Spaceman Spiff
Subscriber
Depends on the type of insulin I believe. Regular insulin is fineSame, even the pharmacy at the grocery store
Walk in and buy, no questions asked
Again this guy is speaking out of his ass.
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Depends on the type of insulin I believe. Regular insulin is fineSame, even the pharmacy at the grocery store
Walk in and buy, no questions asked
I thought this was all the rage with the bros a while back?
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Over-the-Counter Insulin: What to Know Before You Buy
Nonprescription insulin can be sold by a pharmacist in select drugstores, but it’s best to use it under a doctor's care. Learn more about the pros and cons.www.everydayhealth.com
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VERIFY: Yes, Walmart Does Sell $25 Insulin Without Prescription Or Insurance
You ask; we VERIFY. Does Walmart sell inexpensive insulin without a prescription or insurance?www.wfmynews2.com
Depends on the type of insulin I believe. Regular insulin is fine
Again this guy is speaking out of his ass.
Talking out of your ass.LOL, you stalk how many of my posts to find a single error? I can acknowledge being mistaken, can you?
You were on this thread telling people to ignore my heads up on Hospira imminently becoming more restrictive. How'd that work out for anyone who listened to your advice?
that's good to know, thanks. Some people were making it sound like you can't trust Amazon bac water. But we've been using it for years and we're alive. lolLots of people use Amazon BAC water
It's just that we got a little spoiled with cheap Hospira for a while; once that's gone it's back to homemade (for me)
If you've ever reconstituted a peptide you have the skills to make BAC water at home and people have been doing this since forever
I mentioned this in another thread but "pure" water like this is legit dangerous stuff. Injected or even ingested (yes, you best believe there's idiots out there who'd try to drink this) it can wreck havoc. The water that you usually drink and hold in your body is full of minerals and other particles, and when water without those things goes in your body, it "leeches" itself in at the cellular level and causes cells to bust. Nasty stuffWhy would the government of Pfizer care about this being distributed to folks without a prescription?
that's good to know, thanks. Some people were making it sound like you can't trust Amazon bac water. But we've been using it for years and we're alive. lol
I'm fine with that last part (decades of people doing it with no problems) and even though some bubble boys use that same argument to justify some of their personal habits surrounding gear:
They will also say "just because you didn't lose an ass cheek doesn't mean it's safe" or if you get achy joints in 20 years or heart disease in 30 years it is because you used Amazon BAC water
They're practically making a joke of harm reduction
You have yet to test jack shit you have ever bought. or atleast post it.You don't have any issue with injecting cloudy peptides, claim filtering compounds made in illicit labs doesn't reduce risk, and homemade "reconstitution solution" sold on Amazon is equivalent to a product made by Pfizer.
There's no question that avoiding injecting contaminants of any kind reduces risk. A risk that grows with every injection.
We don't need a study or be able to clearly link a specific harm to know that's true.
It's common sense that not injecting glass, butyl rubber, bacteria, aggregated proteins or anything else that's unintended is safer than needlessly putting that garbage into our bodies and blindly trust that the cumulative result after thousands of injections won't damage health.
Is it really unsafe injecting aggregated proteins? And I’m not talking about in a lab study or some AI generated nonsense. Where is the irrefutable evidence that someone injecting aggregated proteins via a peptide has suffered fatal consequences? Nobody doubts injecting glass or rubber is dangerous. But not all bacteria is dangerous and I have no doubt many of us have injected peptides that contained bacteria.You don't have any issue with injecting cloudy peptides, claim filtering compounds made in illicit labs doesn't reduce risk, and homemade "reconstitution solution" sold on Amazon is equivalent to a product made by Pfizer.
There's no question that avoiding injecting contaminants of any kind reduces risk. A risk that grows with every injection.
We don't need a study or be able to clearly link a specific harm to know that's true.
It's common sense that not injecting glass, butyl rubber, bacteria, aggregated proteins or anything else that's unintended is safer than needlessly putting that garbage into our bodies and blindly trust that the cumulative result after thousands of injections won't damage health.
What I do know is in order for you to be taken serious you must frighten naive members by exaggerating risks that so far no one has succumbed to.
talk about "capatilizing" on the situation, damn it $269 per case now,,
I was looking at a old email from them. I think I paid $86 shipped for a case. That's why you don't blow the spot up when you have a good one. It was good while it lasted.
I grabbed 4 cases when the price was between $100-125. They will last me a while. I doubt we will ever see low prices on Hospira again in the US.I was looking at an old email from them. I think I paid $86 shipped for a case. That's why you don't blow the spot up when you have a good one. It was good while it lasted.
