2C-E

This Week in Psychedelics - 11.24.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Study Finds Alcohol 10 Times More Deadly Than Cannabis on the Road (Leafly)
  • Michigan: Legalization Coalition Turns in 360,000 Signatures to Place Issue on 2018 Ballot (NORML)
  • California Weed Club Caught Pretending to Be a Church (TIME)
  • Study: Medical Cannabis Registrants More Likely To Cease Using Opioids Compared To Non-Participants (NORML)
  • California releases cannabis regulations, with no limit on farm size (Sonoma Index-Tribune)
  • Good News: Congo Is Ditching Conflict Metals For Cannabis (High Times)
  • Pennsylvania Couple Sues Drug Warriors Who Thought Hibiscus Was Marijuana (Reason)
  • Is The TSA More Chill About Weed Than San Francisco? (Reason)
  • Caffeine Is More Dangerous Than Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • Pennsylvania Town Used Confidential Informant and Undercover Cops to Arrest a Man For Selling Bongs (Reason)
  • Bush-Era Attorney General Cautions Against Cannabis Crackdown (Leafly)
  • Cannabis Crunch – Ex-Cops Selling Weed, Dubious Marijuana 'Overdose' And Don't Trust Sessions (Psychedelic Times)
  • Don't Blame Wildfires for Rising California Cannabis Prices (Leafly)
  • Last stop for cannabis advertising on Muni buses, trains, stations and stops (SFGate)
  • Can The Standard Hotel Really Open a Cannabis Shop in Its Lobby? (Leafly)
  • Does medical marijuana really work? The truth behind the buzz. (HuffPost)
  • Massachusetts Towns Reject Cannabis Bans, Bucking Early Trend (Leafly)
  • RightSciences raises cash to develop cannabis and hemp-based medicinal patches (GeekWire)
  • Across State Lines: One Medical Cannabis Refugee's Journey to Colorado and Back (Leafly)
  • Talk About Marijuana At Thanksgiving This Year (NORML)
  • How One Painting Class Is Bringing Art, Cannabis, and People Together (Leafly)
  • Oakland reviewing 255 permit applications to cultivate, deliver cannabis (San Francisco Chronicle)
  • Medical cannabis clinic, possible pot shop coming to Old Strathcona (Edmonton Journal)
  • Italian toddler hospitalized after mistaking cannabis for chocolate (The Local)

LSD

  • Observations from 4000 LSD Sessions: A Dialogue with Stanislav Grof (Reality Sandwich)
  • LSD is making a comeback, but not in the way you'd expect (My Fox Boston)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • The California Psilocybin Legalization Initiative Looks to put Magic Mushrooms on the Ballot (The Weed Blog)
  • Johns Hopkins studying effects of psilocybin on brains of long-term meditators (Psymposia)
  • Posttreatment Brain Effects of Psilocybin in Patients With Treatment-Resistant Depression (Psychiatry Advisor)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Psychedelics and Psychotherapy: Is There a Role for MDMA in the Treatment of PTSD? (Medical News Bulletin)
  • 'A Void No One Can Fill': Mum's heartbreaking tribute to daughter, 18, who died after 'taking MDMA at Newcastle nightclub' (The Sun)
  • 3 charged after cat allegedly abused and drugged with MDMA, with videos sent to family (CBC News)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Criminalization Makes It Harder to Study Ayahuasca, Scientists Say (VICE)
  • How Tripping on Ayahuasca Could Help People with Eating Disorders (Broadly)
  • What is DMT and why you should care. (Psychedelics Daily)
  • NM veterans vouch for ayahuasca therapy (Albuquerque Journal)
  • Wook Describes His Wild Method of Transporting DMT Crosscountry (Your EDM)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

Dissociatives

  • Your Healthy Family: Ketamine being used to treat PTSD and severe depression (KOAA)
  • The Effect of a Single Dose of Intravenous Ketamine on Suicidal Ideation: A Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis (The American Journal of Psychiatry)
  • OKC grandmother arrested after child swallows PCP (KSWO)
  • Police: Driver arrested after crashing into vehicle while on PCP (The Herald-News)

Opiates/Opioids

Absinthe

Kratom

  • Can Kratom Help With Withdrawal From Methadone? (Kratom Guides)
  • Using Kratom For Suboxone Withdrawal (Kratom Guides)
  • Seeking Alternative Addiction Treatment, Mainers Experiment With Kratom (Maine Public)
  • FDA finally rules on kratom: It's a potential killer (New York Post)
  • Where FDA Sees Deadly Drug, South Florida Advocates See Natural Alternative To Prescription Drugs (WUSF)
  • Denver bans sale of Kratom, drug often used as painkiller (9NEWS)
  • Mom of man killed by kratom calls for research, not ban (WTSP)

