money from big corporate when we make our own decisions. Look for a battle on this one. Do these products have sides? yes they do. Do these products work? Better than any other supplement on the market!
 

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