Weekend Thoughts - 1.16.16

Image by Dennis Jarvis, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dennis Jarvis, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Did you know that some states still allow corporal punishment in their public schools? That's right—Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas still allow teachers to spank and paddle their students. In six of those seven states, black students account for 90 percent of in-school corporal punishment cases. To be sure, there has been a significant decline in the use of corporal punishment in public schools over the past 30 years. And for good reason too—psychologists agree that beating students does more than just harm students physically. It leaves psychological scars that can affect children for the rest of their lives. "Students who are witnesses or victims of such abuse can develop low self-esteem, magnified guilt feelings, and various anxiety symptoms; such results can have baneful results in the psychological and educational development of these students," a 2010 study from Michigan State University found. "[These students] very likely will learn techniques that actually lead to reduced self-control, with negative behavior characterized by more acting out, school absence, malingering, recidivism, and overt academic revocation." In fact, both the American Academy of Pediatrics and United Nations have opposed the practice, stating unequivocally that corporal punishment does more harm than good. However, even in our supposedly civilized age, some (primarily black) students in America continue to be beaten by school staff legally.

2. What should we do to address the issue of corrupt police? Create crime-fighting robots, of course!  In fact, as of last week, the residents of Silicon Valley have been the first to experience new police robots actively on patrol. Benefits include lower pay compared to human police officers (a mere $6.25 per hour, a rate which can continue to decrease, rather than needing to increase due to inflation and cost of living raises), less living beings placed in harm's way due to the fallibility of human judgment and emotional outbreaks, and less disgruntled, unintelligent idiots with power! Sounds like an excellent solution to me—impartiality with respect to crime definitely would appear to be an improvement over our current situation.

3. Speaking of police, new software has been adopted by police in San Fresno, California that automatically scans social media posts and calculates a "threat score", which is supposedly helpful for police arriving on a scene to identify potentially-dangerous individuals. However, the software is essentially looking for flagged keywords and phrases, which doesn't take into account the context of the original post. For example, someone might post the lyrics to a violent song, quote another individual ironically, or post the title of a violent book or movie. Other opponents assert that the software is unfairly targeting political activists, such as the Black Lives Matter movement, by actively flagging terms like "Mike Brown", "We organize", "Don't shoot", and "It's time for a change". How ironic (albeit simultaneously disheartening, frightening, and disgusting) is it that in the future, someone could be at increased risk for being shot by police because they have tweeted "Don't shoot!" in the past?!

4. Ross Ulbricht, the alleged founder "Dread Pirate Roberts" of the underground marketplace Silk Road, has filed an appeal after being sentenced to more than two life sentences. His defense asserts that during his original trial, he was denied his fifth and sixth amendment rights to due process, the right to present a defense, and a fair trial by:

  1. Precluding the defense from using at trial the evidence relating to DEA Special Agent Carl Force's corruption.
  2. Refusing to order the government to provide additional discovery and Brady Material regarding corruption.
  3. Denying Ulbricht's motion for a new trial based on additional post-trial disclosures regarding Force and another corrupt law enforcement agent involved in the Silk Road investigation.

I wish Ulbricht the best in his fight against the government. If you would like to learn more about him, Silk Road, and how his trial was rigged by the authorities, I encourage you to check out Free Ross Ulbricht.

5. It turns out that members of Congress are not completely in favor of being spied on by the NSA, either. However, it took them finding out that they are also under surveillance to start giving a shit. Now it looks like some reforms will be made, specifically to limit the power of the NSA to spy on Congress—not to address the spying issue as a whole.

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

Book Review - How to Read a Book

HowToReadABook.jpg

Reading is something many people find valuable, whether it be for recreation or education—most people in today's world know how to read. Loads of people are likely satisfied with their current reading abilities, and perhaps even more do not have any intention to increase the amount of reading nor the intensify the difficulty of the books that they choose to read. In fact, many people have the ability to read but simply choose to not exercise it. However, for those of us who enjoy reading and wish to improve our reading skills, I cannot recommend How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading highly enough.

The book was originally published in 1940, and the most recent edition was published (with updated and timely content) in 1972. It aims to provide a guide for comprehensive reading for the general reader—"from elementary reading, through systematic skimming and inspectional reading, to speed reading. You learn how to pigeonhole a book, X-ray it, extract the author's message, criticize. You are taught the different reading techniques for reading practical books, imaginative literature, plays, poetry, history, science and mathematics, philosophy and social science." (From the publisher's blurb.)

