Weekend Thoughts - 1.9.16

Image by Alice Popkorn, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Alice Popkorn, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Are all stories in existence essentially the same story, retold over and over again? Lincoln Michel at Electric Lit doesn't think so, and has a thought-provoking article that explains why he thinks the "one underlying substance of all story structure" models are bullshit. His argument seems to boil down to this: overgeneralized story models are essentially worthless. They do not serve anyone or anything, and to make matters worse, they're incorrect. He believes that the "everything is a remix" mindset is incorrect. Definitely worth perusing and analyzing some of your favorite stories.

2. I was pretty much blown away by the quality of the Behind the Lens: 2015 Year in Photographs compilation from the Official White House photographers. It's definitely worth looking through, to see what President Obama, his family, and other White House staff and politicians were up to last year.

3. An article detailing the issues with open office workspaces details what I have found to be true from working in open offices—feelings of isolation, increased levels of distraction, more sick days, etc. It's definitely a trend in workspace design recently, from what I can see. And although younger people are supposedly less susceptible to the negative aspects of open offices, they are not entirely immune.

4. If you have some extra time on your hands this weekend (or during the next workweek), check out this Design A Wig app. Apparently, customized, expensive wigs were quite an hit in the 18th century. Now you can try your hand at building your own ridiculous (or beautiful) wig for free!

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 1.8.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • The Federal Ban on Medical Marijuana Was Not Lifted (Reason)
  • Marijuana Legalization in U.S. Cuts Mexican Pot Profits by 70 Percent (Breitbart News)
  • Canada and Mexico Must Prove Case With United Nations Before Legalizing Marijuana (High Times)
  • How Does Depression Impact Your Sex Life, and Can Cannabis Help? (Leafly)
  • Drug Investigator Caught Smuggling $2 Million Worth of Pot (TIME)
  • Study: Consumers Infrequently Combine Marijuana And Alcohol (NORML)
  • Sister Act-ivists: Cannabis-growing 'nuns' campaign to save their crop (RT)
  • First Medical Marijuana Dispensaries in New York Are Poised to Open (The New York Times)
  • Cannabis Industry Working to Become More Energy Efficient (High Times)
  • Dog Sniffs Out $400,000 Worth of Marijuana Hidden In Broccoli Shipment (TIME)
  • Georgia Lawmaker Files Medical Cannabis Cultivation Bill (Fox 5)
  • NY Patients Can Now Register For Medical Marijuana Program, But Good Luck Finding A Recommendation (Reset.me)
  • Cannabis church holds job fair for medical marijuana industry (News3LV)
  • The Benefits Of Medical Cannabis: An Interview With Dr. Allan Frankel (Reset.me)
  • Mental Health Practitioner says marijuana helps symptoms of PTSD (KOB4)
  • 'Cannabis for kids' legislation filed (Indianapolis Star)
  • Judge Dismisses Lawsuit by Credit Union Trying to Serve the Marijuana Industry (Reason)
  • Colorado Celebrates Pot Legalization Anniversary: Massive Drop in Arrests and Millions in Revenue (Truthout)
  • Ben Carson Wants Rescheduling but Not Marijuana Legalization (ATTN:)
  • World Famous Cannabis Cafe stays open despite new clean air provisions (The Oregonian)
  • New PSA urges action on growing medical marijuana in-state (11 Alive)
  • Cannabis Credit Union Loses Case Against Fed Reserve Bank (Forbes)
  • Calm Down, East Coast: Cannabis "Shatter" Media Coverage Woefully Overstates Its Dangers (Leafly)
  • A Look at Georgia's Proposed Medical Marijuana Law and How Things Will Change if it is Passed (GeorgiaCannabis)
  • All Smoke Is Not Created Equal (NORML)
  • Inside NYC's First Medical Marijuana Dispensary (Gothamist)
  • 10 Ways to Use Cannabis for Better Health in the New Year (High Times)
  • How I Recovered From A Head Injury With The Help Of Cannabis Oil (Reset.me)
  • Alaska Groups Give Free Cannabis to Severely Ill and Veterans (High Times)
  • Continuing Efforts to Legalize Marijuana Lounges in DC (Marijuana.com)
  • An Australian Family Rents an Airbnb That Turns Out to Be a Drug Den (TIME)
  • One Mom's Race to Legalize Medical Cannabis in Her State and Potentially Save Her Daughter's Life (AlterNet)
  • NORML's Legislative Roundup January 8th, 2016 (NORML)
  • Mexican Marijuana Farmers Are Losing Profits in Light of U.S. Legalization (ATTN:)
  • Canada Needs Permission From International Treaties to Legalize Marijuana, Says New PM Justin Trudeau (Reason)
  • Despite Tight Timeline, New York's Medical Cannabis Industry Launches on Schedule (Marijuana Business Daily)
  • Trudeau Warned That Marijuana Legalization Would Violate Global Treaties (Right Relevance)
  • Step inside New York City's marijuana black market in the era of legalization (Crain's New York Business)
  • These Nuns Are Growing Marijuana for the Best Reason (ATTN:)
  • Christmas Island medical cannabis plan: community expresses concern (The Sydney Morning Herald)
  • How cannabis farms are becoming the criminals' drug trade of choice (Liverpool Echo)
  • The Best Cannabis Strains for Wintertime Activities (Leafly)
  • Police: Fire in Berlin flat uncovers 160 cannabis plants (News24)

