Weekend Thoughts - 6.11.16

Image by Bill Stilwell, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Bill Stilwell, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. This collection of interesting drug ads from a 1930s French magazine are pretty cool. The magazine, Ridendo, was a medical and humor magazine (somewhat of an odd combination) distributed to French physicians from 1933 to 1977. The content focused on jokes and cartoons about medicine and medical life, and the covers are a decent representation of French culture over the years. This selection of cover images featuring drugs is definitely worth a look.

2. Keeping with this week's art theme, check out these naked body-painted women that look like animals. They are beautiful and trippy at the same time.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.10.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Marijuana Legislation 2016: Up To 12 States Could Vote On Cannabis This November (Inquisitr)
  • As Fear and Intolerance Of Marijuana Declined, So Did Adolescent Use (Forbes)
  • Cabinet vote on decriminalizing cannabis delayed a week (The Times of Israel)
  • South Florida man creates company, car made of cannabis hemp (Local 10)
  • Poll: Majority Of Americans Say Make Marijuana Legal (NORML)
  • The Truth About Marijuana and Addiction (ATTN:)
  • Women Are Growing a More Diverse Cannabis Industry (ELLE)
  • Killer Pot? An Analysis Of The Cannabis Wrongful Death Suit In Colorado (Above The Law)
  • Canada: Rising Popularity Of Medical Cannabis Among Veterans Associated With Declining Opioid Use (NORML)
  • Survey: Pediatric Oncology Providers Favor Cannabis For Pediatric Treatment (NORML)
  • How Tommy Chong Became a Marijuana Legalization Advocate (ATTN:)
  • Cannabis Companies Under the Influencers For Advertising (Forbes)
  • Los Angeles restaurant unveils CANNABIS cocktails... and you don't need a medical marijuana card to indulge (Daily Mail)
  • Here's How Marijuana Affects Your Memory (ATTN:)
  • Study Finds Long-term Cannabis Smoking Causes Gum Disease, No Other Health Risks (Inquisitr)

LSD

  • Researcher explorers America's longest running LSD experiment (UCalgary News)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Denting The Ecstasy Myth: Doctors Weigh In After Deaths (Electronic Beats)
  • 'Stay safe, have fun': Final message from mum of tragic woman, 22, who died after 'taking  MDMA at nightclub' (The Sun)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca's Power Comes From the One-Two Punch of Anti-Depressants and DMT (Inverse)
  • Peru's ayahuasca industry booms as westerners search for alternative healing (The Guardian)
  • Legal Support for Psychedelics: ICEERS Founder Benjamin De Loenen Discusses the Ayahuasca Legal Defense Fund (Psychedelic Times)
  • We Asked a Veteran Peruvian Ayahuasca Shaman About Dumb Tourists (VICE)

Iboga/Ibogaine

  • 'Deadliest Catch' Update: Elliott Neese hints return in Season 13, undergoes Ibogaine treatment (Sportsrageous)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • How 'Spice' is Causing Health Emergencies (TIME)
  • Rye Hunt took powerful psychedelic drug NBOMe before he disappeared, family believes (ABC Online)
  • Son beat mother to death 'believing she was a witch' after taking legal high (Mirror)

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine's Effects on Depression Captures Global Media Attention (Newswire)
  • Watch Erick Morillo open up on his addiction to Ketamine (Stoney Roads)
  • Naked UGA student dives into garbage truck hopper, PCP impairment suspected (Athens Banner-Herald)
  • Defendant in PCP-possession case carries folding knife into court hearing (The Washington Post)
  • Man high on PCP during fatal hit & run sentenced (KMTV)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Prince's Death Highlights a Debate Within the Drug Treatment Community (ATTN:)
  • Why the Inventor of the Antidote Naloxone Lost His Stepson to Heroin (Newsweek)
  • The Truth Behind the Opioid Addiction Epidemic (ATTN:)
  • Fentanyl, The Drug That Killed Prince, Is 100 Times Stronger Than Heroin (SELF)
  • Are Opioids the Next Antidepressant? (The New York Times)

Absinthe

Kratom

Kava

  • Cocktails and Kava - how some New York diplomacy bought Key to Fiji strongman's table (Stuff.co.nz)