Kava

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Hunting for the Most Potent Psychedelic Toad Venom on Earth (VICE)
  • Psychedelic Treatments for Cluster Headaches (Psychedelic Times)
  • What The Women's Rights Movement Shares With The Drug War (High Times)
  • Could Oregon Be the First State to Legalize Psychedelic Therapy? (Psymposia)
  • Psychedelic society launches in Glasgow to try to change the law on mind-altering drugs (The Herald Scotland)
  • Mainstreaming psychedelics. Are we there yet? (Rick Strassman MD)
  • Hallucination machine lets you blow your mind without taking psychedelic drugs (RT)
  • LAPD Officer Gaxiola Caught Allegedly Planting Cocaine on Suspect by Own Body Cam Footage (ATTN:)
  • Mind menders: how psychedelic drugs rebuild broken brains (New Scientist)
  • WATCH: Fox News host wants you to have a psychedelic experience before you die (Raw Story)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

This Year in Psychedelics - 2015

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy New Year's Eve! 2015 has been yet another interesting year to follow psychedelic news—both the factual representations and wildly inaccurate media "reports" have brought a lot to the table. This article will present the major themes and trends that were found in the latter half of the year, beginning on the June 5th, which corresponds with this year's first This Week in Psychedelics article.

First, I want to provide a bit of background on what it took to get here. I have been an avid Reality Sandwich reader since 2007, and I looked forward to each new edition of Neşe Devenot's This Week in Psychedelics column. Every week, she posted links to news articles from the mass media that referenced psychedelics and other similar psychoactive substances.

Each week's collection of links attempted to be as unbiased as possible, demonstrating how various forms of mass media represent psychedelic culture and psychoactive substance use. This always included articles that shed psychedelics in a positive light as well as articles that demonized their use (including many articles that are factually incorrect and/or misguided representations of psychedelics).

Devenot gave up "This Week in Psychedelics" more than two years ago to pursue what has proved to be an extremely successful career in academia. This year I was able to successfully bring the column back—first on Think Wilder, and then on Reality Sandwich as well. The following is my analysis of this year's coverage of psychedelics and similar psychoactive substances.

Cannabis

Cannabis was in the news a lot this year, with articles being published on topics including drug policies, newly-discovered medical applications, cannabis scientific research, the fledging cannabis industry, a slew of hilarious poorly-executed drug delivery attempts, and more.

To begin, there were pro-cannabis drug policy movements at the state level across the United States of America, as well as on the international stage in countries like Italy, Australia, Mexico, Iran, and Colombia. Canada legalized cannabis oils and edibles, and its new Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has proudly announced plans to completely legalize the plant.

Stories about cannabis oils and their affinity for helping young children with a variety of needs were aplenty. The medical uses for cannabis expanded even further, with focuses on cannabis benefits for ailments such as epilepsycolon and kidney cancers, low sex drives, broken bones, social anxieties, celiac disease, insomnia, schizophreniaAttention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Cannabis was also found to help with weight losspain management, and drug addiction treatment. Cannabis research included studies on cannabis-involved driving and an upcoming study that will look into cannabis for assisting military veterans that have PTSD.

In the area of cannabis-related crime, London police were astonished to find a cannabis "forest" as big as a soccer field. Cannabis dealers missed the mark at least three times this year, including the time that $10,000 of cannabis fell out of the sky onto a family's home, when 50 pounds of pot were accidentally mailed to the incorrect address, and when a man found cannabis stashed in an Arizona Iced Tea can that he purchased at Walmart. The FBI released data showing that there is a cannabis-related arrest every 45 seconds in the U.S.

Candidates involved with the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election have had to confront the cannabis issue several times, and this will most likely continue into next year as the election cycle continues. The cannabis industry was covered thoroughly, with topics including how women are finding success in the industry, cannabis-themed vacation resorts, and tons of cannabis exposCannabis churches began popping up to encourage and celebrate the spiritual use of (and argue for the religious right to use) cannabis. Hemp began to once again make its way as a popular building materialRussia threatened to block Wikipedia over a specific cannabis article. And finally, Australia's pitiful anti-cannabis "stoner sloth" campaign backfired terribly and was ridiculed on social media.

