Weekend Thoughts - 10.17.15

Image by Amre, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Amre, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. I hope I will see some of my local readers at the second annual TriVegFest in Raleigh, NC later today! There will be an impressive collection of vendors, speakers, and an amazing community to take part in. If you are able to make it out and see me, feel free to say hello!

2. A tropical mushroom that grows on lava flows gives one in three women spontaneous orgasms from smelling it. Naturally, all of the men tested found the smell abhorrent. 

3. Turns out that over the past ten years, the DEA has spent millions of undisclosed dollars on cell phone tracking. However, the organization refuses to release acquisition documents even though the fact that it is operating like this is publicly-known.

4. A photography project that removed cell phones from pictures of people engaged with them, which results in an eerie commentary depicting mobile phone addiction. They're definitely worth looking through.

5. For the collectors out there, here are some coins that have been carved to reveal skulls underneath the faces.

6. One of my favorite food bloggers, Gena Hamshaw of the site formerly known as Choosing Raw, will be changing the blog's name to The Full Helping in an effort to have the name reflect the site's main content a bit better. While Gena was originally a raw foods, she has evolved the blog to include more than just raw-focused posts. I highly recommend reading her blog for recipe recommendations, healthy journey guest posts, and a weekly link roundup that focuses on food, health, and nutrition.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 10.16.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Studies by Oregon researchers hint that mild pot-induced paranoia may have a public health benefit (The Register-Guard)
  • Ohio man gets 'too high', calls police (USA Today)
  • Here's What Marijuana Does to Pain (ATTN:)
  • How safe is stoned driving really? (Aeon)
  • Federal Cancer Institute Acknowledges Cancer-Fighting Properties of Cannabis (Reset.me)
  • Marijuana Could Change the 2016 Election (ATTN:)
  • Sanders Suddenly Becomes Pot-Friendliest Major-Party Candidate (Reason)
  • Marijuana Separated Sanders and Clinton in a Big Way (ATTN:)
  • Legalising cannabis would raise millions in tax, says government study (The Guardian)
  • Cannabis should be as legal as cigarettes because war on drugs is a 'disaster' claims Labour MP (Mirror)
  • Why are stoners always portrayed the same in film? (Dazed Digital)
  • Growing Pains: Regulating the Use of Pesticides on Marijuana (NORML)
  • An Introduction To The Endocannabinoid System (Reset.me)
  • Tribal Nations May Want to Stash Your Marijuana Cash (TIME)
  • Marijuana Could Literally Replace These 5 Prescription Drugs (ATTN:)
  • Oregon Pot Stores Sell More Than $11 Million in First 5 Days (The New York Times)
  • This is what legalising cannabis would raise in taxes (Mirror)
  • How LEDs Are Making Weed Better (Wired)
  • Finding a Place for Cannabis Cash (Bloomberg)
  • Medical cannabis CEO says Maine could be leader in legal marijuana industry (Portland Press Herald)
  • CTU's Helen Kelly wants legal cannabis for cancer pain (Stuff.co.nz)
  • 4 Riders in Senate Appropriations Bills Support Cannabis Federalism (Reason)
  • Rep. Regan: Medical cannabis task force report being reviewed by House (York Daily Record)
  • Free-thinking Brighton wants to legalise cannabis the most - with just one Tory seat in the top 10 (Mirror)
  • Legalise cannabis debate: Only 14 out of 650 MPs take part in parliamentary discussion on drug (International Business Times)
  • SA's cannabis oil 'Robin Hood' (Independent Online)
  • Marlborough man orders cannabis online (Marlborough Express)
  • Banning cannabis has failed - now it is time for our MPs to show true courage (Mirror)
  • Marijuana recipes: How to make Cannabis Ceviche (SF Gate)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Carrying 5 or Less Ecstasy Pills Will Be Legal at ADE (Vice's Thump)
  • Amsterdam under fire over liberal ecstasy policy (NL Times)
  • Why European MDMA Looks So Much Better Than American Molly (Inverse)
  • When Are You Going To Get Your Prescription MDMA? (Gizmodo)
  • Drug smuggler tried to sneak 25,000 ecstasy tablets into Britain inside neck PILLOW (Mirror)
  • Ecstasy lab, precursor chemicals, cash discovered in Macleay Island joint police bust (ABC News)
  • Annie Lennox girl's lover drowned on drugs - EXCLUSIVE: Traces of MDMA found in his body (The Sun)
  • Hair samples shows ecstasy users more stressed (Australian Journal of Pharmacy)
  • Study Confirms That Taking MDMA or Ecstasy Directly Increases Your Stress Levels (Vice's Thump)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • When it comes to worldwide religious tolerance, DMT could be the answer (Binghamton University Pipe Dream)
  • Demystifying Ayahuasca: An Expert Guide Through the Ritual (Men's Journal)
  • Art, Ayahuasca, And Climate Change: Can We Heal Our Way Back To A Healthy Planet (Reset.me)
  • Find out what is behind Ayahuasca that natives call sacred (CCTV-America)
  • Reassessing life in deepest Peru (Cyprus Mail)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Personal Story: Ayahuasca And San Pedro Taught Me To Love Myself Again And Let Go Of The Past (Reset.me)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Salvia Divinorum