The authors, Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren, introduce the concept of four levels of reading: elementary reading, inspectional reading, analytical reading, and syntopical reading. The levels are cumulative, which means that each gradation includes the techniques and skills of the lower levels.

Elementary reading is essentially the baseline ability to read that is taught at the pre-school/kindergarten, elementary and junior high school levels. These reading skills include reading readiness, word mastery, vocabulary growth and the utilization of context, and the ability to read almost anything (albeit in a relatively unsophisticated manner). This is the level of reading that perhaps the majority of the population has achieved. What is truly outstanding about reading is that once one has developed the elementary reading skills, she can teach herself to learn the skills involved with the higher levels of reading.

Inspectional reading involves two main concepts: systematic skimming or pre-reading, and superficial reading. Skimming or pre-reading involves looking at a book's title page, preface, table of contents, index, publisher's blurb, apparently-pivotal chapters, and true skimming of its content. Superficial reading is comprised of trudging through a book's content in its entirety for the first time, without ever stopping to look up or ponder the things that one does not understand right away. At this point in reading a book, one should start asking herself the four basic questions of reading:

  1. What is the book about as a whole?

  2. What is being said in detail, and how?

  3. Is the book true, in whole or part?

  4. What of it?

These questions are thoroughly fleshed out in the book, and I do not wish to focus too much on them in this review. It would be much better for you to check out this book for yourself, although I must warn you that to read it honestly is more like working through a workbook than an easy read. It takes a fair amount of effort on the part of the reader, but she is handsomely rewarded at the end of her journey.

Moving on, the book discusses note-taking techniques, which were very lacking in my own personal wheelhouse—it had been since my days at university that I regularly took notes in books, and even then, I didn't have an efficient education that demonstrated how to mark a book so that I would increase my level of understanding and retention. However, How to Read a Book certainly fills in where my formal education was lacking in this department. Even this brief section alone was worth reading the entire book, for me.

The next section of the book—the main bulk of it, in fact—covers the third level of reading: analytical reading. This part is incredibly valuable for readers wishing to improve their overall skill set, including full chapters on the following topics: pigeonholing a book, X-raying a book, coming to terms with an author, determining an author's message, criticizing a book fairly, agreeing or disagreeing with an author, and aids to reading. Again, I do not intend this review to fully explore the book's contents, and will leave it at that.

Following the section covering analytical reading, the authors explore another tangent: the various ways to approach different types of reading matter. From practical books to imaginative literature, history to science and mathematics, and a few more, this section adapts the four questions that must be asked when reading anything so that they are more applicable to specific types of reading. It was quite interesting for me to consider various types of books and reflect on my reading history and consider what I would truly like to spend my time reading in the future. The final chapter in this section discussed the reading of social science, which often requires reading multiple books about a topic. Because that is essentially the concept behind syntopical reading, it serves as a perfect segue into the next section of the book.

The final section of the book, "The Ultimate Goals of Reading", focuses on syntopical reading and the concept of reading and the growth of the mind. Syntopical reading is truly an interesting concept for me. It involves creating a tentative bibliography (generally including hundreds of books) of a central subject, quickly inspecting each book, re-inspecting all of the books that are specifically pertinent to the topic to identify the relevant passages within, creating a neutral terminology that can be used to discuss the opinions of multiple authors, establishing a set of neutral propositions by framing a set of questions to ask each author, defining the major and minor issues and assigning authors to the various sides of each issue, and providing an analysis of the discussion of the topic. This is a highly-advanced level of reading that one would embark on to do true work in a field, with the hope of providing an unheard analysis of a topic's discussion that many authors have participated in over time. It is possible that one's syntopical reading of a topic could culminate in a book that would push the discussion of a topic even further—in fact, this is indeed often the ultimate goal. The final chapter of the book offers a recap of the previous sections and discusses what good books can do for us, the various classes of books (with regard to what one can get out of reading and re-reading them), and the growth of the mind.

There are two appendices included, the first being an extremely valuable "Recommended Reading List". I must admit that this list makes my mouth salivate in anticipation of many more years of reading excellent books and the possibility of furthering my personal reading ability. The second appendix includes exercises and tests at the various four levels of reading. This is the one section of the book that I have yet to read—I may choose to explore these exercises in the future, although it will involve reading several other books from the aforementioned reading list, so it is likely to be a longterm project.

