Uttarakhand: उद्योगपति मुकेश अंबानी ने किए बदरीनाथ-केदारनाथ के दर्शन, मंदिर समिति को दान दिए दस करोड़
उद्योगपति एवं रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के चेयरमैन मुकेश अंबानी ने सोमवार को भगवान बदरीविशाल और बाबा केदारनाथ के…
उद्योगपति एवं रिलायंस इंडस्ट्रीज के चेयरमैन मुकेश अंबानी ने सोमवार को भगवान बदरीविशाल और बाबा केदारनाथ के…
They won bipartisan allies from Bernie Sanders to Rand Paul, and helped create a billion-dollar industry out of kratom, which has pain-relieving effects they said could help fight the opioid epidemic as a far safer, natural alternative to pills.
Now, many of those same pro-kratom activists are calling for a ban on products containing concentrates of one of kratom’s active components: 7-hydroxymitragynine, or 7-OH, an ultra-potent extract with opioid-like effects. And it’s causing major friction amongst consumers, sellers, and advocates of both substances.
“This is a chemically manipulated, full-blown opioid that is now in the marketplace,” claims Mac Haddow, the senior public policy fellow at the American Kratom Association, a kratom industry lobby group. “They masquerade as kratom products.”
The proliferation of 7-OH in gummies, capsules, and shots with brand names like Magic 7OH, 7 O’Heaven, and Pure OHMS across thousands of gas stations and corner stores over the past few years has caused increasing consternation. Consumers of 7-OH have spoken of its excruciating withdrawal symptoms, and there have been reports of polydrug overdoses involving 7-OH and other substances. Some are now entering rehab to overcome their dependency, while others are self-detoxing based on advice from Redditors.
The kratom community fears that 7-OH’s bad reputation could drag the entire kratom industry into a regulatory quagmire. But the 7-OH industry has organized against the potential prohibition, claiming 7-OH is kratom, despite only appearing in trace amounts within the leaves of the kratom plant, and that its benefits as an analgesic outweigh its potential harms.
Anti-7-OH directives from the federal government have exacerbated tensions between the two sides.
Last July, US Health and Human Services secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. described the 7-OH industry as “sinister” at a press conference where FDA commissioner Marty Makary called for the DEA to categorize the drug as Schedule I—the most restrictive class of banned substances. Speaking from the Oval Office on May 11, President Donald Trump publicly endorsed “natural 7-OH,” in confusing remarks which appeared to refer to kratom. On top of all that, it appears that both RFK Jr. and Department of Homeland Security secretary Markwayne Mullin—who is also pushing for a 7-OH crackdown—have strong ties to a kratom lobbyist (and convicted criminal) behind a notorious kratom drinks company.
Proponents of 7-OH see the substance and the plant it’s derived from as inexorably linked. In April 2025 testimony to Colorado legislators debating how to regulate kratom and 7-OH, Michele Ross, the chief scientific adviser to the 7-OH advocacy group 7-HOPE Alliance, wrote, “To say 7-OH is not kratom is to say caffeine is not coffee or THC is not cannabis. It simply does not make sense.”
But as opposed to coffee, cannabis, and kratom—which have been consumed for centuries if not thousands of years—7-OH does not have a long history of human use. It’s only been on the market for a few years.
Many of the products that are labeled 7-OH contain little-understood compounds with unknown biological effects in animals or humans, says Chris McCurdy, a leading kratom researcher and director of the University of Florida’s translational drug development core. “So, these products, while represented as ‘clean’ are anything but.”
Meanwhile, a dozen states, from California to Vermont, according to reports, have already moved ahead of federal scheduling with their own 7-OH bans. Seven of those states have also banned kratom, although Rhode Island recently overturned its prohibition.
A decade ago, kratom advocates fought a surprisingly successful campaign against a proposed Drug Enforcement Administration ban that claimed the obscure Southeast Asian plant posed “an imminent hazard to public safety.”
They won bipartisan allies from Bernie Sanders to Rand Paul, and helped create a billion-dollar industry out of kratom, which has pain-relieving effects they said could help fight the opioid epidemic as a far safer, natural alternative to pills.
Now, many of those same pro-kratom activists are calling for a ban on products containing concentrates of one of kratom’s active components: 7-hydroxymitragynine, or 7-OH, an ultra-potent extract with opioid-like effects. And it’s causing major friction amongst consumers, sellers, and advocates of both substances.
“This is a chemically manipulated, full-blown opioid that is now in the marketplace,” claims Mac Haddow, the senior public policy fellow at the American Kratom Association, a kratom industry lobby group. “They masquerade as kratom products.”