LSD

The main story about LSD throughout the year involved the concept of microdosing, which is not exclusive to LSD but usually involves one of the classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin mushrooms, and mescaline-containing cacti). The media seemingly could not get enough of headlines comparing tiny doses of LSD to cups of coffee, and the topic was covered in a generally-favorable manner.

A man died after being left hogtied for an hour by police following a Widespread Panic show, and there have been conflicting evidence found by various autopsies performed as to whether he died from LSD toxicity (which would literally be the first occurrence of a lethal LSD dose) or from rough treatment by the police officers. In fact, LSD was blamed for several fatal "overdoses" this year, although those deaths would likely be more accurately attributed to psychoactive research chemicals like 25i-NBOMe.

Scientific studies showed that LSD can enhance the emotional response to music. Other studies looking at  the potential efficacy of LSD that are currently ongoing focus on the treatment of depression, cluster headaches, and smoking cessation.

This year also birthed the creation and performance of LSD: The Opera, and a fascinating history of the connection between the CIA and LSD.

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

Compared to cannabis and LSD, there wasn't as much media coverage of psilocybin mushrooms (or "magic mushrooms" in general) this year, but two highlights include Russia banning Reddit over a single 'shroom thread and a lot of articles detailing the connection between amanita muscaria mushrooms and the origins of Christmas, including one I published last week.

Current research studies are looking into the application of psilocybin to treat depression, general anxieties, cluster headaches, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), smoking cessation, end-of-life anxiety in terminal cancer patients, schizophrenia, and the effect of psilocybin on longterm meditators.

MDMA/Ecstasy

MDMA and ecstasy experienced a bit of both sides this year, with a lot of negative media coverage focused on things like overdoses and deaths as well as positive reports concerning the findings of ongoing MDMA scientific research studies.

There were many articles covering MDMA-related overdoses and deaths, although it is not certain that MDMA was the actual substance involved in every one of these articles. The media tends to over-report deaths that might possibly be related to MDMA, which are actually few and far between, while ignoring the deaths and other issues caused by alcohol. Due to these incidents, there were many efforts made by authorities to ban raves entirely, which is a bit odd because that seems a bit like throwing the baby out with the bath water. There were also warning about ecstasy tablets being "too pure", which sounds confusing at first but ultimately makes sense within the full context. Although drug users would most likely appreciate receiving extremely-pure drugs, if they are accustomed to taking a large dose because all they have been acquiring in the past is not actually the drug they thought it to be, then when they receive the real thing and take the same dose, it can be too large and cause several issues. As happens every year, parents were warned in October that their children may be given ecstasy tablets disguised as candy, an assertion that doesn't make any sense, as drug dealers sell drugs to make profit, not to give away for free to children.

Regarding MDMA-related scientific studies, the DEA approved a study that will look at treating anxiety with MDMA-assisted psychotherapy, and ongoing studies include MDMA's potential role in helping people on the autism spectrum and sufferers of PTSD. There was definitely more negative coverage of MDMA than positive coverage, but the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) is well on its way to legitimizing MDMA in the eyes of the FDA due to its it's decades-long dedication to psychedelic research, and is still on target to legalize MDMA to be used for psychotherapeutic use by 2021.

Ayahuasca/DMT

A Hebrew professor set forth an argument that Moses was under the influence of DMT when he saw the "burning bush". There have been claims of a legal ayahuasca church in the U.S., but the church's actual legal standing has been called into question.

Sadly, as has been the case for the past few years, ayahuasca was involved in the death of at least two people this year. One man died in Peru as a result of a tobacco purge ceremony, but ayahuasca was mentioned in the story because he was also in Peru to experience the medicine. And another man was stabbed to death by a fellow ayahuasca ceremony participant in a rare display of ayahuasca-related violence.

Ongoing scientific studies regarding ayahuasca include the treatment of depression, anxiety, and PTSD. A study also found that ayahuasca drinkers regularly have improved mental health.

Iboga/Ibogaine

Iboga and ibogaine were mainly presented as detox treatments for opiate and methamphetamine addictions, which has been found to be extremely successful for many. There was also a powerful account of how iboga helped a schizophrenic drug addict reclaim his life.

Salvia Divinorum

Aside from being announced as another potential plant useful for treating substance abuse and addictions, salvia divinorum didn't show up much in the media at all this year.