LSD

  • The man who took LSD – and didn't come down for 30 years (Metro)
  • First LSD scene in cinema, the Tingler 1959 (The Daily Psychedelic Video)
  • Hashish trail leads Delhi cops to international LSD cartel (The Economic Times)
  • Man Arrested After Police Says He Was Attempting To Sell LSD (WBIW)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • What's Actually in the Ecstasy Sold in Your Country (ATTN:)
  • How MDMA Affects the Brain (ATTN:)
  • Five U.K. Ravers Hospitalized After Taking Lethal Ecstasy Pills (Your EDM)
  • Kids Company psychologist admits taking MDMA while with vulnerable children (ITV News)
  • Agony and ecstasy: the war veterans trying MDMA treatment (The Guardian)
  • Field Day Sydney: Party girl out of danger after suspected drug overdose (The Daily Telegraph)
  • Ecstasy coma girl Amy Thomson battles through severe pain as she tries to walk again (Scottish Daily Record)
  • Mum of Ecstasy teenager who died after New Year's Eve party said he'd never done drugs before (Mirror)
  • Friends of MDMA death teenager took his friends to hospital bed (STV)
  • Man, 36, arrested in Darwin after police uncover ecstasy parcel (NT News)
  • Ecstasy teen's death second tragedy for friends two years after pal killed in bus accident (Mirror)
  • Teenager, 16, left brain damaged after taking just one Ecstasy pill takes first painful steps out of her wheelchair (Daily Mail)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • An Interview with Maxwell Wieland: The Power of the Psychedelic San Pedro Cactus and Wachuma (Psychedelic Times)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • ISIS Terrorists Did Not Take Captagon or Any Other Drugs Before the Paris Attacks (Reason)
  • 'Liquid ecstasy' drug hospitalizes two people in Auckland brothel incident (AucklandNOW)
  • Kennewick man gets 8-month sentence for mailing psychedelic drug to friend (Tri-City Herald)

Dissociatives

  • WHO Opposes Global Control of Ketamine (The Horse)
  • The Club Drug Ketamine Might Be the Ultimate Anti-Depressant (Inverse)
  • How Ketamine Infusions Saved My Life (Motherboard)
  • Woman Shares Her Experience Undergoing Ketamine Injections for Depression (MSN)
  • Police: One man accused of nudity, another had suspected PCP (NWI Times)
  • Police: Man high on PCP caused crash on I-70, fought troopers at hospital (Frederick News Post)
  • DRI busts party drug factory; seizes contraband worth Rs 2.5 cr (The Chandigarh Tribune)
  • Thatcham man's face was caked in ketamine, court told (Newbury Today)
  • Can Ketamine Injections Cure Treatment-Resistant Depression? (MSN)

