Weekend Thoughts - 6.13.15

Image by John Eisenschenk, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by John Eisenschenk, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all! Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. Disinfo published a piece critical of mindfulness titled "Mindfulness has lost its Buddhist roots, and it may not be doing you good". The article cautions against the thought that mindfulness is a panacea, or without its respective side effects. I'm not sure what to think of this one, but figured it was worth a share.

2. A New York Times op-ed describing why the author chose to default on his student loans, and why you should too. This isn't something I have personally done, but I do know people who have chosen to go this route. The piece is short but well worth a read.

3. I haven't covered the Silk Road trial on Think Wilder, but I wanted to report that Ross Ulbricbht is appealing his conviction and life sentence, arguing that he was framed by Internet drug kingpins who have not been identified.

4. An innovative idea (with backing logic) suggesting that we run a study that allows police officers to take MDMA to see if it will reduce police violence and improve police/community relations from SmartDrugSmarts.

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.12.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Meanwhile, this week in psychedelics:

  • John Cusack on Psychedelic Drugs: 'I Did Do Acid and Mushrooms' (CelebStoner)
  • Almost 20 kilos of ketamine seized by gardai in biggest ever haul of its kind (Irish Mirror)
  • New substances added to prohibited drug list (GulfNews)
  • Beach Boy's [sic] Brian Wilson talks past LSD use and hallucinogens (Examiner)
  • Boy high on ketamine thinks his cast is the most amazing thing ever (Metro.co.uk)
  • Dark web drug shopping: Fewer risks take users online to buy weed, LSD, and MDMA (International Business Times)
  • The Psychoactive Substances Bill: An opportunity or threat for research? (The Guardian)
  • Chris Christie Declares War On Drugs A 'Failure,' But Still Doesn't Think Recreational Pot Should Be Legal (Huffington Post)
  • Study Finds Europeans Love to Get High — And Their Drugs Are Stronger and Purer Than Ever (VICE News)
  • REVEALED: How ancient Philistines got WASTED on on LSD-like drugs 3,000 years ago (Express.co.uk)
  • Pittsburgh Pirates: Dock Ellis' LSD-induced no hitter 45 years later (isportsweb)
  • Hundreds Of People To Inhale Nitrous Oxide Outside Parliament In Protest At New Drug Law (BuzzFeed News)
  • Why ketamine is such a powerful antidepressant (International Business Times)
  • Army doctor who trained U.S. troops suspended for macabre, ketamine-assisted sexual experiments (Boing Boing)
  • Tour America's First All-Inclusive Marijuana Ranch Resort (Curbed Ski)
  • Charges against Garden City mother enflame cannabis community (The Garden City Telegram)
  • Cannabis Is Not Causing California's Drought (Reset.me)
  • Third Eye Sees All: Dr. Ben Sessa On Psychedelic Drugs (The Quietus)
  • How MDMA Could Piece Back Together Lives Shattered in Iraq (Mic.com)
  • Global Drug Survey Releases Findings For 2015 (Your EDM)
  • DMT: The Drug In All of Us (News 24)
  • Cannabis church puts down root, seeds in new home (USA Today)
  • Bay Area lawyers launch Cannabis Bar Association (Mercury News)
  • Desperate Parents Of Autistic Children Trying Cannabis Despite Lack Of Studies (Forbes)
  • Ketamine is actually an anti-depressant (Metro.co.uk)
  • Aldous Huxley's wife wrote this letter about injecting him with LSD right before he died (Plaid Letter)
  • MDMA: A Prescription for the Police? (SmartDrugSmarts)
  • Chelsea Handler Is Going To Do Hallucinogenic Drugs For Her Netflix Series (Vulture)
  • How Psilocybin Improves Your Brain (Reset.me)

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.

Weekend Thoughts - 6.6.15

Image by Holger Ejleby, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Holger Ejleby, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all. Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. A great article from iRunFar that focuses on the health benefits and overall importance of ensuring that runners get sufficient sleep each night. Sleep is something that I really need to focus on, myself. This article was a great reminder that it is extremely important.

2. A fairly thorough guide for referring to transgender people, which is timely due to Caitlyn Jenner's announcement of her gender transition that was published this week. This certainly isn't one of my most knowledgeable topics, but I've been interested with the language that is used in the trans community for a few years after listening to several episodes on the C-Realm Podcast that cover this topic.