  • Tripping down memory lane with Leaves of the Virgin Mary (The Coast)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Man in critical condition after taking 'unpredictable' N-bomb (Stuff.co.nz)
  • 'Hallucinations, confusion and agitation': Police sound warning over LSD-type synthetic drug (TVNZ)
  • 'Hell of a shock': Father of drug user - The family of 20-year-old university student on life support after taking synthetic LSD had no idea the man wasn't going to his classes. (NZCity)
  • Hospital staff attacked by man who snorted dangerous synthetic drug 'blue scissors' (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • Thought ice was bad? Introducing 'Flakka' - Australia's most terrifying new drug, which turns users into 'zombies' and causes them to strip naked as their bodies overheat (Daily Mail)

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine Could Soon Be Used To Treat Depression (Inverse)
  • Ketamine Causes Long-Lasting Changes in Brain Function in Young Mice (Brain & Behavior Research Foundation)
  • Hong Kong Customs seizes about 12 kilograms of suspected ketamine at Man Kam To Control Point (7th Space Interactive)
  • High on PCP and bleeding, Jersey City man tries escaping ambulance after fight: police (NJ.com)
  • Burglary suspects caught in Southbridge with $10,000 worth of ketamine (Worcester Telegram)

Opiates/Opioids

  • How Mexican drug cartels are feeding America's deadly heroin epidemic (The Week)
  • Poppy cultivation up 50% in Mexico: DEA (Mexico News Daily)
  • Heroin crisis: presidential candidates forced to confront issue on campaign trail (The Guardian)
  • Charge heroin dealers as killers? Not so fast, law says (SI Live)
  • Heroin's Death Toll Reaches Another Gruesome Landmark (Mother Jones)
  • Government to consider giving more opium poppy cultivation licenses (The Economic Times)
  • No, you can't send a block of opium via courier. Two arrested in Richmond Hill, Ont., and 1.8kg package seized (National Post)
  • Heroin mailed in sandals brings prison for Mich. dealer (Detroit Free Press)
  • University of Kentucky training pharmacists to distribute naloxone (American Pharmacists Association)
  • $100,000 federal grant to help prevent opioid overdose deaths in WMass (Mass Live)
  • UN: Afghan Opium Production Down 48% (Voice of America)
  • Lehigh Valley police have yet to get heroin overdose antidote (The Morning Call)
  • Heroin worth over 500 million rupees seized from Jalandhar (ANI News)
  • Australia, ACT once again on an upward epidemic curve of opioid, heroin overdose (The Canberra Times)
  • Heroin Proves a Formidable Foe in Suburban Ohio County (ABC News)
  • Demand Iowa overdose legislation (Quad-City Times)
  • Grant to help Northern Berkshire group fight opioid overdoses (The Berkshire Eagle)
  • Howard awarded $50,000 to combat heroin addiction (The Baltimore Sun)
  • Heroin, pain-pill addicts face lifelong struggle (The Journal News)
  • SA to allow farmers to grow opium (Nine MSN)
  • Government mulling more licenses for opium cultivation (Business Today)
  • Heroin deaths exceed traffic fatalities in Virginia, Fredericksburg area (The Free Lance-Star)
  • Kentucky Lets Pharmacists Distribute Drug That Reverses Overdoses (Governing)

