bible

19-Year-Old Rescued From Drug-Fueled Doomsday Sect in Peru

The Local:

According to José Antonio Capa, head of the anti-trafficking police unit, sect leader Félix Steven Manrique considered himself an envoy of God and called himself "Prince of Gurdjeff." 

He managed to groom Aguilar and other women through a Facebook group he set up, painting himself as a messiah on a mission to repopulate the world and one who would save his followers from the apocalypse.

In fact Manrique ran a harem of women who submitted to him. He forced them to have sex and consume Ayahuasca, an indigenous drink that causes hallucinations and anxiety attacks.

Absolutely horrific. This is the first time I've heard about an ayahuasca doomsday sect having been formed, but it's reminiscent of the murderous cult Charles Manson led in the 60s. However, instead of brainwashing his followers with "sex, LSD, Bible readings, repeated playing of the Beatles’ White Album and rambling lectures about triggering a revolution," Capa used Facebook to find his followers and held them captive by raving about the impending apocalypse and drugging them with ayahuasca.


This Week in Psychedelics - 3.2.18

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Maine: Lawmakers Push To Rewrite 2016 Voter-Approved Marijuana Law (NORML)
  • UK Parliament Members Blame Own Party for Blocking Medical Cannabis Vote (Leafly)
  • Acclaimed Illustrator Reveals the Secrets of Great Cannabis Packaging (Leafly)
  • Marijuana man makes $1 million a year running a 'bud and breakfast' hotel (The Sun)
  • Tech behind cryptocurrency unites with cannabis (New York Post)
  • This UK Cafe Is Selling Cannabis-Infused Treats (High Times)
  • In Hollywood, Cannabis Is Part of the Creative Process (Leafly)
  • Why It's So Hard to Dose Weed (Wired)
  • Colorado Is Finally Getting Its First Cannabis Club (Forbes)
  • Missouri: Medical Marijuana Initiative Effort Reaches Signature Milestone (NORML)
  • Ex-FBI official hoping to blaze a path to Congress as 'cannabis candidate' (CNN)
  • Racial Disparities Persist Among NYC Marijuana Possession Arrestees (NORML)
  • Federal Judge Dismisses Lawsuit Challenging Marijuana's Schedule I Prohibited Status (NORML)
  • Most UK cannabis 'super strength skunk' (BBC)
  • Cannabis Access Consistently Linked With Lower Opioid Use: Studies (NORML)
  • Will Hawaiians Who Use Medical Pot Lose Their Right to Own a Gun? (Reason)
  • Anti-Pot Group Releases Scathing Report Card on Commercial Cannabis (Westword)
  • Tribes Cut out of California Cannabis Market Might Grow Their Own (Leafly)
  • Legal Cannabis Industry Poised For Big Growth, In North America And Around The World (Forbes)
  • Cannabis 101: The science behind your high (The Weekender)
  • Ebony Costain Is Changing The Way You Buy Cannabis (Forbes)
  • What We Can Learn from the Man Who Ate Cannabis and Had a Meltdown High Above the Pacific Ocean (The Stranger)
  • Better Marijuana Stock: Aurora Cannabis vs. Cronos Group (The Motley Fool)
  • Molson Coors 13F: Legalized Marijuana May Hurt Our Beer Sales (Investopedia)

LSD

  • LSD Study Reveals Unprecedented 'Harmonic' Reorganization of Brain (Inverse)
  • The Beckley Foundation Intends To Study Links Between Microdosing LSD And Creativity (Forbes)
  • Prof. David Nutt: 'It's irrational to deny people access to LSD' (Radio New Zealand)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Study: Mushrooms became hallucinogenic to keep away insects (UPI)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Using MDMA to Treat Eating Disorders (Psychedelic Times)
  • Ecstasy, party drug of '90s, makes a roaring comeback (Clarion Ledger)
  • Assumed dodgy ecstasy batch reason thirteen people hospitalised in Christchurch (Newshub)
  • MDMA warning after six children taken to hospital in Scotland (The Independent)
  • Model died after 'overdosing on MDMA and ketamine' at music festival (Metro)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Federal lawsuit forces Oklahoma City airport security to modify their handling of Native American objects (NewsOK)
  • A Peyote Tipi Ceremony with Puyallup Tribal Leader Ramona Bennett (The Stranger)

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • How the Shamanic Medicine Iboga can Resolve and Heal Childhood Trauma (Reality Sandwich)
  • Maryland Lawmakers Consider Using Ibogaine To Treat Addiction (CBS Baltimore)

