Complete Hair Follicle Cleansing Programs
With our Complete body cleanse solutions we have combined our strongest shampoo kits with one of our Permanent programs to cleanse your system forever. First you must complete a 4-6 day program so your urine and blood will be toxin free.
UNLIKE OTHER TOXIN REMOVING SHAMPOOS, OURS IS A UNIQUE FORMULA, BLENDING HERBS AND OILS TO CREATE ITS OWN HEAT AND REMOVE UNWANTED TOXINS FROM THE NERVE ENDINGS OF EACH HAIR FOLLICLE PORE. For More Info Click Here
|
|
4 oz Shampoo Removes all toxins.Ideal for thin hair-light users. |
$59.50 |
|
|
|
8oz Shampoo Good for thick hair. Removes all Toxins. |
$79.00
|
|
|
|
2oz Enhancer - Use before shampoo to help loosen the hair shaft. Improves success! |
$49.95 |
|
|
|
2oz Hair Conditioner Leave in conditioner No Flaking. Cleans while you wait. |
$49.95 |
|
|
|
8oz Hair Mud Treatment program Removes all Toxins. |
$106.95 |
|
|
|
THC Only Hair Follicle Treatment Program Removes all THC only! |
$104.95
|
|
|
|
All Toxin Removal-Hair Follicle Treatment Program
Removes all toxins retained in the hair follicle. |
$139.95
|
|
|
|
Detoxifying Hair Gel
Works in 10 Min. Lasts for 4 hours. Removes all Toxins. |
$59.95 |
|
| More |
Permanent Body Cleansers
Try One of our Permanent Cleansing Programs To be Toxin Free!!! |
$169.95
And UP
|
|
Hair Drug Tests Catch More Blacks than
Whites
WASHINGTON-
January 19, 1998
Hair
tests for "drugs" have become more popular because they
are supposedly harder to beat than urine tests and can determine
use months prior to the test and are thus even less relevant to
on the job performance. In addition, coarse black hair holds "drug"
residues longer than thin blond hair. This has the added advantage
of increasing the power of the state over minorities.
"
It's a major problem" warned J. Michael Walsh, executive director
of the President's Drug Advisory Council under Presidents Reagan
and Bush and now a consultant to the urinalysis industry."
From the perspective of those like Walsh, whose focus is on middle
class marijuana use this indeed can be a problem. Also they show
hard drug use that would be missed by urine tests. However, they
do not detect any use in the last week.
About
20 million Americans undergo drug tests each year, according to
the Institute for a Drug-Free Workplace, a Washington-based prohibitionist
lobby. The majority are job applicants without rights of appeal.
About
80 percent of companies that test for drugs rely solely on urine,
and only 2 percent use hair.
One reason is legality. Urine tests have universal acceptance in
courts, while skepticism about the science behind hair tests persists.
The other reason is politics. Employers, state regulators and courts
want approval from federal public-health experts before they go
ahead with hair testing. And the regulators remain skeptical. To
date, "hair analysis for the presence of drugs is unproven,
unsupported by scientific literature or controlled trials,"
Food and Drug Administration spokes-woman Sharon Snider said.
Hair
tests are becoming more popular. That's partly because the tests
turn up more drug users than urinalysis and counter some of urine
testing's shortcomings. Also important are sustained lobbying and
marketing efforts by Psychemedics Corp. of Cambridge, Mass, which
dominates the hair-testing market.
A
decade ago, Psychemedics' biggest customers were Nevada casinos.
Today, they include Anheuser-Busch, the Federal Reserve System and
General Motors. Florida entrepreneur H. Wayne Huizenga, founder
of Blockbuster Entertainment, gets much of the credit. He led a
group of investors that bought Psychemedics out of debt in 1989.
With Blockbuster as a mainstay customer, the firm grew to more than
750 clients, according to its 1996 Securities and Exchange Commission
filings. (Huizenga sold Blockbuster, he is now the nation's largest
used car salesman.)
In
that year, Florida legislators, pushed by Huizenga's lobbyists,
(He owns the Dolphins.) approved hair testing in the state. The
law grandfathered Psychemedics' patented hair-testing process and
set high hurdles for future competitors. By the end of 1997, according
to company general counsel William Thistle, Psychemedics had 1,000
clients. Thistle and other Psychemedics executives insist patented
methods are unbiased and produce no "false positives"
from innocent drug exposure. If hair testing were to supplant urine
testing for drugs, Thistle ventured in an interview, from three
to 10 times more illicit drug users would be caught. The result
could be a new epoch in the nation's drug-war history: "Drug
users wouldn't be employed," Thistle said flatly, "or
they'd be in rehabilitation programs."
"Hair
testing may turn out to have a complementary role in workplace testing,"
said Robert Stevenson, deputy director of the Workplace Programs
Division of the federal Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. "But
we have yet to resolve remaining questions about its fairness and
the ability to interpret results consistently."
Using
scheduled urine tests, the New York City Police Department caught
one drug abuser in seven year, according to a published report.
In the first 18 months of random hair test by Psychemedics, more
than 30 NYPD employees tested positive. In another comparison, involving
774 job applicants to Steelcase Corp., a Michigan furniture maker,
urinalysis tests were 2.7 percent positive. Psychemedics hair tests
on the same applicants were 18 percent positive. But hair testing
also has its flaws. It can't catch recent drug use the way urine
tests can, because traces of ingested drugs take about five to seven
days to show up in hair. On the other hand, hair tests can detect
drug use within 90-day period.
In
the real world, one would hope that African American leaders would
object to these tests on obvious grounds, but on the other hand,
they would take some of the focus off of marijuana. (There is one
"easy" way to beat these tests, but it may itch a little
and be a little drafty in the winter.) (Not
If You Use Our Shampoos Though!!)
|