Weekend Thoughts - 2.25.17

Image by Andrea Kirkby, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Andrea Kirkby, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Possibly the biggest news of the week originated 40 light years away: NASA announced the discovery of seven Earth-sized planets orbiting closely around an ultra-cool star that has been named TRAPPIST-1 (the clever domain name trappist.one was created specifically for this star system). Although the discovery of TRAPPIST-1 was announced last year, at that time only three planets had been located. Three of the seven planets are found within the star's habitable zone, which means that there could be oceans on those planets' surfaces. However, the scientists do not have concrete evidence of that at this time. Thus, the search for life outside our own solar system continues...

2. I found this history of bar stools to be an interesting read. I've never thought too much about it, aside from being annoyed when attempting to order a drink at the bar and finding myself surrounded by other people, sitting on the stools and taking up the space I need to place my order. I never considered the possibility of a stool-less bar, but as someone who almost never opts to sit directly in front of the bar on one, the idea is definitely appealing.

3. If you've ever wondered what a "brain scan" of an AI brain would look like, wonder no further! The images that the artificial intelligence are truly stunning in their similarity to the way flesh brains look, and slightly psychedelic as well.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 2.24.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • White House Promises 'Greater Enforcement' of Federal Marijuana Laws (TIME)
  • Washington may have finally found bipartisan consensus with Congressional Cannabis Caucus (Salon)
  • Polling: Voters Support Marijuana Law Reform By Record Numbers (NORML)
  • Most Republicans Oppose Federal Interference With Marijuana Legalization (Reason)
  • When Retirement Comes With a Daily Dose of Cannabis (The New York Times)
  • Australia Loosens Cannabis Import Rules to Speed Patient Access (Leafly)
  • Dutch Lawmakers Extend Tolerance Policy to Cannabis Cultivation (Leafly)
  • Houston D.A. Will No Longer Prosecute Pot Cases, Outraging Other Prosecutors (Reason)
  • Understanding the Intersection of Poverty and Access to Medical Marijuana (Psychedelic Times)
  • Which Teens Are Most Likely to Smoke Pot? The Smart Ones, Study Finds (TIME)
  • How a Federal Crackdown on Marijuana Could Affect Mexican Cartels (ATTN:)
  • The Future of Designer Cannabis: Interview with Josh of Level Blends (Psychedelic Times)
  • Which U.S. Presidents Would Have Tried Cannabis? (Leafly)
  • Irvine-Based Lawyer Discusses History of Cannabis and How It'll Effect Employment In The Future (OC Weekly)
  • Colorado's First Drive-Through Cannabis Shop Will Open Next Month (Leafly)
  • Microdosing with Cannabis (Psychedelic Press UK)
  • Cleveland's Cannabis College Is Here to Train Ohio's Next Medical Marijuana Professionals (Merry Jane)
  • What Researchers Found in California's Marijuana (ATTN:)
  • How and where to attend cannabis-infused dinners (and a cooking class) in Los Angeles (Los Angeles Times)
  • The Weed You're Smoking Might Not Be What You Think (ATTN:)
  • Texas Has a Medical Cannabis 'Prescription' Problem (Leafly)

LSD

  • Microdosing LSD: Author Ayelet Waldman 'finds insight' through drug experiment (ABC)
  • LSD gets stuck in your brain — literally. This could help us develop better (health) drugs (ZME Science)
  • Acid Flashbacks (VolteFace)
  • LSD 'microdosing' trend popular with tech entrepreneurs may be putting their lives at risk, claim Cambridge University students (Daily Mail)
  • 'I was given LSD at 14': Inside Australia's notorious cult The Family where children were drugged and brainwashed to believe their female leader was Jesus Christ (Daily Mail)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Teen Dies of MDMA Overdose After Fear of Sniffer Dogs Finding Her Pills (Noiseporn)
  • Crime lord offered to kill drug dealers who sold ecstasy to teenager Leah Betts (Mirror)
  • Driver took MDMA and crashed into 12 cars (ITV)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Ayahuasca, meditation and activism: On cultivating the mindful politics of love (Salon)
  • Powerful hallucinogenic drug DMT seized by police in New Glasgow (CBC News)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Stephen Colbert tells Alex Jones to stop 'mixing steroids with peyote' (Monsters & Critics)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • N-bomb inquest told young people need drug education (The Irish Times)
  • Man charged in Prince Albert after six people hospitalized following apparent overdoses of psychedelic drug 2C-B (Saskatoon StarPhoenix)
  • Daniel Horton from London drowned on holiday in Liskeard after taking what he thought was LSD (Cornwall Live)
  • Woman fighting for her life after taking 'bad batch of MDMA' – a month after 20 partygoers were hospitalised with similar drug (Daily Mail)