3. Although I'm getting to this one a week late, the United States Justice Department has indicted 14 FIFA soccer officials with accusations of rampant corruption. It really makes you wonder if the matches themselves are fixed, as well...

4. Jay Michaelson at The Daily Beast published a fairly decent piece titled "Can Ecstasy Replace Xanax?" that discusses the potential for using MDMA as a replacement for common pharmaceuticals used to treat health issues ranging from PTSD to social anxiety. A good overview for someone unfamiliar with the topic, although I was surprised that it didn't mention the hard work that MAPS has been doing with regard to MDMA research.

5. An internal investigation has reported that undercover investigators were able so smuggle mock explosives or banned weapons through TSA checkpoints 95% of the time. That means the organization is only catching 5% of truly dangerous items at the security gate. My opinion? Shut them down. They're not effective at their jobs, so why should we still be dealing with them?

6. A somewhat provocatively-titled article on The Atlantic, "Why Pot Smokers Are Skinnier" examines the results from research at the University of Nebraska that analyzed participants' fasting insulin and glucose levels, insulin resistance, cholesterol levels, and waist circumference. The results show that current cannabis users sported significantly smaller waist circumference than participants who had never used cannabis and had higher levels of HDL, also known as "good cholesterol". Although it's not exactly clear how this happens, the findings suggest that cannabis may improve insulin control and regulating body weight, which may explain why cannabis users have a lower incidence of diabetes.

7. From Re/code, AT&T Says Subsidized Phones, 2-Year Contracts Going Away. From the article: "Like unlimited data plans, the two-year contract and the subsidized cellphone are on the endangered species list." If this signals an overall trend in the mobile phone industry, we may be paying much higher prices up-front for our devices, but less money in the long run.

8. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) published an article detailing its opinion about the passing of the USA Freedom Act that is worth a read.

9. An interesting bit of research on disinfo about how plants know when they are being eaten. As a member of the vegan community, one of the things that frustrates me is when fellow vegans get on their high horses about how morally superior eating plants is over an omnivorous diet. I'm glad that research is being done to determine how much harm we are causing to the plants that we consume. My personal take is that all life must consume other forms of living (or dead) matter to survive, and while it is nice to be in a camp that strives to minimize the harm that we are causing to other life forms, I find it foolish to think that eating a vegan diet is completely harmless.

10. I also really enjoyed this article from disinfo about how pseudoscience and conspiracy theories are not victimless crimes against science. It served as a good reminder for myself to judge the sources of my information. There is an explanation of the efficacy of the scientific method, and I really enjoyed this quote: "Science might not be perfect but it is the best tool mankind has developed to understand itself and the world around us."

That's all for this week's edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.5.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

As an avid Reality Sandwich reader since 2007, I looked forward to each new edition of Neşe Devenot's “This Week in Psychedelics” column. Every week, she would post 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).

As far as I can tell, Devenot gave up "This Week in Psychedelics" two years ago. There have been a couple of attempts at a revitalization of the column on Reality Sandwich by other contributors, but it hasn't stuck. My goal is to bring the column back—first on Think Wilder, and then perhaps on Reality Sandwich as well. I hope you find the following links helpful, eye-opening, enjoyable, and/or infuriating:

  • 250 hits of LSD found inside car in Middlefield Township (Cleveland.com)

  • LSD: Speaking to volunteer users of the drug as trials get underway to see if it cures depression and addiction (The Independent)

  • Are psychedelics a fluidity and fluency to cognition? (The Statesman)

  • 'At Long Last A$AP Rocky' a psychedelic trip through grief (LA Times)

  • Ketamine offered to patients with depression in take-home, DIY packs by controversial clinic (ABC News Australia)

  • Silk Road founder gets life for creating online drug site (Fox News)

  • Chemical engineer jailed for sending postcards laced with LSD-style drugs to prisoners (Mirror.co.uk)

  • Global Drug Survey: what made you stop taking drugs? (The Guardian)

  • This LSD could save your life (The Daily Beast)

  • Sleaford Mods: 'My first festival, I took LSD by the Pyramid stage and stared at the sky' (The Guardian)

  • LSD to be trialled as a potential anti-depressant in the UK (Metro.co.uk)

  • Psychedelic Videos Capture Coral in Motion (Yes, Coral) (Wired)

  • New research makes a case for psychedelic drugs offering profound spiritual experiences (The United Church Observer)

  • Police Helicopters and a Shit Load of Ketamine: The Illegal Free Party Scene that Roamed the Home Counties (Noisey)

  • Police in Massachusetts City allow addicts to turn in drugs without arrest if they seek treatment (US News)

  • WSU researchers see link between hunter-gather cannabis use, fewer parasites (EurekAlert!)