The proliferation of 7-OH in gummies, capsules, and shots with brand names like Magic 7OH, 7 O’Heaven, and Pure OHMS across thousands of gas stations and corner stores over the past few years has caused increasing consternation. Consumers of 7-OH have spoken of its excruciating withdrawal symptoms, and there have been reports of polydrug overdoses involving 7-OH and other substances. Some are now entering rehab to overcome their dependency, while others are self-detoxing based on advice from Redditors.
The kratom community fears that 7-OH’s bad reputation could drag the entire kratom industry into a regulatory quagmire. But the 7-OH industry has organized against the potential prohibition, claiming 7-OH is kratom, despite only appearing in trace amounts within the leaves of the kratom plant, and that its benefits as an analgesic outweigh its potential harms.
Anti-7-OH directives from the federal government have exacerbated tensions between the two sides.
Last July, US Health and Human Services secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. described the 7-OH industry as “sinister” at a press conference where FDA commissioner Marty Makary called for the DEA to categorize the drug as Schedule I—the most restrictive class of banned substances. Speaking from the Oval Office on May 11, President Donald Trump publicly endorsed “natural 7-OH,” in confusing remarks which appeared to refer to kratom. On top of all that, it appears that both RFK Jr. and Department of Homeland Security secretary Markwayne Mullin—who is also pushing for a 7-OH crackdown—have strong ties to a kratom lobbyist (and convicted criminal) behind a notorious kratom drinks company.
Proponents of 7-OH see the substance and the plant it’s derived from as inexorably linked. In April 2025 testimony to Colorado legislators debating how to regulate kratom and 7-OH, Michele Ross, the chief scientific adviser to the 7-OH advocacy group 7-HOPE Alliance, wrote, “To say 7-OH is not kratom is to say caffeine is not coffee or THC is not cannabis. It simply does not make sense.”
But as opposed to coffee, cannabis, and kratom—which have been consumed for centuries if not thousands of years—7-OH does not have a long history of human use. It’s only been on the market for a few years.
Many of the products that are labeled 7-OH contain little-understood compounds with unknown biological effects in animals or humans, says Chris McCurdy, a leading kratom researcher and director of the University of Florida’s translational drug development core. “So, these products, while represented as ‘clean’ are anything but.”
Meanwhile, a dozen states, from California to Vermont, according to reports, have already moved ahead of federal scheduling with their own 7-OH bans. Seven of those states have also banned kratom, although Rhode Island recently overturned its prohibition.
A decade ago, kratom advocates fought a surprisingly successful campaign against a proposed Drug Enforcement…
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Jun 14, 2026; Summerlin, Nevada, USA; Athletics pitcher Scott Barlow (58) pitches the ball in the eighth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Las Vegas Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Boz Bloom-Imagn Images The Athletics continue their unusual homestand Monday in their present home after winning four of six games in their future home.
The A’s took two out of three contests from both the Brewers and the Rockies in Las Vegas. Now it is back to West Sacramento, Calif., to open a three-game series against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday.
Overall the week in Las Vegas was positive, but a 23-9 loss to the Colorado Rockies Sunday in which pitchers gave up 24 hits and six home runs was not a great way to leave Nevada.
The Athletics plan to move into a major league stadium in Las Vegas in 2028. Last week’s games were played at Triple-A Las Vegas Ballpark.
The good news for the A’s is they send arguably their best pitcher to the mound to open the Pirates series in J.T. Ginn.
Ginn (4-3, 3.15 ERA) is coming off a win against the Brewers. It was not his best outing. as the right-hander gave up five runs on eight hits in five-plus innings of a 7-5 victory.
It was their first win in Las Vegas and manager Mark Kotsay admitted the pitchers need to get used to the thin-air conditions.
“These conditions to pitch in are tough,” he said. “But he (Ginn) grinded and gave us what we needed.”
Heading into the contest, Ginn had posted a 1.49 ERA in his previous six starts.
The 27-year-old is 9-11 with a 4.23 ERA in 46 career games, including 34 starts.
He has yet to face the Pirates.
The A’s hitters had no problems Sunday as they belted out 15 hits, including two home runs.
Tyler Soderstrom had two hits, including his 12th home run, and has reached base in 21 straight games.
The Pirates have dropped seven of their last nine games, including losing two out of three in Miami over the weekend.
Pittsburgh ace Paul Skenes had 10 strikeouts Sunday, but the offense failed as the team dropped a 4-2 decision to the Miami Marlins.