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

There was quite a bit of media coverage earlier in the year a scourge of the synthetic cannabinoid blend called "spice" (also known as "K2") in the northeast, but that story has mostly died off as of late. There has been a lot of negative coverage of the compound 25i-NBOMe (also known as "N-Bomb") and there was an interview with the man who originally synthesized it. "Legal highs" have been making their way into jails and prisons by being soaked into letters and pages of books. And a homeopathy conference ended terribly after attendees erupted in panic after being dosed with 2C-E.

Dissociatives

Protesters in the United Kingdom staged a demonstration against the Psychoactive Substances bill by inhaling nitrous oxide in front of the Parliament building. Basically every PCP story was framed in a negative light and played up an illegal act performed by someone high on the substance.

Ketamine had a lot of favorable coverage due to studies showing that it is helpful in treating depression. And due to the increased media coverage, governments around the world began considering placing ketamine under a stricter class of illegal drugs, which has worried veterinarians, pharmacists and medical health professionals because that may prevent them from being able to access the drug, even for legitimate medical reasons. Finally, a lot of time was spent arguing about whether or not a man fed ketamine to a seagull, even though he denied having done so.

Opiates/Opioids

Heroin use is in America is way up and so are overdoses—in fact, heroin usage has been widely described as an “epidemic”. Since it is mainly affecting white and middle class folks, this year's victims of heroin addiction have been mostly pitied, rather than lambasted as in years past. Still, the heroin issue has thrust the horrors of the drug war into even more people's faces, and it may prove to have a positive effect on drug policies overall.

Fentanyl found in heroin has led to an increase in overdoses, and research is showing that legal prescription drugs are leading people to become addicted to heroin and in many cases, die from overdose. The overdose drug naloxone has been in the media spotlight—information about it has spread fairly rapidly, and the FDA approved a nasal spray version for easier application.

Kratom/Kava/Khat

There has been a series of back-and-forth debates on the issues of safety and efficacy with regard to these plants, and kava in particular has been focused on recently with research into the effects of driving under the influence of the plant. Other than those topics the majority of coverage on these plants has been related to seizures by law enforcement.

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

Psychedelics have made their way into mainstream entertainment, being talked discussed in songs written by musicians like A$AP Rocky, Kendrick Lamar, and Miley Cyrus. Many celebrities and other well-known people came out of the psychedelic closet, admitting to past usage of psychedelics. These include John Cusack, musician Brian Wilson, Lindsay Lohan, the late neurologist and author Oliver Sacks, Olympic gold medalist Mo Farah, radio personality Robin Quivers, CNN reporter Lisa Ling, musician Vanessa Carlton, former Apple employee Daniel Kottke, and Star Wars animator Phil Tippet. Many others have come out publicly against the drug war, including a strong assertion from David Nutt about why banning psychedelics has been the greatest censorship of medicine in human history.

Ross Ulbricht, the alleged founder of the Silk Road, was convicted and received two life sentences plus an additional 40 years. I encourage everyone to check out the website Free Ross Ulbricht, which has plenty of information about how his trial was mishandled and how he may have even been framed by the U.S. government. Even though the Silk Road is no longer in operation, purchasing illegal substances on the dark web continues to be in fashion and shows no sign of slowing down.

The DEA had an incredibly rough year in 2015. Current DEA Chief Chuck Rosenberg claimed that cannabis is "probably" not as bad as heroin and later corrected himself by admitting that it in fact is definitely not as bad as heroin. Later, he called medical marijuana a "joke", leading medical marijuana patients around the country to officially call for his resignation. DEA agents at JFK airport stole $44,000 from a legitimate nail salon owner who hadn't committed any crimes whatsoever. The two primary agents involved with the Silk Road investigation have been accused of stealing more than $700,000 in Bitcoin from the dark web site. Amtrak passengers have been routinely harassed by DEA agents. The DEA was sued by Human Rights Watch and Electronic Frontier Foundation over the illegal bulk collection of America’s telephone records and lost the case. The U.S. Senate voted to force the DEA to butt out of medical marijuana states. The DEA spent undisclosed millions of dollars the past ten years on cell phone tracking and has refused to release the acquisition documents. Agents were caught soliciting Colombian prostitutes that were supplied by the drug cartels that they are supposedly fighting. And finally, the daughter of a DEA head was busted for selling illegal drugs. So yeah, how long are we going to keep these bozos around, exactly?