Dissociatives

  • Additional Review of Ketamine as Fast Acting Antidepressant is Promising (PsychCentral)
  • Ketamine Now Being Used in Los Angeles clinic to treat Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD) and Treatment Resistant Depression (TRD) (PRWeb)
  • Hartford Police: Man Set Fire To House After Family Confronted Him About PCP Use (Hartford Courant)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Inside the secret lives of functioning heroin addicts (CNN)
  • How America Can Win the Drug War in Afghanistan (The National Interest)

Kratom

  • FDA oversees destruction and recall of kratom products (The National Law Review)
  • Kratom, Marijuana Can Help People Kick Opiates, Addiction Expert Says (Westword)
  • Kratom Likely Source For Multi-State Salmonella Outbreak, CDC Says (The Fix)
  • Why Kratom Shouldn't Be Swept Up in the Opioid Crackdown (The Crime Report)
  • FDA raises death count from kratom, a natural opioid (CBS News)

Kava

  • Kava Kava: An Ancient Herb For Stress And Anxiety (Reports Healthcare)
  • Alternative to alcohol: Michigan's first Kava Bar in Grand Rapids (The Rapidian)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • President Trump Suggests Executing Drug Dealers (TIME)
  • Getting High with the Most High: Drugs in the Bible (Ancient Origins)
  • Bitcoin Mega-Philanthropist 'Pineapple' Talks About Psychedelic Research (Forbes)
  • Neuroendocrine Associations Underlying the Persistent Therapeutic Effects of Classic Serotonergic Psychedelics (Frontiers)
  • The Untapped Potential of Psychedelics in Mental Health Treatment (Conatus News)
  • A Single Psychedelic Drug Trip Can Change Your Personality for Years (Live Science)
  • Are psychedelic drugs about to become the new prozac? (Well+Good)
  • Long-Term Effects Of Psychotropic Drugs Are 'Cloaked In Mystery' (NPR)
  • Cocaine, LSD and Ketamine: They Reveal Drug Network in the US Navy (Maritime Herald)

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.

Book Review - Ishmael

Ishmael.jpg

Ishmael is a philosophical novel written by Daniel Quinn that was published in 1992. The story begins with a newspaper ad: "Teacher seeks pupil. Must have an earnest desire to save the world. Apply in person." The unnamed narrator decides to check it out and finds himself in a room with a telepathically-communicating gorilla named Ishmael. The basic plot of the book involves a Socratic dialogue between Ishmael and the narrator focusing on "how things came to be this way" for humankind.

The concepts covered during their conversation include an exploration of the mythological thinking that forms the underpinning of our modern civilization's consciousness and consequential actions, that humans are not the pinnacle of evolution (nor exempt from the laws of nature or the rule of the Gods), and how the story we have chosen to enact has contributed to our ethical understanding of the world and a potential societal and environmental collapse that lurks just beyond today's horizon. There is also a story woven throughout the main Socratic dialogue that features Ishmael's history as a member of a menagerie and adoption by a wealthy benefactor.

Some of the major themes in the book include the idea that the Book of Genesis from the Bible truly refers to the decimation of nomadic hunter-gatherer societies by agricultural societies, that eating the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil convinced modern humans that they have the right to decide which species live and die, and that there is nothing fundamentally wrong with people—rather it is the story told for the last ten thousand years by Mother Culture that has been enacted that is harmful. This last aspect of the book really reminded me of Charles Eisentein's The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible, which echoes and expands upon a lot of the points Quinn makes about that story.

Following Ishmael are two books penned by Quinn that form a loose trilogy: The Story of B, a 1996 spiritual sequel, and My Ishmael, a 1997 followup. So far I have only read the first book in this trilogy, but hope to make my way through the rest of it in due time.

I greatly enjoyed this novel. Early on, it reminded me of Sophie's World, a novel by Jostein Gaarder that was the center of discussion during an International Baccalaureate Theory of Knowledge course in high school. I suppose I drew that comparison due to the format of the book—a wise teacher with an understanding of philosophy uses the Socratic dialogue method to teach philosophical concepts to a pupil. The method involves the pupil working through the concepts "out loud" throughout the book's pages, which allows the reader to absorb them in a different manner than if they had been presented directly from the teacher. Another book I have read that uses the same style is Plato's The Republic. Although it isn't my favorite format, I think it may be growing on me because I really enjoyed Ishmael, and a major reason for that was the way the book allowed me to work through the concepts alongside the pupil. There is quite a bit to absorb from this novel, and it definitely warrants a re-read at some point.

Overall, I found Ishmael to be an excellent book and would recommend it to anyone frustrated with the current state of the world, an interest in human and evolutionary history and/or philosophy, and environmental activists that would like to see positive global changes come to fruition. With knowledge like this in our toolbox, I firmly believe humanity could rethink its position in nature's hierarchy, construct a new story for modern culture to enact, and reverse its course for the betterment of all life on Earth and beyond.