Dissociatives

  • A New Treatment for Depression Could Help Millions of Americans (Digital Journal)
  • New antidepressant works on mice in hours, not weeks (Knowridge Science Report)
  • RESTORE KETAMINE INFUSION: The New Treatment for Depression That Works in Hours is Now Available in Pensacola Florida (MENAFN)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Psychedelics Help Reduce Opioid Addiction, According to New Study (AlterNet)
  • Seattle Is Taking a Big Step in the Fight Against Opioid Addiction (ATTN:)
  • 25% of all overdoses are from heroin (CNN)
  • How Doctors Are Fueling the Opioid Epidemic (TIME)
  • Teens Say Heroin Is 'Probably Impossible' to Get (Live Science)
  • America's Opium War: How Fentanyl Will Lead All Overdose Deaths in 2017 (Paste)
  • China White, Mexico's New Heroin Threatening the United States (InSight Crime)
  • The War That Made Asia: How the Opium War Crushed China (The National Interest)
  • Naloxone: How it saves lives by reversing the effects of opioids (Ottawa Citizen)
  • Bloodletting, voodoo and opium: New Orleans museum spotlights medical methods of the past (The Washington Post)
  • What's Disappearing from Veteran's Hospitals Is Alarming (ATTN:)
  • Mexican Heroin Cartel Operating in North Carolina (CNS News)
  • First 'End Heroin' walk happening in Birmingham this weekend (AL.com)
  • Legislators Who Supported Criminal Justice Reform Now Sponsoring Tougher Heroin Bills (Reason)
  • Where does heroin come from? (Asbury Park Press)

Kava

Khat

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • Is Eating Hallucinogenic Himalayan Honey A Good Idea? (The Alternative Daily)
  • Understanding How Psychedelics Therapy Uses Rebirth to Treat Psychological Disorders (Psychedelic Times)
  • Photographers in the Philippines Recall Harrowing Scenes of the Drug War (TIME)
  • Psychedelic therapy gains traction as evidence based treatment for IPV (Blasting News)

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 are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Weekend Thoughts - 2.18.17

Image by Lisa Norwood, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Lisa Norwood, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. As automation and artificial intelligence continue to replace human workers in various industries, we can expect robots to be doing more and more of the jobs that we have always had people do. Now that news-writing bots are already part of journalism, it's possible that Think Wilder may eventually replace me with a bot. You'll know the switch has happened when articles come out faster, contain more accurate information, and have a better personality. Stay tuned!

2. So what are we going to do as a society to transition into a world where the robots perform so many tasks that large swaths of the country are unemployed? Bill Gates thinks that we should force companies using robots to pay a robot tax, which would slow down the process while still allowing for innovation. It's an interesting concept, and not one that I had come across previously. My first reaction was "Why would we want to slow down innovation in the first place?", but as I thought about it, I realized that we don't have anything in place to deal with the near-sudden widespread unemployment that automation is going to cause. I'm not sure that this is the best way to tackle the problem, but it's a proposition worth considering, and one that may not have been made by anyone other than Gates at this time.

3. Leaving and re-entering the country just got a lot more complicated. Customs Border Patrol has begun asking U.S. citizens re-entering America to hand over their devices and in some cases, passwords to their social media accounts. If you're planning to leave the country (and come back) anytime soon, especially if you are visiting China or Russia during your trip, it would be well worth your while to read through the article linked above for advice on how to get past Customs without giving up your most sensitive information.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 2.17.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Ireland to legalise cannabis for medicinal purposes (The Independent)
  • So We Have Attorney General Sessions – What's Next For Marijuana? (NORML)
  • Iowa State University's NORML Chapter Fought Back – and Won – in the 8th Circuit Court (NORML)
  • Cannabis and Legalization: A Practical Guide to Using Marijuana For Therapeutic Purposes (Psychedelic Times)
  • Ganja Could Be Legalised In The Future According To Drugs Suppression Police (Buriram Times)
  • NORML Forms Multi-State Workplace Drug Testing Coalition (NORML)
  • Washington State Destroys 2000 Cannabis Plants and Clones Over $29,000 Tax Delinquency (New Cannabis Ventures)
  • Colorado Releases First-of-Its-Kind Guide to Cannabis Worker Rights, Safety (Leafly)
  • A Catapult on the Mexico Border Was Used to Hurl Drugs Into U.S. (TIME)
  • Colorado Governor Talks Cannabis Colleges in California Capitol (Leafly)
  • Georgia senators to work to slash THC potency in medical cannabis (Online Athens)
  • Leafly Investigation: California Has a Dirty Cannabis Problem (Leafly)
  • Cannabis Isn't Making You Lazy, Your Bad Habits Are (Leafly)
  • Cannabis bouquet delivery service (Boing Boing)
  • Swedish patients given cannabis for chronic pain (The Local)
  • Pop Music and Cannabis: A Romance That Began in the 1930s (Leafly)
  • UK set for cannabis boom as GW Pharma storms ahead (The Telegraph)
  • Los Angeles may finally get cannabis right, and help minorities get a stake in the industry (Los Angeles Times)
  • New Luxury Cannabis Brand Brings Haute High To Consumers (Yahoo! Finance)