Harm reduction has made headlines this year, with an emphasis on the need for drug users to test their substances before consuming them. NASA released a bunch of cool psychedelic images and videos from space. Google took it one step further and developed its "Deep Dream" code, which mimics the visual perception of a machine and resulted in some mind-blowing psychedelic videos. Oddly enough, the sale of Janis Joplin's "psychedelic Porsche" showed up in the news time and time again.  Buddhism and psychedelics showed up quite a bit. It seemed to me that there was a moment in the year where there was almost nothing but positive articles about psychedelics, mostly in regard to the current state and findings of psychedelic research studies. The New Yorker published a fantastic interview with Earth and Fire, the creators of the drug education website Erowid. Perhaps most strikingly, Richard Branson leaked the news that the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) was expected to publish documents advising for the reversal of the drug war, and then it never did, allegedly because it received pressure from a country heavily involved in the drug war.

All in all, it has been quite a year! I am greatly looking forward to bringing you more news related to psychedelics and psychoactive substances in 2016. I hope that you will join me. Until next time, keep thinking wilder!

This Week in Psychedelics - 9.18.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • It's In The Air: Scientists Measure THC in The Atmosphere (High Times)
  • Bernie Sanders: 'Not Acceptable' To Jail Young Pot Smokers And Let Big Bank CEOs Walk (The Huffington Post)
  • Why is Cannabis Not Already on the Shelves for Treating Arthritis? (High Times)
  • Who needs weed when we've got THC-producing yeast? (Engadget)
  • Cannabis prescriptions are eligible medical expense, CRA confirms (CBC News)
  • Defendant cites membership in First Church of Cannabis for pot use (Minneapolis Star Tribune)
  • Cannabis Drug Shows Promise In Treating Schizophrenia (Medical Daily)
  • A UFC Fighter Was Just Suspended on Dubious Marijuana Charges (ATTN:)
  • Ronda Rousey Takes Stand Against Drug Testing For Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • 11 Benefits of Marijuana That Make it Medicine For Humans Who Are Not "Sick" (High Existence)
  • Colorado has Had Record Lows in Traffic Fatalities Since Marijuana was Legalized (ATTN:)
  • Cannabis for kids seminar held for parents of kids with autism, epilepsy (The Vancouver Sun)
  • California Marijuana Legalization 2015: New Medical Marijuana Law Rankles Top Cannabis Industry Investor (International Business Times)
  • Walla Walla Cannabis Co. ready to watch grass grow (Walla Walla Union-Bulletin)
  • Colorado generates more tax revenue from pot than alcohol, marijuana proponents say (Mass Live)
  • The Biochemist Who Cured His Cancer With Cannabis Oil (Reset.me)
  • Medical cannabis advocates in Iowa take cause to presidential race (KCRG)
  • This Incubator Is Helping Cannabis Businesses Blaze a Trail Forward in a Budding Industry (Entrepreneur)
  • B.C. parents still hope to treat ill baby with cannabis oil (CTV News)
  • Melissa Etheridge: Middle-aged women are leading the marijuana revolution (Fortune)
  • Court Says Misleading Description of Ohio's Marijuana Initiative Must Be Corrected (Reason)
  • Is Cannabis Tourism a Cause for Concern (The Huffington Post)
  • Supposedly Neutral Federal Report Stacks the Deck Against Marijuana Legalization (Reason)
  • Cannabis use in consumer products banned (The Philippine Star)
  • Study: German youths increasingly consuming cannabis (Deutsche Welle)
  • Cannabis use may affect diabetes risk in the middle-aged (National Health Service Choices)

LSD

  • Toxicology report refutes police claims that hogtied suspect's death was from LSD (The Daily Dot)
  • This 'peacenik deadhead' will die behind bars — unless Obama steps in to save him (SFGate)
  • Trials find that LSD could cure alcoholics (West - Welfare Society Territory)
  • See Susan Sarandon remember LSD pioneer Timothy Leary at Burning Man (Entertainment Weekly)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Watch: Psilocybin Made Me Grateful To Be Alive (Reset.me)
  • Toronto event seeks to reduce stigma around magic mushrooms (Metro News)
  • Are medical shrooms on the way? Activists hail comeback of psychedelic drugs (Toronto Star)
  • Magic mushrooms for mental health? Shaky basis for story's proposed "paradigm shift" (Health News Review)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Meet the Iraq War Veteran Who Says Ecstasy-Assisted Psychotherapy Saved His Life (Mic)
  • From Club To Clinic: How MDMA Could Help Some Cope With Trauma (National Public Radio)
  • On a high: why Britain is back on ecstasy (The Guardian)
  • This Is England '90: Thomas Turgoose recalls the first time he was offered MDMA (Metro)
  • MDMA probably didn't put this Glasgow teenager into a coma (The Daily Dot)
  • Family of Scottish teen who suffered brain damage after taking ecstasy posts video of daughter (Fox News)
  • Teen Overdoses On 'Molly' Capsules (Blackburn News)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Integration: How To Get The Most Benefit From Your Ayahuasca Experience (Reset.me)
  • One Hundred Academics for Ayahuasca Dignity in Colombia (Africa is a Country)
  • A Scientist's Journey To The Soul: How Ayahuasca Opened The Door To My Heart (Reset.me)
  • Robin Quivers Takes Ayahuasca — Which Howard Stern Thinks Is Crazy (2paragraphs)