Absinthe

  • Library Goers Sample Craft Liquor at St. George Spirits Talk (Santa Clara Weekly)
  • 'The Green Hour', a Late Night Absinthe Bar, Is Coming to Germantown's Tempered European Indulgence (Eater Nashville)

Kambô

Kava

Khat

  • Bonds set for men arrested for foreign drug (WHLT22)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

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 - 10.10.15

Image by Wonderland, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Wonderland, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. After watching mycologist Paul Stamets' inspiring TED Talk presentation "6 Ways Mushrooms Can Save The World" seven years ago, I have been interested in the awesome powers of the humble mushroom, and impressed by Stamets' innovative mycelium-based techniques that clean up nuclear waste, fight pest invasions, and more. I found an article this week from Vice's Munchies that explores the new technological ability to create batteries out of portabello mushrooms that will be able to power mobile phones and electric cars. These batteries use the mushrooms in place of the synthetic graphite that usually acts as the anode component of a lithium-ion battery. The best news is that the combination of the naturally-high levels of porosity and concentration of potassium salt in the portabello leads to improved performance of the battery over time, as opposed to the way batteries typically run out of juice after a while.

2. From the Electronic Frontier Foundation:

"New law enforcement technologies are raising new questions about what civil rights abuses look like in the digital age. Historically, allegations of police misconduct were based on visible behavior: people generally know when they have been assaulted, detained unjustly, or had their property searched or seized without due process. Today, civil rights violations occur on computer screens, amplified by automated processes, or exacted invisibly and indiscriminately on large populations. These problems are exacerbated by a lack of transparency, with journalists and researchers unable to access records critical to an informed public debate.

That's where civilian oversight bodies may have a role."

With that in mind, EFF published a law enforcement technology primer for civilian oversight bodies. The primer focuses on new technologies that officers are using to spy on us, including IMSI catchers (i.e. Stingrays), automated license plate recognition, drones, and mobile biometrics. The document details methods that police are using to analyze and infiltrate online social networks, and explores emerging civil liberties issues, actions that oversight boards should take, and what questions they should ask regarding local law enforcement surveillance.

3. KrebsOnSecurity tackles the question, "What's in a boarding pass barcode?" The answer?: "A Lot". It turns out that the data stored inside a boarding pass barcode include your name, frequent flyer number, record locator, and other personally identifiable information. A nefarious person would be able to use the information to gain access to your entire account and view, change seats, and cancel future scheduled flights. I highly suggest reading the article linked above, but at any rate, your next used boarding pass should probably find its home in a document shredder rather than an airport waste bin.

4. Fans of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy may enjoy looking at the sketches that J.R.R. Tolkien used to build Middle-Earth. The accompanying article explains how Tolkien's process of drawing the story out was an important part of writing the books. Definitely worth a peek if you are a fan of his works.

5. I quite enjoyed this collection of Americans who purport to love English but have a very hard time expressing that in writing.

6. Bikram Choudhury, the millionaire (and accused serial rapist) who is best-known for making hot yoga popular in America, sued other hot yoga studios in 2003 for violating a copyright Choudhury claimed to hold regarding the sequence of poses in his class. The United States Federal Appeals Court for the 9th circuit has ruled that his copyright claim in invalid, making this classy Choudhury quote from earlier in the court proceeding even more hilarious: "I have balls like atom bombs, two of them, 100 megatons each. Nobody fucks with me." Sounds like the court system just did, buddy.