5/5 stars. 263 pages

This Week in Psychedelics - 8.7.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Exclusive: Justice Department Admits Misleading Congress on Marijuana Vote (Marijuana.com)
  • 2016: The Marijuana Election (Newsweek)
  • Congress' Summer Fling With Marijuana: How Congress turned on the DEA and embraced weed. (Politico)
  • Marijuana: From Demonization to Legalization to Celebration (Nation of Change)
  • New York State Awards 5 Medical Marijuana Licenses (The New York Times)
  • 1st legal medical pot sold in Nevada 15 years after approved (WBNS 10TV)
  • Is it time to legalize marijuana in sports? (The San Diego Union-Tribune)
  • Budding Movements in Canada and US Vow to Bring 'Sacrament' of Cannabis to the Masses (VICE)
  • DEA Destroyed Medical Cannabis (Santa Fe Reporter)
  • Big Pharma-Produced Cannabis Is Likely Coming To The U.S. (Huffington Post)
  • Research Shows CBD Combats Social Anxiety (Collective-Evolution)
  • Pot legalization defies party lines (Burlington Free Press)
  • Federal bankers: No account for Colo. cannabis credit union (USA Today)
  • Medicinal cannabis likely in New Zealand by 2016 (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Teen Marijuana Use Not Linked to Later Depression, Lung Cancer, Other Health Problems, Research Finds (American Psychological Association)
  • Massachusetts marijuana groups seek pot legalization vote (Reuters)
  • Philly420: Marijuana, PTSD and Pennsylvania (Philly.com)
  • Portland's World Famous Cannabis Cafe opens to packed house (Oregon Live)
  • Free cannabis handed out to veterans at Denver rally (KDVR Fox 31 Denver)
  • The Register's Editorial: Law creates cannabis oil craziness (The Des Moines Register)
  • Michigan Medical Marijuana Panel Approves Autism, A Step Closer To Cannabis For Autistic Kids (Inquisitr)
  • Experts Predict Oregon Cannabis Industry Will Be Worth Nearly $500 Million in Five Years (MarketWatch)
  • Bud and Breakfasts and 420 Tours: Denver sees a cannabis 'gold rush' (The Guardian)
  • Memphis Cop Was Killed After Interrupting $20 Pot Deal (Alternet)
  • Woman Successfully Treats Stage 4 Kidney Cancer And Celiac Disease With Cannabis Oil (Reset.me)
  • Cannabis ban bends under corporate, congressional and medicinal pressure (The Telegraph)
  • Texas cannabis capitalists are ready to seed the soil (Sharon Herald)
  • MP Tathagata Satpathy's pitch: Make cannabis legal, why ban porn (The Indian Express)

LSD

  • Why Did My Grandmother Try LSD For Multiple Sclerosis In The 1960s? (Forbes)
  • Boulder Police Fear LSD Use Rising (MSN)
  • 20-year-old man fighting for life after 'accidental LSD drugs overdose' (Lancashire Telegraph)
  • Young man in 'LSD coma' after being rushed to hospital suffering from hallucinations and seizures (Mirror)
  • Man left fighting for life after suspected LSD overdose as popularity of hippy acid soars (Daily Star)
  • Colorado man mailed LSD-infused candy to customers in N.J., cops say (NJ.com)
  • Narcotics Cell baffled as LSD flows into city (The Hindu)
  • Mood glasses designed by Bence Agoston simulate psychedelic hallucinations of LSD (Daily Mail)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Psilocybin Switches Off Part Of Brain That Causes Depression — But Current Laws Interfere With Research (Reset.me)

MDMA

  • From Gary to Molly: The Feminization of Ecstasy in Popular Culture (Thump)
  • The Agony Of The Ecstasy (Science 2.0)
  • No place for Ecstasy at music festivals: Cops (Toronto Sun)
  • Ban on Raves Proposed After Teens Die at HARD Festival (Los Angeles Weekly)
  • Ban on Raves to Be Studied by L.A. County (Los Angeles Weekly)
  • Top Italian nightclub closed for four months after 'ecstasy death' (The Guardian)
  • Toby Fairclough, 17, dies of ecstasy overdose during exam celebrations (Daily Mail)
  • The trouble with Molly: thought safe, but can be risky (Delaware Online)

Ayahuasca/DMT

Peyote/Mescaline

  • Huachuma (San Pedro Cactus) — Healing The Spirit And Body (Reset.me)
  • Should inmates be allowed to use peyote for religious purposes? (Indy Star)