Peyote/Mescaline

  • Native American Church members fight harassment by authorities (Boing Boing)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Mystery surrounds hallucinatory chaos at German homeopathy conference (The Guardian)
  • 60 Minutes investigation into synthetic drug trade in China (News.com.au)
  • I used K2 to stay out of jail (New York Daily News)
  • Europe's Scary, Legal Drug Boom (Yahoo! News)
  • Australia: Father travels to China to expose his dead son's drug suppliers in TV show (Yahoo! News)
  • Huge Synthetic Marijuana Bust Highlights Growing Threat (Time)

Dissociatives

Opiates/Opioids

  • China's drug habit fuels return of the Golden Triangle (BBC News)
  • Obama Administration Makes Big Announcement Addressing Heroin Epidemic (The Huffington Post)
  • Heroin epidemic puts pressure on schools to get antidote (The Washington Times)
  • Bromley woman buys 'cookie jar' finds out it was probably for opium (Soo Today)
  • Opium crops the right medicine for SA economy (In Daily)
  • Naloxone-Equipped Kits Prevented Fentanyl Overdoses: Alberta Health Services (The Huffington Post)
  • Naloxone Technologies Offer Options for Reducing Opioid Overdoses (Monthly Prescribing Reference)
  • Youth heroin crisis prompts call for schools to keep antidote on hand (The Guardian)
  • Building awareness of heroin addiction, Run for Recovery draws nearly 500 participants (Watertown Daily Times)
  • Price Soars For Key Weapon Against Heroin Overdoses (KTOO)
  • Man jailed by Dubai court for bringing opium poppies into UAE (The National)
  • Heroin bill may give boost to providers treating substance abuse (Modern Medicine Network)

Absinthe

  • Racy cabaret show Absinthe mixes circus, comedy, burlesque and vaudeville (ABC News)

Kratom

Kava

Khat

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Evidence Builds for Medicinal Use of Psychedelic Drugs (Brain Decoder)
  • Psychedelics like LSD, Ayahuasca Ease Anxiety, PTSD — But Don't Self-Medicate (The Inquisitr)
  • These Are the Two Forgotten Architects of Silk Road (Vice: Motherboard)
  • Burning Man Ends, and an Event for Law Enforcement Begins (The New York Times)
  • Operation Naked King: U.S. Secretly Targeted Bolivia's Evo Morales In Drug Sting (The Huffington Post)
  • Interpol Built Its Own Dark Net Drug Marketplace With Cops Posing As Dealers (International Business Times)
  • Bill Bennett: 'Bring Back the War on Drugs' (Reason)
  • Using Psychedelics Shouldn't Be a Crime (Drug Policy Alliance)
  • Yeah, DEA Agents Are Stalking You At Raves (Los Angeles Weekly)
  • I Walked Around a Music Festival Asking to Test People's Drugs (Vice News)
  • Do Adults Have a Privacy Right to Use Drugs? Brazil's Supreme Court Decides (The Intercept)
  • A Passion For Powerful Plants And People (Reset.me)
  • Psychedelic drug reform is not only about policy change — It's a social movement too (Psychedelic Press UK)
  • Janis Joplin's psychedelic Porsche to hit the auction block (Reuters)
  • Bridget Riley review — pounding psychedelic art that will make you see the world differently (The Guardian)
  • The psychedelic world of Indian truck art (The Keene Sentinel)
  • Psychedelic Drugs Could Be Used As Anxiety Cure (News Everyday)
  • Horizons Conference Celebrates 'Visionary Substances' (The New School News)
  • Psychedelic drugs may help in treating mental disorders (The Tribune Register)
  • Psychedelic baby! Perth Fashion Festival brings back the swinging Sixties with technicolour prints and Go-go boots... but would anyone ACTUALLY wear them? (Daily Mail)
  • Psychedelic science is making a comeback (The Week)
  • Psychedelic Drug Research Re-Emerges (dailyRx News)
  • Psychedelics Could Trigger A 'Paradigm Shift' In Mental Health Care (The Huffington Post)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