Opiates/Opioids

  • This Drug Can Reverse Heroin Overdoses – & It's Now Over The Counter (Refinery29)
  • Republicans in Congress ended the decades-long funding ban on needle exchange programs (Vox)
  • Heroin-related deaths were 'still rampant' during 2015 (Reading Eagle)
  • 'Hollywood' heroin is a lethal batch (Boston Herald)
  • Could accused "Hollywood" heroin dealers face manslaughter charges? (WWLP)
  • How to Survive the Heroin Epidemic (The Daily Beast)
  • Florida Man Delivers Heroin-Stuffed Burrito to Hospital (Eater)
  • Police investigating heroin death of 1-year old girl in Provo (KSL)
  • Maine governor blames heroin epidemic on men named 'D-Money,' claims his theory has nothing to do with race (New York Daily News)
  • Vancouver opium dealer sentenced to three years in prison (The Georgia Straight)
  • After Decades, Congress Effectively Lifts Ban On Federally Funded Needle Exchanges (BuzzFeed News)

Absinthe

  • Absinthe now available at P.E.I. distillery for adventurous drinkers (CBC)

Kratom

  • Kratom, an Addict's Alternative, Is Found to Be Addictive Itself (The New York Times)
  • Why Do We Use Kratom? Kratom Effects at Higher and Lower Doses (Kratom Guides)
  • Heroin Addicts are Flocking to Controversial Treatment (ATTN:)
  • A Testimonial about Kratom (Cato Institute)
  • US Marshals seize dietary supplements containing kratom (FDA)
  • People are flocking to Florida bars for a legal but dangerous drug (Business Insider)
  • Popular Legal High Kratom Helps Addicts Treat One Addiction By Replacing It With Another (Medical Daily)
  • Kratom, legal in Texas, seized by feds in Illinois (KXAN)
  • The government just seized 90,000 bottles of a supplement containing a legal heroin-like drug (Business Insider)
  • Choice for addicts can supply aid, and typically a relapse (The Times)
  • Boyer to New York Times: Beware of kratom (News from the University of Massachusetts)
  • Bali Kratom – A Wonderful Mental Strain (Kratom Guides)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • How the DEA Profits off the War on Drugs (ATTN:)
  • The most convincing argument for legalizing LSD, shrooms, and other psychedelics (Vox)
  • Surgeon General Announces Review of Federal Drug Policies (Marijuana.com)
  • 7 of 2015's Most Outrageous Killings by the Drug War Police (AlterNet)
  • More Than 47,000 Americans Died of Drug Overdose in 2014, Setting Record (Partnership for Drug-Free Kids)
  • Drugs policies and electronic music culture (Resident Advisor)
  • Mexico's drug war reverses trend of rising male life expectancy, study finds (The Guardian)
  • How to Make Drug Taking Better in 2016 (VICE)
  • Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results... (Ukiah Community Blog)
  • Yale Medical School Professors Are Starting a Psychedelic Meetup (Motherboard)
  • Psychoactive Soundscapes: The Trippiest Albums of 2015 (Disinformation)
  • Should Tea Leaves Give Probable Cause for Drug Raids? (Reason)
  • Illicit drugs work better with classical (San Diego Reader)
  • New psychedelic science group forms at Yale (Yale School of Medicine)
  • Drug Paraphernalia Laws in the U.S. (ATTN:)
  • GAO: Army should monitor PTSD prescriptions more carefully (Stars and Stripes)
  • Jeb Bush Pens an Emotional Essay on His Family's Struggle With Drug Addiction (TIME)
  • A Book of Art and Essays Explores Psychedelics as a Spiritual Technology (Hyperallergic)
  • Psychedelic Spiritual Experience—An Integral View (Reality Sandwich)
  • William A Richards, Sacred Knowledge: 'Turn on, tune in, see God', book review (The Independent)
  • Visit to Godenholm by Ernst Jünger: A Story of Esoteric Psychedelic Initiation involving Albert Hofmann (Psychedelic Press 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 (and other psychoactives) are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Weekend Thoughts - 1.2.16

Image by Wayne S. Grazio, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Wayne S. Grazio, 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 about how used bookstores are making a comeback across the country, despite fierce competition from websites like Amazon. There are several factors that come into play here. Many book lovers enjoy browsing a physical store and serendipitously finding the perfect match for them, rather than shopping for books online. The profit margins on used books are better than new ones. And even the latest generation of kids born directly into the digital age has found reading books printed on paper to be preferable to reading them on a screen. All around, this is great news for print books, which are one of my favorite physical media (and pretty much the only one I collect any longer). Go visit a used bookstore today and be sure to support your local shops!