Overall, this is one of the best books I have read in the past several years. I am confident that the advice contained within it will help me improve my reading skills while simultaneously increasing the level of enjoyment that I get out of my reading practice. I must admit that when I first started reading the book, I was a bit disappointed that it is heavily biased toward non-fiction reading, when in the past I have reaped so much enjoyment from reading fiction. However, the skills that I have learned from How to Read a Book will only serve to improve my relation to non-fiction books, something that has been somewhat lacking for me previously. This is one book that I do plan on working with further in the future, whether it is simply picking it up from time to time to skim through the notes I took on its pages, choosing my next book from its impressive reading list, or working through the second appendix's reading exercises and tests. 

5/5 stars. 424 pages.

Click here to buy the book.

Disclaimer: Think Wilder is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com. I may earn a small commission for my endorsement, recommendation, testimonial, and/or link to any products or services from this website.

This Week in Psychedelics - 1.15.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Cigarettes Linked to Lower Grades in Adolescents, Not Cannabis (High Times)
  • Study Concludes Biking While High on Marijuana Isn't Dangerous (Marijuana.com)
  • Yes, pot is stronger today, but not for the reasons you think (Los Angeles Times)
  • After Healing His Own Cancer with Cannabis, Self-Taught Doctor Helped over 5000 Patients (Anti Media)
  • Will 2016 Be the Year of Cannabis? (The Huffington Post)
  • The Head of the Democratic Party is a Huge Hypocrite on Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • An inside look at the ritziest weed parties in America (The Cannabist)
  • Study: Marijuana Associated With Decreased Migraine Frequency (NORML)
  • Less is More: Medical Cannabis Micro-Dosing (Reset.me)
  • NORML's Legislative Round Up January 14th, 2016 (NORML)
  • How Cannabis Can Help You Cut Back on Alcohol and Live Healthier (Leafly)
  • Serial entrepreneur Mark Hadfield sets his sites on medical cannabis with HelloMD (San Francisco Business Times)
  • Israeli Health Ministry Plans to Lift Restrictions on Growing Medical Cannabis (Haaretz)
  • Smugglers disguise marijuana as carrots (Boing Boing)
  • Dad pushes for medical cannabis to help autistic son (NBC4i)
  • Anti-Legalization Lawsuit Shows Conservative Constitutionalists Have Marijuana-Related Memory Loss (Reason)
  • Study: Cannabis Use Not Predictive Of Lower IQ, Poorer Education Performance (NORML)
  • Windy City Cannabis Set to Open Medical Marijuana Dispensary in Justice (Patch)
  • These Oregon Cities Have Banned Cannabis (Leafly)
  • Medical Marijuana Seller Faces Prison in Washington, Where Pot Is Legal (Reason)
  • Jail for man who grew £12k of cannabis at home (The Gazette)

LSD

  • How Taking Acid Helped Me Stop Smoking (Newsweek)
  • Five Facts Besides Steve Jobs and Bill Gates that You Didn't know About LSD (Clapway)
  • Family sues over Tennessee man's death in police custody (Centre Daily Times)
  • Forbes endorses LSD: Is the end near? (SFGate)
  • Camp Lejeune Marine charged with trafficking Ecstasy, LSD (Stars and Stripes)
  • Teen who used LSD to sexually assault victim sentenced to prison (Petoskey News-Review)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • '4-hour Workweek' author Tim Ferriss plans to donate $100,000 toward studying how to treat depression with psychedelics like magic mushrooms (Yahoo! News)
  • Psilocybin Mushrooms Gave Me The Insight I Needed To Ease My Chronic Depression (Reset.me)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • The Creativity of MDMA Pill Pressing (Magnetic Magazine)
  • How Reversing Drug Stigmas Can Save Lives: Interview with MDMA: The Movie Director Emmanuel Sferios (Psychedelic Times)
  • Kids Company psychologist pleads to keep job after giving MDMA to client (The Guardian)
  • Rikers Island Jail Fairly Confident Its Missing Ecstasy Pills Are Gone For Good (Gawker)
  • Red Wolf, Cookie Monster and Facebook: How 'killer' ecstasy pills are flooding UK streets (Daily Star)
  • Ingleside man gets 6 years for providing Ecstasy before woman's death (Chicago Tribune)
  • Give Me Your Love – ingenious PTSD play boxes itself in (The Guardian)
  • Johor police bust Ecstasy drug lab (The New Paper)
  • MDMA discovered in glasses case of Barnstaple man (North Devon Journal)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca And Cancer: One Man's Healing Experience (Reset.me)
  • Sacred Plants: In Praise of Wildflowers and Ayahuasca (Tablet Magazine)
  • How A Spiritual Practice Supports Ayahuasca in Personal Healing (Reset.me)
  • The Canadian Man Who Killed a British Guy at an Ayahuasca Retreat in Peru Speaks Out (VICE)
  • Pope Francis Reveals White Smoke At Papal Conclave Is Actually DMT (Wunderground)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Ayahuasca & Huachuma: One Person's Account Of Their Experience (Neon Nettle)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Salvia Divinorum

