Weekend Thoughts - 8.15.15

Image by Alan English, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Alan English, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. The Washington Post published an article that tackles the issue of how inaccurate drug-sniffing dogs, sometimes known as K-9 Units, are when attempting to detect the presence of drugs. It turns out that drug dogs are about as reliable as a coin toss, in many cases successfully identifying drugs less than 50% of the time. Dogs may be trained sufficiently to identify drugs, but there are many complications when they are working on the beat. Dogs are able to sense the hunch that a police officer has about a suspect, leading to many false identifications. In addition, some officers give their K-9 Unit a treat every time the dog alerts, because the cops are able to use an alert from a dog to use civil asset forfeiture to take money from the citizen (who does not need to have committed a crime, be arrested, or found guilty in court) for themselves or their police department. This form of legalized highway robbery for police officers has been reinforced recently by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, which ruled in favor of allowing dog alerts to be sufficient for searches in the U.S. v. Bentley case. It begs the question—why not just allow police officers to flip a coin to decide whether they will sic a dog on you, conduct an illegal search, and steal money from you, without any evidence of or actuality of criminal behavior on your part?

2. Rolling Stone published a pretty solid overview of the major harm reduction practices and organizations in Kristen Gwynne's piece Meet the People Who Want to Make It Safer to Take Drugs at Festivals. It's good to see a more mainstream and well-known publication like Rolling Stone tackle this issue, and frame it in an open-minded an honest manner.

3. I've been fascinated with the struggle that many homeowners face when wanting to present a wild ecosystem or garden in place of a traditional lawn. Township officials in Ohio have accused this homeowner of presenting a nuisance in the form of a wild-grown ecosystem instead of a manicured lawn. The officials threatened to slap her with a fine of $1,000 if she refused to mow her lawn, which she has opted to pay rather than succumb to the officials' wishes. Many of the issues of this debate are presented here, including the fact that manicured lawns are harmful to the ecosystem in many ways and that a homeowner should have the right to decide whether or not to float with the mainstream on this issue. I encourage all homeowners to let their lawns grow freely or to start a garden, rather than work on another useless, environmentally-unfriendly, ecosystem-preventing mowed lawn.

4. An article titled "Why It's Time to Shut Up in a World That Can't Stop Talking" on High Existence covers the issue of the general noise level of modern life. As a fan of silence, I really enjoyed this one.

5. The data collected concerning the use of force by police in the United States is essentially worthless. Some police departments don't even collect the data, others only partially collect it, and some won't hand it over even when asked. Do we need a standard method for collecting data about use of force by police? Judging from the stories that have been in the news recently, I vote yes.

6. The Huffington Post office tested a new vape pen that allows for the vaping of caffeine. Although not FDA-tested or certified, all ingredients in the Eagle Energy Vapor caffeine e-liquid are FDA-approved. Quotes from testers included "Oh my God, my heart is racing so fast. Am I going to die?", "If you blow it out your nose, it tastes just like Red Bull", and "The Eagle Energy has successfully replaced my morning coffee and is definitely better for focusing. Downside, it feels like I'm smoking at my desk, which is definitely considered 'rude' in the office space." I find this pretty interesting, because I've been following the alternative methods of ingesting caffeine for several years now, and although I've known about insufflating (snorting) caffeine, I wasn't aware that it was possible to vape it. Definitely an interesting development in the caffeine industry. Being someone who is extremely sensitive to caffeine, I doubt I would purchase one of these, but I would give it a try for testing purposes!

7. Here is a humorous article that describes the steps necessary to write a contrarian thinkpiece.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 8.14.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Texas cops smell weed in black woman's car so they stick hand up her vagina in public (Boing Boing)
  • Was William Shakespeare high when he penned his plays? (The Independent)
  • Scientists Detect Traces of Cannabis on Pipes Found in Shakespeare's Garden (Time)
  • To inhale or not to inhale: Was Shakespeare a cannabis user? (Alaska Dispatch News)
  • Sheriffs are asking for armored trucks to wage war on marijuana. Yes, really. (The Washington Post)
  • Scientists speak out against false cannabis claims (International Centre for Science in Drug Policy)
  • Berlin's Hanfparade: For pot, against harsh drug laws (Deutsche Welle)
  • ResponsibleOhio Initiative Qualifies For The 2015 November Ballot (NORML)
  • Phily420: Marijuana arrests down 73 percent (Philly.com)
  • Unionizing cannabis workers (Glens Falls Post-Star)
  • Study shows medical cannabis not linked to rise in illegal recreational use (The Jerusalem Post)
  • Coming, a weight-loss pill from cannabis (The Times of India)
  • Renewed calls for Tasmanian medical cannabis trials to include larger scope of patients (ABC Online)
  • Eight courses high and rising: Amsterdam's gourmet marijuana dining experience (The Guardian)
  • We Must Separate Fact From Fiction in the Cannabis Debate (The Huffington Post)
  • 17% drop in police raids on cannabis farms (BBC)
  • Panelists discuss medical cannabis at forum in Ellwood City (Times Online)
  • Dutch company E-Njoint develops cannabis e-cigarette (International Business Times)
  • Gourmet Marijuana, Anyone? (Health Aim)
  • Tacoma Armory to host marijuana trade show and seminars — and a cannabis competition (The News Tribune)
  • 2nd search warrant served on Charlo Greene's Alaska Cannabis Club (Alaska Dispatch News)
  • Senate committee backs medical cannabis (9news.com.au)
  • Marijuana Lifer Jeff Mizanskey Will Be Free Soon (Reason Magazine)
  • Can a Tolerance Break Rejuvenate the Effects of Cannabis? (Leafly)
  • Lt. Gov. Newsom: California will legalize cannabis in 2016 (SF Gate)