Salvia Divinorum

  • Harper Government Moves Forward to Regulate Salvia (Pharmi Web)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • At Her Majesty's pleasure: Legal highs are rife in jails; new laws won't help much (The Economist)
  • New menace on campus: Cheap and 'effective' Meow Meow keeps cops on their toes (Firstpost)
  • New Jersey legislator pushes to outlaw emerging synthetic drug (Newsworks)
  • NYPD video on fake pot effects showed man on PCP: ex-cop (New York Daily News)

Dissociatives

  • Depression researchers halt ketamine clinical trial amid funding battle (ABC.net.au)
  • Protesters mass inhale nitrous oxide outside Parliament in demonstration against Psychoactive Substances Bill (International Business Times)
  • Banning laughing gas is a serious matter. The balloon protest treats it as a joke (The Guardian)
  • Burnt ketamine new go-to for drug-test dodgers - study (Bangkok Post)
  • Lockbox Full of Drugs Missing From Irving Animal Services (NBC 5 Dallas-Fort-Worth)

Opiates

  • How opium poppies process morphine revealed for the first time (Digital Journal)
  • New DEA Chief: 'Heroin Is Clearly More Dangerous Than Marijuana' (Huffington Post)
  • 'Fair trade' cocaine and 'conflict-free' opium: the future of online drug marketing (The Hamilton Spectator)
  • Coroner warns of poppy dangers after opium tea kills Dane in Tasmania (The Guardian)
  • Gov. council member proposes decriminalizing heroin (Boston Herald)
  • Washington County judge says heroin addicts fare better in treatment than prison (Tribune-Review)
  • Tainted heroin increasing across St. Louis area (KMOV)
  • Perfect storm rains heroin, pain pills onto Mon Valley (Tribune-Review)
  • Hassan, Shaheen, judges, police gather to discuss heroin issue in NH (WMUR)
  • Combating the Rising Use of Heroin in City, Suburbs (WTTW Chicago Tonight)
  • Portland mobilizes as opiate abuse, overdose cases grow (Portland Press Herald)
  • Sandy heroine becomes latest victim of heroin overdose (USA Today)

General Psychedelics

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.

Weekend Thoughts - 4.11.15

Image by Larry, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Larry, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! I have a lot of links for you to enjoy this weekend, so let's get started.

1. Rare and Unseen Color Photographs of America’s Hippie Communes from the 1970s—via The Vintage News. This is a nice collection of unseen photographs of American hippie communes from the 1970s. The people in these communes look so free-spirited and quirky. Although there are a lot of well-known issues with communes, this does make me wish I could live off the grid for the rest of my life.

2. Psychoactive Plants in the Bible—via Philosopher's Page. I found this account of psychoactive plants found in the Bible to be fascinating. It's quite obvious that there were consciousness-altering plants that inspired the stories in the Bible, and this article gives a good overview of what the plants were, how they were used, and the psychoactive effects they generated.

3. 7 Things You Should Know About Matcha—via Health.com. Matcha is a special form of green tea that was used traditionally in Japanese meditation practices. I find it to be quite enjoyable and this article is a good introduction to this type of tea.

4. Is the Internet Killing Middle-Class Jobs?—via The Week. "The robopocalypse for workers may be inevitable. In this vision of the future, super-smart machines will best humans in pretty much every task. A few of us will own the machines, a few will work a bit — perhaps providing "Made by Man" artisanal goods — while the rest will live off a government-provided income. Silicon-based superintelligence and robots will dramatically alter labor markets — to name but one example, the most common job in most U.S. states probably will no longer be truck driver. But what about right now? If you're unemployed or working part-time instead of full-time, or haven't seen a raise in years, should you blame technology?"

5. Obama Steps Up Commutations, Feeding Drug War Prisoners’ Hopes—via Forbes. This is a step in the right direction, but there are still a lot of people in prison for non-violent "crimes". Hopefully the commutations will continue, with more prisoners of the drug war being released.

6. Vegan Diet Best for Planet—via The Hill. "The Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, a federally appointed panel of nutritionists created in 1983, decided for the first time this year to factor in environmental sustainability in its recommendations." Naturally, the meat and dairy industries are pissed off about this information being incorporated into dietary recommendations, but that doesn't take away from the truth that a vegan diet is best for environmental sustainability.

7. U.S. Directs Agents to Cover Up Program Used to Investigate Americans—via Reuters. This shouldn't be surprising at all, but the Drug Enforcement Administration was collecting data on Americans long before the National Security Agency. Now on top of that, the U.S. government wants information regarding the DEA's domestic spying covered up and kept away from American citizens.

8. American Cops Just Killed More People in March than the UK Did in the Entire 20th Century—via The Free Thought Project. There is something incredibly wrong with the way that policing is done in our country. This is a mind-blowing headline, and the article backs up the claim with statistics.

Enjoy the reads for this weekend and I'll see you next week!