LSD

  • A neuroscientist explains why Donald Trump needs LSD (Raw Story)
  • The Incredible Story of Albert Hofmann and the Birth of LSD (Merry Jane)
  • LSD to Cure Depression? Not So Fast (The New York Times)
  • Bill Gates once coyly defended LSD use by saying 'I never missed a day of work' (Business Insider)
  • LSD 'microdosing' is trending in Silicon Valley – but can it actually make you more creative? (The Conversation)
  • Misadventures In Tuning In: Considering The Limits Of Music, LSD And Science (NPR)
  • Mick Jagger 'bought country estate while high on LSD' (The Telegraph)
  • Legalize LSD – Drug policy should draw from science instead of culture (Argonaut)
  • Inside the bizarre 1960s cult, The Family; LSD, yoga and UFOs (The Guardian)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Marriage Is Driving Some To Drugs And It May Not Be A Bad Thing (The Huffington Post)
  • Leaked Police Memo Reveals What Was In Melbourne's Deadly MDMA (EDM Tunes)
  • Two Lovers, Two Doses of MDMA (Inverse)
  • Enough chemicals to make one billion ecstasy pills were seized in the Netherlands (The Outline)
  • Ecstasy and other recreational stimulants tied to heart damage: study (The Globe and Mail)
  • Drug-dealing teenager who supplied MDMA that killed schoolgirl at music festival walks FREE from court (Mirror)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • The Spiritual and Therapeutic Benefits of Icaros Songs in an Ayahuasca Ceremony (Psychedelic Times)
  • Could The Psychedelic Drug Ayahuasca Cure Depression? (MSN)
  • Re-reading Ayahuasca: Cultural complexities of the vine unpicked (Psychedelic Press UK)
  • Uncommon hallucinogen DMT believed to have been found in Leask (CBC News)

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

Iboga/Ibogaine

Dissociatives

  • Taking party drug before combat could reduce PTSD in armed forces, study suggests (Plymouth Herald)
  • Ketamine as Preventative PTSD Drug for Troops Headed Into Battle? Not So Fast (Seeker)
  • More Than a Pound of PCP Seized During Federal Drug Interdiction Investigation (United States Department of Justice)
  • Mother of Terence Crutcher's children arrested after car wreck (Tulsa World)
  • Man On PCP Burglarizes Takoma Park Home: Police (Takoma Park Patch)

Opiates/Opioids

  • Proposed bill could charge heroin dealers with murder (KTVB)
  • Rite Aid expands naloxone non-prescription availability in six states (Drug Store News)
  • When failed drug war meets failed real war (Personal Liberty Digest)

Kratom

Kava

Khat

  • Banned Khat drug 'pushed underground' in Wales, users say (BBC)
  • Experts settle the debate on Miraa and bedroom matters (Tuko.co.ke)
  • Tanzania: Army Man in Police Hands for Transporting Khat (allAfrica)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • The Loudest Critic of Duterte's War on Drugs Is Preparing for Arrest (TIME)
  • Four Ways to Access Psychedelic Therapy Without Using Illegal Substances (Psychedelic Times)
  • Alcohol leads to more violence than other drugs, but you'd never know from the headlines (The Conversation)
  • Psychedelics a Viable Therapeutic Option for Depression (Psychiatry Advisor)
  • Psychedelic Advocacy and The Reality of Truth: Interview with Mike "Zappy" Zapolin (Psychedelic Times)

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 are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Weekend Thoughts - 2.11.17

Image by Tom Conger, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Tom Conger, 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 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) spent $1 billion in 2013 on "behavioral detection" training for its agents to more effectively spot potential terrorists by keeping an eye out for a list of "tells" that included things like "a bobbing Adam's apple", "arriving late", "trembling", "yawning", and "being in disguise". The ACLU sued the agency to force it to reveal its internal documents on the program, and even the Government Accounting Office claimed that it was psuedoscience. This week, the ACLU's lawsuit has resulted in a ton of documents confirming that the TSA intentionally racially profiles and otherwise harasses people while using "behavioral detection" as an excuse for doing so. This, combined with the fact that the acting director of the TSA was reassigned in 2015 after agents failed to detect explosives and weapons 95% of the time begs the question—are we really benefitting enough from this security theater that we should allow the agency to continue, or would we be better off shutting them down altogether?

2. Wikipedia has decided to ban the Daily Mail as a source for the encyclopedia's articles in all but "exceptional circumstances" due to the publication's repeated unreliability. Wikipedia's editors cite "Daily Mail's reputation for poor fact checking, sensationalism and flat-out fabrication" as reasons for not allowing its articles to be used as sources for the site's articles. As someone who reads the Daily Mail fairly regularly to find examples of how mainstream media covers the topic of psychedelics inaccurately, I can definitely agree that most of the articles I read seem are more on the side of "tabloid" than "legitimate news". In my opinion, Wikipedia is making the right move here.

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