The Pirates have lost six straight starts by Skenes.
“It hasn’t been one thing, just we haven’t put together a complete game with him out there,” Pittsburgh manager Don Kelly said. “I can’t point to one thing. He has been consistent every time out there.”
The Pirates will turn to right-hander Jared Jones (1-0, 4.73) on Monday. Kelly purposely placed Jones in the rotation between his best starters — Skenes and Mitch Keller.
Skenes and Keller can go late into games so having Jones in the middle gives the Pirates a fresh bullpen if they need it.
“When we look at Jones, he’s not going to be unleashed, where we can just let him roll at seven innings and 100 pitches,” Kelly told Yahoo Sports. “It’s going to be managed as we go. To have him in between Paul and Mitch just made a lot of sense to us, as far as managing innings, having two innings-eaters on either side of him.”
Jones has made three starts this season and has pitched a total of 13 1/3 innings.
“Mitch is a great pitcher, mixes it in-and-out, up-down,” Kelly said. “The changeup has gotten better, and he’s just an innings eater for us that has historically thrown a lot for us. Felt like putting Jones in between those two was a good spot.”
Jones is 7-8 in his career in 25 outings, all starts. He has yet to face the A’s in his career.
–Field Level Media
Jun 14, 2026; Summerlin, Nevada, USA; Athletics pitcher Scott Barlow (58) pitches the ball in the eighth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Las Vegas Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Boz Bloom-Imagn Images The Athletics continue their unusual homestand Monday in their present home after winning four of six games in their future home.
The A’s took two out of three contests from both the Brewers and the Rockies in Las Vegas. Now it is back to West Sacramento, Calif., to open a three-game series against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Monday.
Overall the week in Las Vegas was positive, but a 23-9 loss to the Colorado Rockies Sunday in which pitchers gave up 24 hits and six home runs was not a great way to leave Nevada.
The Athletics plan to move into a major league stadium in Las Vegas in 2028. Last week’s games were played at Triple-A Las Vegas Ballpark.
The good news for the A’s is they send arguably their best pitcher to the mound to open the Pirates series in J.T. Ginn.
Ginn (4-3, 3.15 ERA) is coming off a win against the Brewers. It was not his best outing. as the right-hander gave up five runs on eight hits in five-plus innings of a 7-5 victory.
It was their first win in Las Vegas and manager Mark Kotsay admitted the pitchers need to get used to the thin-air conditions.
“These conditions to pitch in are tough,” he said. “But he (Ginn) grinded and gave us what we needed.”
Heading into the contest, Ginn had posted a 1.49 ERA in his previous six starts.
The 27-year-old is 9-11 with a 4.23 ERA in 46 career games, including 34 starts.
He has yet to face the Pirates.
The A’s hitters had no problems Sunday as they belted out 15 hits, including two home runs.
Tyler Soderstrom had two hits, including his 12th home run, and has reached base in 21 straight games.
The Pirates have dropped seven of their last nine games, including losing two out of three in Miami over the weekend.
Pittsburgh ace Paul Skenes had 10 strikeouts Sunday, but the offense failed as the team dropped a 4-2 decision to the Miami Marlins.
The Pirates have lost six straight starts by Skenes.
“It hasn’t been one thing, just we haven’t put together a complete game with him out there,” Pittsburgh manager Don Kelly said. “I can’t point to one thing. He has been consistent every time out there.”
The Pirates will turn to right-hander Jared Jones (1-0, 4.73) on Monday. Kelly purposely placed Jones in the rotation between his best starters — Skenes and Mitch Keller.
Skenes and Keller can go late into games so having Jones in the middle gives the Pirates a fresh bullpen if they need it.
“When we look at Jones, he’s not going to be unleashed, where we can just let him roll at seven innings and 100 pitches,” Kelly told Yahoo Sports. “It’s going to be managed as we go. To have him in between Paul and Mitch just made a lot of sense to us, as far as managing innings, having two innings-eaters on either side of him.”
Jones has made three starts this season and has pitched a total of 13 1/3 innings.
“Mitch is a great pitcher, mixes it in-and-out, up-down,” Kelly said. “The changeup has gotten better, and he’s just an innings eater for us that has historically thrown a lot for us. Felt like putting Jones in between those two was a good spot.”
Jones is 7-8 in his career in 25 outings, all starts. He has yet to face the A’s in his career.
–Field Level Media
Jun 14, 2026; Summerlin, Nevada, USA; Athletics pitcher Scott Barlow (58) pitches the ball in…
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