Khat

  • Somalia Agrees to Hold On Khat Ban for the Exchange of Direct Flights and Respect for Refugees (All Africa)
  • Yemeni Officials Ban Popular Narcotic (Vocativ)
  • Police confiscate khat leaf (Viet Nam News)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • The Secrets Inside 1960s Editions of the US Government's Private Drugs Newsletter (VICE)
  • Can meditation and psychedelics have the same benefits for your mind? (CNN)
  • What drugs are on the rise in Britain? (The Guardian)
  • DEA Tweet Highlights a Struggle Within the Drug Policy Community (ATTN:)
  • London Is Officially the Cocaine Capital of Europe, but There's Just One Problem (Disinfo)
  • Bay State Officials Want To Emulate the Drug War to Collect Cigarette Taxes (Reason)

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 - 6.4.16

Image by Sonny Abesamis, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Sonny Abesamis, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. More than a dozen men (thought to be neo-Nazis) stormed into a vegan cafe in Tbilsi, the capital of Georgia, shouting, smoking, and throwing meat at patrons. In many other locations around the world (and probably even other stats in the U.S.), going against any mainstream opinion (including the non-mainstream decision to be a vegan) can often be a calculated risk concerning the potential to be on the receiving end of physical violence. Although I do wish that veganism was more accepted here in North Carolina and the overall country, I am grateful that I don't have to worry (all that much) about being physically attacked for my choice to abstain from consuming/using animal products.

2. If humans were to disappear from Earth, what would happen to the planet? Traces of our existence would start to vanish fairly quickly. Within 24-48 hours power will be out pretty much everywhere. After 72 hours, all of the world's subways would flood. One year later, satellites in space will fall into the atmosphere, looking like shooting stars that packs of wild dogs will see. 25 years later, streets will be reclaimed by vegetation growing underneath the pavement, the air will be cleaner, and nature will have taken back mostly everything we've built over it. 500 years later, there will be no trace of modern cities. 300 million years later, there will be no trace of us at all. The visiting aliens at that time will have no idea we were ever here. For more detail, photographs, videos, and animated GIFs that depict this process, check out what Earth will look like millions of years after humans.

3. As a rabid fan of Alice in Wonderland, I really enjoyed this brief compilation of the various ways that people have interpreted the book: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Many ideas have circulated over the years about what the book is about—drugs, sex, religion, politics, colonialism, etc. It's possible that there is a mixture of all of these involved, as far as I am concerned. Regardless of any allegorical hidden meanings behind the book, it's an excellent read, Disney's 1951 film adaptation is superb, the 2010 version with Johnny Depp was pretty good, and you should probably check all of it out if you haven't already.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 6.3.16

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Colombia Close to Legalizing Medical Cannabis (Leafly)
  • We Spoke with the People Trying To Stop Marijuana Reform (ATTN:)
  • "Cannavaping" Could Be an Efficient and Safe Way to Deliver Medical Cannabis (The Science Explorer)
  • 2 Rare, Heartwarming Video Clips of Terence McKenna Smoking Cannabis and Taking it Easy (High Existence)
  • Cannabis on tribal land a '50/50' gamble for Native Americans in Washington (The Guardian)
  • International law allows for the legalization of cannabis (Science Daily)
  • I Only Ate Cannabis-Infused Foods for Two Days. Here's What Happened (Willamette Week)
  • Cannabis Saved My Life – Depression (Reset.me)
  • Why Cannabis-Growing Techniques Differ So Much Between the U.S. and Europe (Leafly)
  • Industrial cannabis activists showcase their cause with 'all hemp' luncheon (The Washington Times)
  • New York's Cannabis Growers Lobby for More Medical Patients (High Times)
  • What happens when you get stoned every day for 20 years (The Independent)
  • San Francisco Gym Focuses on Using Cannabis to Enhance Fitness (The Marijuana Times)
  • How Does Cannabis Consumption Affect Insomnia? (Leafly)
  • State investigates $500,000 in missing medical marijuana oil (Minneapolis Star Tribune)
  • Indoor vs. Outdoor Cannabis Growing: 3 Key Differences (Leafly)