LSD

  • LSD Enhances Emotional Responses to Music (The Beckley Foundation)
  • Jersey Cops Are Seriously Angry About Trey Brasher's LSD-Laced Gummy Bears (Westword)
  • Terence Blacker: How an LSD trip changed my life for good when I was lost (The Independent)
  • LSD enhances the emotional response to music (Springer)
  • Miley Cyrus Talks Double Standards In Music: 'Kendrick Lamar Sings About LSD And He's Cool' (Design & Trend)
  • A New Pair Of Mood Glasses Was Designed By An Artist; LSD Hallucinations Are Simulated Once Worn — Would You Wear It? (iSchoolGuide)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Russia bans all of Reddit over a single 'shroom thread (Engadget)
  • 920 Coalition for Psilocybin Research Awareness Announces First Dates (Reality Sandwich)
  • It's A Crime Against Society That Psilocybin Is Not More Accessible And Accepted (Reset.me)
  • Can magic mushrooms cure schizophrenia? (New Zealand Herald)
  • Fired drugs tsar Professor David Nutt to lead £250k study on effects of mushrooms (Daily Mail)
  • Healing trip: therapeutic effect of magic mushrooms (Sentinel Republic)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Anti-MDMA Campaign Warns Teens About Dangers Of Feeling More Connected To Others (The Onion)
  • Ravers Rally to Fight Proposed Party Ban (Los Angeles Weekly)
  • The Man Who Took 40000 Ecstasy Tablets in His 20s (New York Magazine)
  • Teen who nearly died taking drugs at music festival releases coma photo as warning (The Telegraph)
  • MDMA, Cocaine Sales Help Dark Net Drug Sites Make Over $100 Million Annually, Without Shuttered Silk Road (International Business Times)
  • 'Rolls Royce ecstasy': Police warning to clubbers over dangerous batch of pills linked to death of reveller (Mirror)
  • Molly drug usage increases throughout Florida (WWSB ABC 7)
  • Calgary EMS takes 17 to hospital for substance abuse at Chasing Summer music festival (Calgary Sun)
  • Whiting: 'Party drugs', summer heat and secrets are a deadly mix (The Orange County Register)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • An Introduction to 'Ayahuasca: An Executive's Enlightenment' by Michael Sanders (Evolve and Ascend)
  • Interview With A Former Opium Addict Who Found Salvation Through Ayahuasca (Reset.me)

Peyote/Mescaline

  • "Religious Freedom" as a Shield and a Sword: Tensions Between Conflicting Rights (Jurist)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Salvia Divinorum

  • Order Amending Schedule IV to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (Gazette du Canada)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • How this chemist unwittingly helped spawn the synthetic drug industry (Washington Post)
  • NYC Sees Surge in Synthetic Pot Use, With Dire Consequences (Time)
  • NYPD Stop Lying! Here's How to Handle "Synthetic Marijuana" (Drug Policy Alliance)
  • NYPD uses PCP as poster child for synthetic marijuana (Watchdog)
  • Tackling the synthetic marijuana crisis (Pix 11)

Dissociatives

Opiates

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Meet the People Who Want to Make It Safer to Take Drugs at Festivals (Rolling Stone)
  • Narcotic drugs for 'magic brews' found at Turkish archaeological site (International Business Times)
  • The Ban On Kava And The Bogus Liver Damage Scare (Reset.me)
  • A Guide to Synesthesia 2015: Denver's Premier Psychedelic Showcase (Westword)
  • World's Most Precious Gemstone Looks Like a Psychedelic Dildo (Cosmopolitan)
  • FunBITS: Do Computers Dream of Psychedelic Bears? (TidBITS)
  • Risking Your Life On Psychedelics: How Injury-Prone Will You Be? (Newswire)
  • A psychedelic horror game inspired by the great masters of art (VG 24/7)

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 - 8.8.15

Image by Lisa Omarali, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Lisa Omarali, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. There was yet another great piece at Ask The Festival Lawyer this week. This time, the topic is: are drug testing reagent kits technically legal and do they qualify as drug paraphernalia? The bottom line is that testing kits are essentially legal under all federal drug laws, and for the most part are legal for personal ownership under state laws. However, owners of head shops in states where drug paraphernalia laws include the a limitation on devices that "identify, analyze, or test" controlled substances should be wary that they may technically fall on the other side of the law because they are operating a business. All in all, it comes down to something I've talked about a few times on Think Wilder—shouldn't harm reduction practices that enable people to have know the purity of what they are planning to ingest be allowed?