  • Experts Unearth 2,400 Year-Old Solid Gold Bongs in Southern Russia (Tech Times)

  • One More Link in Drug Supply Chain Nabbed (New Indian Express)

  • Juvenile charged with murder in drug death, another charged with distribution at school (Chatham Star Tribune)

  • First ever Psychedelic Action! comes to Brixton's Windrush Square, Sat 6th June (Brixton Buzz)

  • Soaring Aloft: Psych Fest 2015 (Premier Guitar)

  • Can Ecstasy Replace Xanax? (The Daily Beast)

  • Why Pot Smokers are Skinnier (The Atlantic)

  • LSD's Medical Comeback Story (Care2)

  • British Government Plans to Illegalize All Unapproved Psychoactive Substances (Mad in America)

  • House Tells the Feds to Respect Medical Marijuana Laws (Again) (Reason)

  • Psilocybin And LSD - The Only Effective Treatment Known For Cluster Headaches (Reset.me)

  • America's Quality Pot Is Changing the Drug War (Bloomberg)

  • Psilocybin Mushrooms Ease Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (Reset.me)

  • Bans On Psychedelics Make No Sense (Reset.me)

  • LSD kingpin Arif Shaikh sent to judicial custody (The Times of India)

  • The Drug Dare: Campaign urges people to upload drug-taking videos to YouTube to highlight "positive experiences" (Mirror.co.uk)

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.

Weekend Thoughts - 5.30.15

Image by theclevelandkid24, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by theclevelandkid24, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Happy Saturday y'all. Below, I have rounded up some things for you to think about this weekend:

1. Fortune published a piece that explores the jobs that automation will kill next. Careers such as commercial airline pilots, journalists, lawyers, managers, and financial advisors are considered to be in the middle of the difficulty range compared to other jobs. The latest theories about automation predict that middle-skill jobs will be hit the hardest, because employees at the upper-end (engineers and scientists) and lower-end (plumbers and electricians) will be less threatened by automation practices. This article comes at an interesting time for me, as I recently reviewed Marshall Brain's Manna: Two Visions of Humanity's Future, which describes a future where automated robots eliminate half of the jobs on the market.

2. An excellent article from The Age that starts with the powerful lede, "It would be nice to say that the war on drugs had achieved nothing. The truth is far worse." Author Michael Coulter goes on to explain the current state of the drug war by highlighting the damage the war has done to the world's citizenry and pointing out that the damage from the war is far greater than any potential damage from the drugs themselves.

3. This week, I stumbled across this interesting idea: a chat room for psychedelics. The tagline is "Join psychedelic researchers, therapists, explorers and advocates to discuss...". It hasn't launched yet, and it only taking names and email addresses now, so I can't predict how it will turn out. But I wanted to share it with the Think Wilder audience nonetheless!

4. VICE UK has an in-depth article about synthetic cannabinoids (sometimes referred to as "Spice" or "K2"). Well worth a read for someone interested in the topic, concerned friends or family members, people in the medical profession, and psychonauts.

5. For those of us following the news of US Border Patrol's illegal detainment, search and assault of criminal justice student Jessica Cooke, this article from Reason dives a bit deeper and discusses how the organization is actually used (illegally) as an extension of the country's war on drugs.

6. Maj. Neill Franklin, a 34-year veteran with the Maryland State Police and Baltimore Police Departments, wrote a short piece explaining how the drug war has created more violence and made neighborhoods more dangerous. Franklin is also the executive director of LEAP (Law Enforcement Against Prohibition), an organization consisting of current and former members of the law enforcement and criminal justice communities who speak out against the failures of our existing drug policies.

That's all for this edition of Weekend Thoughts. Until next week, keep thinking wilder.