LSD

  • Investigating the Urban Legend That LSD Will Make You Think You're Orange Juice (Complex)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Severe Depression Treatment: Magic Mushrooms Found To Be Effective? (Info-Europa)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Science Explains What Molly Does to Your Sex Life (Mic)
  • Ecstasy in comeback as new generation discovers dance drug (The Guardian)
  • European Partiers Got Smart, Ditched Bad Ecstasy for Pure MDMA (Inverse)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Exploring the Sacred Power of 5 MeO DMT: Podcast with Dr. Gerardo Sandoval (Psychedelic Times)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Eagles' Debut: Don Henley on How Peyote, the Occult Shaped Hit LP (Rolling Stone)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • A Deadly New Hallucinogen Is Being Peddled On The Street As LSD (Digg)

Dissociatives

  • Ketamine could treat chronic pain (SBS)
  • Meta-analysis shows ketamine effective against persistent post-surgical pain (Medical Xpress)
  • New Mesa clinic offers alternative therapy for pain, depression (East Valley Tribune)
  • Man High on PCP Acts Erratically, Stabs Man, San Diego Police Say (Patch)
  • Police: Woman on PCP bit teenager, resisted arrest (Bryan-College Station Eagle)

Opiates/Opioids

  • FDA OKs first implant treatment for opioid addiction (Engadget)
  • Burmese Opium Farmers Protest Eradication (High Times)
  • CVS Health will expand access to naloxone in seven more states (American Pharmacists Association)
  • CU Boulder study: Narcotic painkillers cause chronic pain (The Denver Post)
  • Prince Reportedly Died from a Fentanyl Overdose (ATTN:)
  • Taliban instability could fuel opium trade (OODA Loop)
  • Heroin being laced with drug 100 times more powerful than morphine (FOX 8)
  • Why it's easier to be prescribed an opioid painkiller than the treatment for opioid addiction (Disinformation)
  • The One Paragraph That Prompted an Opioid Epidemic (ATTN:)

Kratom

  • Kratom, the Herb of Last Resort for Recovering Addicts, Is in Legal Trouble (Gizmodo)
  • The Best Type of Kratom for Opiate Withdrawal (Kratom Project)
  • How Long Does Kratom Last? (Kratom Revealed)

Khat

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • New British Law Makes Psychoactive Substances Presumptively Illegal (Reason)
  • Combating the War on Drugs Around the World with Harm Reduction Education and Policy (Psychedelic Times)
  • Two New Psychedelic Films That Will Open Your Mind To Plant Medicines (Collective Evolution)
  • The New and Ancient Psychedelic Revolution: Preparing the Way for the New Story of Humanity (Psychedelic Times)
  • TripSit Factsheets now use PsychonautWiki's Subjective Effects Index (TripSit.me)
  • Psychedelic Honey from Nepal Proved to be 'Healing' (Nature World News)
  • I Took LSD, Coke, and Edibles on the Job to See How They'd Affect My Work (VICE)

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 - 5.28.16

Image by sirmichael, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by sirmichael, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Google is hard at work on a research project that is setting out to find an answer to the question—can computers can be truly creative? The project is called Magenta (a branch of the overall Google Brain Team), and it is an attempt to find out if artificial intelligence systems can be taught to create original music, art, or video. Although it's a bit away yet, the real test will be if AI will be able to create art that humans will find enjoyable. One application for computer-generated music would be a system that takes a person's heartbeat and generates music that fits the situation. So for example, a system could produce fast-tempo upbeat music for exercise, and slow ambient sounds when it is time to decompress after work or go to sleep. To me, this begs the question—if, in the future, artificial intelligence is able to accomplish much of the work currently done by humans as well as provide enjoyable entertainment, what will become of us?

2. Beijing has developed an innovative solution to tackle its legendary traffic jams—an elevated bus that drives above other vehicles on the road. Watching it is fairly awesome, to say the least. If this form of public transportation is implemented across China (not to mention other countries), it would potentially alleviate congestion and reduce pollution in the world's most populous country. Implementing this form of transportation in the United States would be another story, because it would require uniform street width, vehicle size limitations, and the discipline for drivers to stay in their lanes at all times. However, it's worth checking out. I mean, just look at it!  

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