2. One of my favorite food documentaries, Food Inc., was recommended in an article on High Existence. The film covers various aspects of the overall food industry, including the inhumane treatment of animals, the economic and environmental repercussions of our current industrial production model that is used to grow vegetables and grains, and how the industry's economic and legal forces actually encourage an unhealthy diet. I would definitely give the film a strong recommendation—check it out if you are able!

3. It turns out that the NSA is not only surveilling American citizens, it has also been spying on members of Congress and Jewish American groups, according to an article published by The Wall Street Journal. To make matters worse, the security administration blatantly lied to Congress when directly asked about this accusation in 2014 by current presidential candidate Bernie Sanders.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 1.1.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • A Look Back at 2015; and Ahead to 2016 (NORML)
  • Marijuana Legalization 2016: Which States Will Consider Cannabis This Year? (International Business Times)
  • Best Marijuana Moments of 2015 (ATTN:)
  • California Gets Ready for Legal Marijuana (Reason)
  • FDA Weighs in on Rescheduling Cannabis (Leafly)
  • The 10 States Where It's Easiest to Get Weed (ATTN:)
  • Exchanging Pot Brownies for 'Donations' Is Still a Crime in D.C. (Reason)
  • Parents find success treating kids' epilepsy, autism with cannabis oil (Vancouver Sun)
  • Colorado Cannabis Credit Union Demands Access to the Federal Reserve System (Reason)
  • Nonprofit gives out A THOUSAND free joints to homeless stoners for Christmas in Denver (Daily Mail)
  • Kosher Marijuana: New York Company Says Medical Cannabis Conforms To Jewish Dietary Law (International Business Times)
  • Congress Did Not Legalize Medical Marijuana (Reason)
  • Should Grandma Smoke Pot? (Reset.me)
  • 2015: The Year In Review – NORML's Top 10 Events That Shaped Marijuana Policy (NORML)
  • Crossing the green line: The first cannabis company on Wall Street (The Telegraph)
  • Colorado Settlement Suggests RICO Nuisance Suits Will Hinder Legal Pot Industry (Reason)
  • Colleges Ease Athlete Punishments for Cannabis (Leafly)
  • Now You Can Buy Kosher Marijuana (TIME)
  • The Difference Between Indica and Sativa (ATTN:)
  • 5 Ways Cannabis Creams Help You Chill (Civilized)
  • After 6 months, stakeholders assess Minnesota medical cannabis program (Twin Cities)
  • Indoor farming: Good for cannabis, not so good for food (Gigaom)
  • Six Resolutions for the Cannabis Community in the New Year (Willamette Week)
  • Cannabis Can Gives Free Pot to the Homeless on Christmas Eve (Westword)
  • Mentor Capital Has Five Best Congressional Cannabis Resolutions (Business Wire)
  • NORML's Weekly Legislative Round Up (NORML)
  • World's first kosher cannabis will let Jewish people enjoy medical marijuana (Mirror)
  • Doctors urge cannabis caution for children with chronic diseases (The Vancouver Sun)
  • Summer sun prompts police warning about cannabis growers (Manawatu Standard)
  • Latest: Trio charged for possession of over $10M worth of cannabis (Antigua Observer)
  • ChocoHigh! Chocolate with cannabis goes on sale in Siberia for $3 a bar (RT)
  • Boy, eight, 'kept locked in a tiny shed on illegal cannabis farm was left there forgotten for THREE WEEKS with just chips and a box of muesli bars' (Daily Mail)