2. Defying a Supreme Court decision, the country of India banned pornography websites and then reversed its decision less than 48 hours later, after worldwide criticism. But ISPs are still going to block the websites anyway. Regardless of your personal opinion about pornography, is it right for an entire country to block access to parts of the Internet?

3. I enjoyed this take on the struggle with social media. Points made include the reinforcement of one's ego when seeking likes and comments, the ability to make connections with strangers who live far away, the lurking possibility of those connections becoming mere distractions, and the balance between honesty and fakery that exists when promoting one's work on social media platforms. As someone who spends a fair amount of time on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, and the Psychedelic Chat on Slack, I can definitely relate to a lot of the points made here. I find that choosing to use social media involves a lot of responsibility, and is not always strictly a fun experience.

4. Speaking of banning things, Los Angeles county is planning to move forward with banning EDM festivals altogether following the deaths of some patrons of HARD Summer Music Festival last week. The deaths have been anecdotally attributed to MDMA, but there isn't any solid evidence to confirm that at this time. It seems to me that improving (and in some cases, simply implementing) harm reduction practices would be a better solution than restricting an entire music genre's ability to put on a music festival.

5. I'm really fascinated by the infographics that have been making their way around the Internet that show what happens one hour after consuming a can of Coca-Cola or Diet Coke. I had a love affair with sodas for a large portion of my life, but gave them up almost entirely a few years ago. Nowadays I only have a soda once or twice a year, and I am glad that I have cut back so drastically from the days when I used to drink 192 ounces of Mountain Dew every day! 

6. A piece on the differences between deliberate mindfulness and effortless mindfulness.

7. New scientific research showing that a diet high in leafy greens, beans, berries, wholegrains and wine can slow cognitive decline. Eat your fruits and veggies!

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

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 - 8.1.15

Image by Francois de Halleux, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Francois de Halleux, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. California's Press Enterprise's editorial board penned an excellent editorial marking the 14th anniversary of Portugal's decision to decriminalize all drug use and possession. The article details the overwhelmingly-positive results of the country's harm reduction model. Portugal is the first nation to undergo an experiment like this. We can only hope that other nations will follow and reap the same benefits that Portugal has: declining rates of drug use, lower numbers of sexually transmitted diseases such as HIV, a reduction in drug-induced deaths, etc. 

2. On Last Week Tonight, John Oliver spoke out against mandatory minimum prison sentences for certain crimes. He explains why we treat turkeys better than some low-level offenders. In a lot of these cases, the judges want to be able to hand out a softer sentence, but these laws prevent them from doing so. Definitely worth a watch.

3. I enjoyed this positive article from High Existence on how your spiritual growth is shaping human evolution. The general argument of the piece is that the individual actions we make have a significant impact on the overall evolution of the human species. There are some references to Rupert Sheldrake's morphic resonance theory, which has interested me for a long time. I have been really enjoying browsing High Existence the past week or so, which is a new website to me that has a lot of articles about topics that interest me, and would most likely interest the Think Wilder audience.

4. The issue of Performance-Enhancing Drugs (PEDs) in sports and e-sports has been in the news this week, and I was interested to read an article on how research chemicals have made their way into the professional cycling world. Cyclists are purchasing PEDs from Chinese laboratories (similar to the psychoactive research chemical market) that are so new that the drug tests the World Anti-Doping Agency uses won't be able to identify them. It just goes to show that you cannot eliminate drug use—there are always going to be minor structural changes that can be made to the molecules that will produce a similar effect (or completely different effect, if that's what you're into) and won't be testable. This is a totally new application of research chemicals that is innovative and mischievous, and I am fascinated to see what happens next.

5. I never thought I would see something like the editorial arguing for cannabis legalization on the D.A.R.E. website earlier this week. It has been taken down, but here is a snapshot of the original page. The original piece talked about how criminalization has actually made it easier for children to obtain illegal substances (which has been a long-standing argument in the drug policy reform movement) and explains how a system that would actually control the substances is a better option. The tides are definitely turning.

6. Due to the recent passing of the USA Freedom Act, the NSA has agreed to no longer analyze call metadata obtained under the Patriot Act from November 29, 2015 onward. This won't prevent the agency from  continuing its mass surveillance, but it will prevent the NSA from digging through any data obtained before that date, which many critics believe should have never been collected in the first place. 

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