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

This Week in Psychedelics 10.9.15

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • How Marijuana Use Affects Pregnancy (ATTN:)
  • 3 Medical Marijuana Growers in Washington Get Federal Prison Terms (Reason)
  • Cannabis Coming to Uruguary Pharmacies—At Last (High Times)
  • Ohio Teen Committed Suicide After Being Accused of Smoking Pot (ATTN:)
  • Cannabis coffee shops given red light in Berlin (The Local)
  • UFC veteran Nick Diaz named guest judge for California cannabis contest (SB Nation)
  • Pot policy: Harper, Trudeau clash over marijuana legalization (CTV News)
  • Marijuana recipes: how to make a cannabis coconut mojito (SF Gate)
  • Free medical marijuana offered to victims of Northern California's Valley Fire (Boing Boing)
  • Why This Convicted Marijuana Felon Wants His Life Back (ATTN:)
  • Metro-east's medical cannabis industry set to bloom (Belleville News-Democrat)
  • Puff, pass, paint: Cannabis and creativity (Sun Times Extract)
  • Smoking cannabis daily 'IS safe when treating chronic pain - but only if you're an experienced user', study finds (Daily Mail)
  • Proposed California Marijuana Initiative Allows Cannabis Cafés (Reason)
  • Scientists Asked the Stoners: What Type of Pot Helps You Sleep Better? (Brain Decoder)
  • Cannabis 'safe to treat pain' but no proof it helps (National Health Service)
  • Seniors Turn To Cannabis For Treatment (Reset.me)
  • Here's What Marijuana Does to Your Erection (ATTN:)
  • Dried medical pot producers await approval to sell now-legal cannabis oils (CBC News)
  • Cannabis Club TV: Perfect buds of useful pot-themed programming (Los Angeles Times)
  • The Medical Minute: How Cannabis Could Help Solve The Substance Abuse Epidemic (Leafly)
  • Board rejects marijuana legalization (Daily Call)
  • New Brain Effects behind "Runner's High" (Scientific American)
  • The sweet smell of Amsterdam ... and it's not just cannabis, say odour mappers (The Guardian)
  • Tasmanian mother using medicinal cannabis to treat daughter's seizures doesn't want part in NSW trial (ABC News)
  • Group pushes for medical cannabis legalization at Mason City forum (Mason City Globe Gazette)
  • Australian girls in B.C. for cannabis oil treatment (CTV News)
  • Parents turn to cannabis oil after son's seizures (Wave3 News)

LSD

  • Documentary: President was in LSD experiment (Prague Post)
  • The Trip That Never Ended: The Really Good, the Bad and the Ugly Faces of LSD (The Daily Nexus)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Why Molly May Be More Dangerous and Deadly If You're a Woman (Vice's Broadly)
  • Parents concerned ecstasy could be disguised as Halloween candy (WREG)
  • Amsterdam Dance Event revelers warned of partying dangers (NL Times)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Personal Story: Ayahuasca Taught Me To Overcome Obstacles And Become The Mountain (Reset.me)
  • DMT: A Lost History FULL DOCUMENTARY (YouTube: Chris Rice)

Peyote/Mescaline

  • 9 Reasons to head to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico's beachy resort (The Huffington Post)
  • Two social movements your high school textbook probably missed (Daily Bruin)

Salvia Divinorum

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Synthetic Psychedelic Drug Bought Online Kills Teen - High School Senior Dies After A Painful Seizure (Inquisitr)
  • Man in critical condition after taking N-bomb (Stuff.co.nz)
  • Friendswood police warn parents about synthetic LSD (KHOU)
  • Police issue warning about synthetic LSD (KPRC Houston)
  • Albany man ordered hallucinogenic drugs from China (Albany Times Union)
  • Police warn about illegal synthetic drug (Radio New Zealand)

Dissociatives

Opiates/Opioids

Absinthe

Kava

Khat

  • Miraa yoghurt, new silk farms among top innovations at Nairobi Show (The Star)
  • Second arrest made following paraphernalia seizure (The Daily Sentinel)
  • Authorities concerned about foreign drug found in Pine Belt (WDAM-TV)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • 6,000 inmates to be freed as US eases drug sentences (Boston Globe)
  • The Mind-Bending History Of Buddhism And Psychedelics (The Huffington Post)
  • How to Make Paintings from Psychedelic Drugs (Vice's The Creators Project)
  • Benga says ecstasy, ketamine use and 'unnecessary benders' led to mental health issues (NME)
  • Not your stereotypical psychedelic drug user (Al Jazeera)
  • Ocean life or acid trip? Photos of psychedelic jellyfish (Boing Boing)
  • Steady rise in circulation of psychedelic substances (The Hindu)
  • Rebooting Psychedelic Science (Al Jazeera)
  • Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy - The Mental Health Trip of the Future? (Brain Blogger)