LSD

  • Animator dropped acid while creating 'Return of the Jedi' (New York Post)
  • An Interview with the Author of Psychedelic Psychiatry: LSD From Clinic to Campus (Slice Today)
  • Oscar-winning Star Wars animator admits he took LSD while working on 'Return Of The Jedi' (Raw Story)
  • Phil Tippet Took LSD While Animating 'Return of the Jedi' (Inverse)
  • A 'Star Wars' Animator Admits He Took LSD While Working On 'Return Of The Jedi' (Maxim)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Ask the Lawyer: Drug penalties depend on what member knows about drug (Military Times)
  • Five youths rushed to hospital after taking ecstasy at Aberdeenshire house party (Press and Journal)
  • MDMA warning to Southport's clubbers (Southport Visiter)
  • Nigerian Sentenced To Death For Drugs Smuggling In Malaysia (NAIJ)
  • 16-year-old using a wheelchair after taking Ecstasy (The San Fransisco Globe)
  • Teen accused of intending to supply ecstasy at Field Day music festival granted strict bail (Courier Mail)
  • The new party drug threat you NEED to know about (LOOK)
  • Police issue warning amid fears of dangerous batch of ecstasy (The Independent)
  • Teenager charged over supplying ecstasy at Boxing Day races at Broadmeadow (Newcastle Herald)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca: a Possible Cure for Alcoholism and Depression (Motherboard)
  • Effects of Long-Term Ayahuasca Administration on Memory and Anxiety in Rats (PLoS)
  • Portland Fuckboy in Band Called 'Black Pussy' Says Psychedelic Drug DMT Will Cure 'PC Culture' (The Muse)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine To Be Helpful in Depression And Overeating (Capitalberg)
  • Rat Study IDs Brain Circuit Activated By Ketamine (PsychCentral)
  • An Anthem for Ketamine (EMSWorld)
  • Why overeating tends to make us depressed (Free Malaysia Today)
  • Man on PCP gets on KCATA bus, says he's been shot (KMBC)
  • Ketamine May Aid Antidepressant Development (Pharmacy Times)
  • Ketamine worth Rs 2.5 crore seized in Bhiwadi factory raid (The Times of India)
  • Vet office burglarized for second time in month (Daily Journal)
  • Powerful anesthetic drugs stolen in Indiana animal hospital burglaries (WTTV)

Opiates/Opioids

  • FDA Comments on Nasal Naloxone Dose Concerns (MedPage Today)
  • Good and Bad News on the Heroin Front (Patch)
  • Heroin for the Holidays (Reason)
  • Portraits Of Those Killed By Heroin Bring Healing And Awareness (NPR)
  • Law freeing drug antidote for public use has saved hundreds of lives (The News & Observer)
  • Cape Cod: America's Heroin Hot Spot (The Daily Beast)
  • 'I have been reborn': Recovering young addict offers hope to others (Today)
  • HBO's 'Heroin' Is a Harrowing, Necessary Documentary About Addicted Teens (Flavorwire)
  • Fentanyl suspected cause of dozens of overdoses in BC (The Globe and Mail)

Absinthe

  • Five things you thought you knew about absinthe (Los Angeles Times)
  • Vom Fass sells absinthe, liqueurs and flavored oils on the Plaza (The Pitch)

Kratom

  • Rapid Use of Kratom in Western Countries (Kratom Guides)
  • Kratom Being an 'Organic' Opiate Withdrawal Solution – 100% Works (Kratom Guides)

Kava

Khat

  • Tanzania: Police Destroy Khat Farms in Operation (All Africa)
  • Bids to smuggle khat, marijuana foiled; five persons arrested (Muscat Daily)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • The Year's Best Drug Scares (Reason)
  • Music Fesivals, Drugs And Pill Testing (The Huffington Post)
  • The best psychedelic videos of 2015 (The Daily Psychedelic Video)
  • The Puzzling Persistence of Pee Tests (Reason)
  • Beyond Zero and One: Machines, Psychedelics, and Consciousness by Andrew Smart review - inside the minds of computers (The Guardian)
  • Toad venom on filmmaker's menu (Echo Net Daily)
  • Skateboarders and Artists Totally Flipped an Abandoned Church Into a Psychedelic Skatepark (RYOT)
  • Psychedelic Themed Nintendo is The New Trend (Clapway)
  • Why NASA released this psychedelic, technicolor video of Pluto (The Washington Post)
  • See: NASA's New Horizons paints Pluto in psychedelic Christmas colors (IBNLive)
  • NASA releases psychedelic new footage of Pluto, capture by New Horizons (Blastr)

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 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!