Dissociatives

  • WHO Opposes Chinese Request to Restrict Access to Ketamine (Psychiatry Advisor)
  • FDA and Congress should let doctors, patients take K train (The Register-Herald)
  • CBS News Features Dr. Ashraf Hanna Describing How IV Ketamine is Successfully Treating Fibromyalgia Pain Patients (PR Newswire)
  • The novel ketamine analog methoxetamine produces dissociative-like behavior in rodents. (National Institutes of Health)
  • New type of antidepressant found to act quickly in mice (EurekAlert!)
  • We're Entering A New Era In How We Treat Depression (Newsy)
  • Chemical fights thoughts of suicide (The Australian)
  • PCP seized from vehicle, two arrested (Your4State)
  • Police seize 25kg of drugs worth HK$6.25 million at private Hong Kong housing estate (South China Morning Post)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Anatomy Of Addiction: How Heroin And Opioids Hijack the Brain (NPR)
  • Did Painkiller Crackdown Cause Heroin Epidemic? (WebMD)
  • Delhi sees sharp rise in seizure of opium, poppy heads (The Statesman)
  • Panel recommends FDA approve implant to treat opiate addiction (USA Today)
  • Heroin Is the Worst Thing to Ever Happen to Me, and I've Never Touched It (The Huffington Post)
  • Naloxone overdose antidote should be available over the counter, Health Canada says (CBC News)
  • Heroin laced with pesticide making way through N.J. (NJ.com)
  • Sailor held with 52kg opium denies drug charges (Gulf News)

Absinthe

  • Get out with the Green Fairy: Where to Drink Absinthe in the Bay Area (7x7)

Kratom

Kava

Khat

  • Illegal 'miraa' farming blamed for poor student performance (IPPmedia)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • DanceSafe Founder Emmanuel Sferios Discusses Harm Reduction and Festival Drug Testing (Psychedelic Times)
  • Drug Cartel Kingpin 'El Chapo' Guzman Recaptured in Mexico (ATTN:)
  • Baltimore psychologist pioneers team using psychedelics as 'sacred' medicine (The Guardian)
  • 20 Safety Suggestions for Participating in Ceremonies That Use Psychoactive Substances (Reality Sandwich)
  • Everything You Wanted To Know About Microdosing (But Were Afraid To Ask)
  • David Bowie's Infamous Mugshot Is Indicative of Early 'War on Drugs' (ATTN:)
  • How Long Drugs Stay in Your System (ATTN:)
  • What is Psychedelic Therapy? How Visionary Plants and Other Psychedelics Give Hope to the Weary (Psychedelic Times)
  • How a psychedelic sex GIF animator went viral after getting banned on Facebook (Boing Boing)
  • How the Mexican Drug Trade First Began (TIME)
  • Psychedelic Spiritual Experience—An Integral View (Reality Sandwich)
  • 5 books that bust the myths of drug writing (Boing Boing)
  • The band of psychiatrists who are looking to reclaim psychedelics for medicine again (Medical Xpress)
  • Androgyny and psychedelic make-up: David Bowie's impact on fashion can't be overstated (The Telegraph)
  • How the War on Drugs Came Between the U.S. and Mexico (TIME)
  • Bruce's History Lessons: The father of '60s drug culture (Appeal-Democrat)

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 - 1.9.16

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.