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 - 10.3.15

Image by Hernán Piñera, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Hernán Piñera, 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 search for extraterrestrial life is one of my favorite topics. Scientists have been attempting to find water on Mars, and this week NASA announced that evidence for liquid water on Mars has been found. That's pretty big news, because that means there could be life on Mars, and the planet could support human life in the future. 

2. Some politicians have recently proposed that beneficiaries of the social welfare system should have their names published for all to see. An article from ATTN: proposes that the government also publish the names of companies who receive monies from the corporate welfare system (the top five are McDonald's, Olive Garden, the NFL, oil companies, and agricultural companies). After all, if people want to scrutinize impoverished citizens at the lower end of the economic scale who receive help, why not also scrutinize the privileged business folk at the top who are essentially doing the same thing? 

3. When skateboarding became emerged in the 1950s, the media was confused. Ratter put together an amusing collection of newspapers that just didn't the sport at all.

4. Something that I have long held as a personal hunch, it turns out that the FBI really does have the methods to spy on any Internet activity they want to, whether it is encrypted or not. Although they may not legally be able to do so, the organization has the means to hack devices and get past the levels of encryption that provide the infrastructure for technological innovations like the Dark Web. In addition, the FBI has been pushing for the ability to install spying malware directly into operating system updates, which the article covers in detail. They are already able to decrypt our communication, and I believe that side of the war has already been won. This is why I have been arguing for a movement toward two-way transparency, rather than an insistence on personal privacy.

5. Wired has its eyes set on the future horizon in its piece about platform blogging, which they have dubbed plogging. Social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are planning to release features that will allow their users to publish long-form posts on the platforms, essentially enabling the option to blog on a social media platform. The concept is interesting, and it may just work—there are fascinating things that everyone has to share with the world, and it is easier for the average Internet user to read content produced in a social media platform feed than to go directly to a blog or news website. The tradeoff here—from what I can see—is that the content would be published on the social media platform, so the writer wouldn't have control over it the same way she would if it was published on a personal website. We'll have to see if it kicks off. Maybe it's time for more people to start thinking about the possibility of creating long-form content for other people to read?

6. The concept of universal basic income has been a fascinating and inspiring idea to me for a while, and it turns out that offering money to citizens regardless of employment is an idea that is becoming increasingly accepted by both sides of the political divide. Could it be the end to poverty that we are looking for?

7. Would you like to eat less plastic? Maybe you should reduce or eliminate your consumption of fish, since a recent study found that one-in-four fish consumed contains plastic. In addition to taking this into consideration for your own health, don't forget about the health of your extended family—your pets!

8. This most likely doesn't come as a surprise to Think Wilder readers, but it turns out that DARE—the anti-drug "educational" program—was not effective. At all. I remember receiving DARE "education" classes during my elementary schooling in the 1990s, and they fed me with undeserved fear and paranoia about all drugs that remained unchecked until the mid 2000s, during my college years. It was at that time that I learned about amazing resources like Erowid, NORML, and MAPS by listening to the Psychedelic Salon podcast. Since then, I have learned that educating myself is more fruitful and valuable than anything the establishment could ever shove down my throat. I believe that the best education for children is to be honest about the potential dangers and the potential benefits that some drugs have to offer. Outright dishonesty and political propaganda does nothing but embed a feeling of distrust in our youth. They will eventually find out that, like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny, much of the anti-drug rhetoric that is taught in schools is false. And when that happens, it is possible that they will make bad decisions—which could have been prevented with accurate information—because they assume the entire message was false.

9. Finally, local readers may enjoy this brief history of cannabis legislation in North Carolina from 1977 to 2015.

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