This Week in Psychedelics - 9.11.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Here's Why We Hear So Many False Claims About Cannabis (Independent Scientific Committee On Drugs)
  • Study: Young People Are Smoking Less Tobacco, More Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • I Went to a Cannabis Salon to Taste Farm-to-Table Weed (Munchies)
  • Israel Could Grow Into A Global Cannabis Startup Superpower (TechCrunch)
  • We Have No Idea What Kind Of Cannabis We're Buying (Discovery News)
  • How Marijuana Affects Your Workout (ATTN:)
  • Parliament to debate cannabis legalization next month (The Independent)
  • Marijuana Will Be Tax-Free for a Day in Colorado (Time)
  • Vaping: The latest scourge in drug abuse (CNN)
  • Deer Devour Hemp Crops At Southern Oregon Farm (The Associated Press)
  • Southwest Cannabis Conference Coming to Phoenix Next Month (Phoenix New Times)
  • Proponents want Pa. to legalize medical cannabis, farmed hemp (The Standard Speaker)
  • High School Kids Use E-Cigarettes to Smoke Cannabis: Study (NBC)
  • Cannabis farms in Reading drop by half in the last year (Get Reading)
  • Middle School And High School Students Use E-Cigarettes To Vaporize Cannabis: Study (Medical Daily)
  • Cannabis compliance: Why good books, solid security and great tech are key (Upstart)
  • N. Texas cafe will sell cannabis drinks and snacks (Chron)
  • Could Cannabis Be Decriminalized in the UK? (Vice News)
  • Twisted Sister Leads a Yoga and Cannabis Retreat (Westword)

LSD

  • Oliver Sacks Used LSD Legally. Is the Drug War Preventing Great Discoveries? (The Huffington Post)
  • Treatment For Anxiety May Be Found Using Mood Enhancing Drug LSD, According To A New Report (Inquisitr)
  • Other Colours: Rob Chapman On Psychedelia And LSD (The Quietus)
  • Music sounds better on LSD, study finds (ZME Science)
  • This YouTuber Taken on Acid (LSD) vs. Alcohol Challenge - Find Out What Happened! (Food World News)
  • The era of love-ins, light shows and LSD (Halifax Courier)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • This Is What It Feels Like to Treat Depression with Magic Mushrooms (Vice)
  • Terence McKenna Had a Bad Trip in the Late 80's and Never Took Mushrooms Again (Disinformation)
  • Doctor enjoyed 'shrooms and ecstasy' (San Diego Reader)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • The "Amend The RAVE Act" Petition is Going to Congress (Dance Music Northwest)
  • MDMA (Ecstasy) Can Accelerate Personal Growth (Reset.me)
  • DEA Approves Ecstasy For Anxiety, MDMA Trials Begin In California (Practically Viral!)
  • MDMA 'could be used to treat mental illness', scientists say (Metro)
  • What Exactly is MDMA (Ecstasy)? (Press Rocket Release)
  • A Little 'Molly' and then 'She Was Gone' (CBN News)
  • Nearly 200 People Arrested On First Two Days Of Nocturnal, Mostly For Trespassing (Your EDM)
  • 'This is what one tiny pill can do to you': Teen who was left in a wheelchair with slurred speech after taking ecstasy releases video of how her life has changed (Daily Mail)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca IN the USA UPDATE! Ayahuasca church opening soon! (YouTube)
  • Personal Story: How Ayahuasca Helped Me Defeat A Demon Called Fear (Reset.me)
  • Ayahuasca & Relationships (Jayson Gaddis)

Peyote/Mescaline

Iboga/Ibogaine

Salvia Divinorum

  • 5 Drug Scares vs. Reality (Reason)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Psychedelic drug emergency at seminar near Hamburg (Deutsche Welle)
  • Homeopathy conference ends in chaos after delegates take hallucinogenic drug (The Independent)
  • Synthetic cannabis dealing 'an issue throughout the community' (The Timaru Herald)
  • Editorial: NBOMe — a nasty designer drug that parents know too little about (The Dallas Morning News)
  • Drug in teen's system rarely seen by DFW law officers (Star-Telegram)

Dissociatives

  • Baltimore drug startup Cerecor launches new study of antidepressant as it plans stock sale (The Baltimore Sun)
  • Bring Me The Horizon's Oil Sykes on drug addiction: 'Ketamine made me want to die' (NME)

Opiates/Opioids

  • The stigma against people who use heroin makes it harder for them to get help (The Conversation)
  • The Fantasy of Stopping the 'Heroin Epidemic' by Stopping the Heroin (Reason)
  • Pill crackdown may boost heroin sales (El Paso Times)
  • Thailand's Northern 3rd Army Destroys Thousands of Opium Poppy Fields (Chiangrai Times)
  • Price Soars For Key Weapon Against Heroin Overdoses (National Public Radio)
  • KPD officers now have Naloxone to help overdose victims (WBIR-TV)
  • With rising heroin use, Peninsula doctor lobbies for an antidote (Alaska Public Media)
  • Naloxone prescriptions creating hurdles (Victoria News)
  • As Heroin Epidemic Grows, So Does Rehab Wait (NBC)
  • A new practice (The Times-News)
  • Scituate officials call for action in wake of opiate crisis (Scituate Mariner)
  • Ohio Couple Calls Out Heroin Overdose in Teen Daughter's Obituary (NBC)
  • Naloxone Hydrochloride: An Antidote to Drug Overdose (The Science Times)
  • Tatamy police receive life-saving atomizers for overdose victims (Lehigh Valley Live)
  • In Myanmar's Opium-Rich Shan State, Addicts Without Options (Voice of America)
  • 'Reopening of opium vends in Rajasthan unfortunate' (Times of India)
  • Naloxone reverses effects of drug overdose, experts say (Fox 13 Salt Lake City)
  • As Overdose Deaths Climb, So Does Demand For Their Antidote (Bloomberg)
  • The new war on heroin has only just begun (Business Insider)
  • Families open up about the changing face of heroin addiction (CBS News)
  • Littlest victims of America's heroin epidemic (CBS News)
  • All-Time High: The Narcan/Heroin Complex (Delaware County News Network)
  • Heroin epidemic hits Vermont community hard (CBS News)
  • Illinois Senate rejects Rauner's veto of anti-heroin bill (The Hawk Eye)
  • Heroin Fatalities in Hartford County: 'These Are Not Just Numbers' (Bel Air Patch)
  • Cumberland County police officers to begin carrying Naloxone (The Sentinel)

Kambô

  • Kambô: Nature's Vaccine For The Mind And Body (Reset.me)

Kratom

  • Experts Speak Out on Benefits of Kratom: Why it Would be a Mistake to Ban It (Business Wire)
  • Kratom leaves: Are they really a dangerous drug? (Bangkok Post)
  • Man Claims His Wife's Odd Addiction Is Destroying Their Marriage (The Huffington Post)

Kava

  • I drank kava -- the trendy, non-alcoholic beverage that's supposed to make you feel high -- but it just made me sick (Business Insider)
  • Kava ruling (The Fiji Times)

Khat

  • Mo Farah admits he did take drug Khat - but says he only wanted to try it and used it before it was banned by the authorities (Daily Mail)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Psychedelics Promise a 'Paradigm Shift' in Treating Mental Illness (Newsweek)
  • Susan Sarandon carried LSD guru Timothy Leary's ashes in a Burning Man ceremony (USA Today)
  • Psychedelic drugs could treat several mental conditions (Pulse Headlines)
  • Use of LSD, MDMA and magic mushrooms aid treatment of anxiety, addiction and PTSD (International Business Times)
  • Experts call for study of possible therapeutic uses of psychedelic drugs (The Globe and Mail)
  • Could these psychedelic drugs be making the trip to a B.C. doctor's office near you? (The Province)
  • Psychedelic drugs as treatment for anxiety, addiction (CBS News)
  • Psychedelics Promising for Anxiety, Depression, Addiction, and PTSD (Psychiatry Advisor)
  • LSD, magic mushrooms and ecstasy could be used to treat mental health disorders (Northern Californian)
  • Attend LA's Psychedelic Conference And Learn From The Leading Healers And Experts (Reset.me)
  • How to Change the World review - the psychedelic birth of Greenpeace (The Guardian)
  • 'Ingenious' dark web drug network run from Irish bedroom (Independent.ie)

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.