us border patrol

Weekend Thoughts - 1.13.18

Image by Engin_Akyurt, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Engin_Akyurt, 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 U.S. Customs and Border Protection searched 60 percent more electronic devices in 2017 than it did during the previous year. That has led to concern from privacy advocates who worry that the rise in searches may indicate something nefarious about the administration's stance on immigration and surveillance. However, the good news to come out of this is that customs agents will now need to have "reasonable suspicion" before they can perform a thorough search on devices. The real question now though is, "What constitutes reasonable suspicion?" It's quite possible that even with this change, the number of searches will not decrease in the near future.

2. President Trump has signed an executive order that could make it easier for Internet Service Providers to install high-speed broadband networks in rural areas. This move may help bring reliable and powerful Internet access to these areas, where 39 percent of people do not have access to broadband speeds. However, Trump's latest order will not offer any federal funding to promote broadband in those areas; instead it will expedite federal permitting requirements, which theoretically would make it easier for broadband companies to install and operate wireless towers. And of course he had to follow up this move by saying, "Those towers are going to go up, and you're going to have great, great broadband."

3. The concept of humans having sex with robots is still fairly new (and foreign) to most people, but the technology continues to get more sophisticated and advanced as time marches on. It's worth thinking about the pros and cons of sex robots and how it may affect individuals as well as the species as a whole. All in all, this is a fascinating area of technology that has several layers of complexity, and you may find it worth learning about while it is still relatively unknown to the general public.

4. Brick-and-mortar stores have been having a tough time competing against online retailers recently, and some have begun to turn to automation technology solutions to replace human workers. Think of the self checkout register, for example. Now a six-foot tall robot that is capable of moving about a store, performing inventory tasks for its employer, is beginning to make its way to stores. This machine is able to take photographs of store shelves and determine when items need to be restocked—a job that is still done by a human. For the time being, anyway. So when you see a towering robot in your local brick-and-mortar store, it's probably wise to leave it alone and let it do its job.

5. And for one last piece of news, also related to automation technology—GM plans to release a car without a steering wheel or pedals in 2019. In fact, the car will not have any manual controls or buttons for the passengers (remember, there is no human driver in this vehicle!) to push at all. This release will be dependent on whether or not the U.S. Department of Transportation approves some regulation, but it is exciting to think that there might be a fully autonomous consumer-grade vehicle on the road just next year.

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

This Week in Psychedelics - 9.1.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Cannabis Shows Promise In Treating Schizophrenia And Tourette Syndrome (Forbes)
  • Green gold: how China quietly grew into a cannabis superpower (South China Morning Post)
  • Colorado's Governor Sets Jeff Sessions Straight on Marijuana Legalization (Reason)
  • FDA Seeking Public Comments On CBD (NORML)
  • Lagunitas Unleashes New IPA Made With Cannabis (Eater)
  • American Legion Resolves In Support Of Expanding Veterans' Access to Medicinal Cannabis (NORML)
  • Researcher Says V.A. Obstruction Jeopardizes Study of Marijuana As PTSD Treatment (Reason)
  • 'Snoop & Martha' Earns the First-Ever Cannabis Industry Emmy Nomination (Leafly)
  • AAA Is Doubling Down On Their Marijuana Distortions (NORML)
  • Cannabis Industry Weekly Recap (Forbes)
  • How budtenders help customers pick the right cannabis (The Seattle Times)
  • Congressman O'Rourke Introduces Amendment To End Arbitrary License Suspensions (NORML)
  • Man protests at court over pot, bong seizure (The Record)
  • Is Cannabis a 'Gateway Drug'? (Leafly)
  • American Cannabis Company, Inc. Announces 2017 Mid-Year Review and Shareholder Update (American Cannabis Company)
  • Cannabis Entrepreneurs Offer Advice On Where To Jump In (Forbes)
  • School Is In—Cannabis School, That Is (The Portland Mercury)
  • Cannabis website Herb raises $4.1M (TechCrunch)
  • Coolest Travel Jobs: What It's Like to Own a Cannabis Tour Company (AFAR)
  • Time to Leave Las Vegas, Gaming Commish Tells Cannabis Trade Shows (Leafly)
  • Clinical Cannabis Treatment for Trauma (Viceland)
  • California Gets Into the Weeds of Pot Marketing (U.S. News & World Report)
  • Baltimore City Council weighs concerns about cannabis dispensaries (The Baltimore Sun)
  • Cannabis 101: SR 260 cultivation facility grows 60-plus strains of medical marijuana (Verde Independent)
  • Cannabis medicines firm GW Pharma plans UK expansion (The Telegraph)
  • Bianca Jagger To Receive Second Annual Michael J. Kennedy Social Justice Award (NORML)
  • Last Week In Cannabis—Five Marijuana Stories You Might Have Missed (Psychedelic Times)

LSD

  • First-Look Trailer: Errol Morris Explores CIA's Secret LSD Experiments in Netflix Doc (The Hollywood Reporter)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Will California Become The First State To Decriminalize Psychedelic Mushrooms? (HuffPost)
  • The case to legalize magic mushrooms (IOL)
  • Magic enzymes in 'magic' mushrooms analyzed (Science Daily)
  • Magic Mushrooms Break on Through to Biosynthetic Reality (Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News)
  • I Tried Psychedelic Therapy to Help Get Over My Father's Death (VICE)
  • My experience with mushrooms was an epiphany. There's never been a need to revisit that depth of consciousness. (Psymposia)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • FDA Designates MDMA As 'Breakthrough Therapy' For Post-Traumatic Stress (Forbes)
  • Some Brave Soul Tried 26k Ecstasy Pills From Around The World (EDM Tunes)
  • MDMA could help save your marriage (Metro)
  • Final phase trials for MDMA-assisted psychotherapy to treat PTSD (New Atlas)
  • Trump-Branded Ecstasy Tablets Seized By Cops – Make Partying Great Again? (Inquisitr)
  • Several hospitalised over 'potentially lethal' MDMA (Metro)
  • Dad of daughter who died after taking single 'MDMA' pill says family released tear-jerking video to stop others making the same mistake (The Sun)
  • New Westminster police make arrest after girl dies of MDMA overdose (Vancouver Sun)

Ayahuasca/DMT

Peyote/San Pedro/Mescaline

  • Peyote Is A Hallucinogenic Astral Experience You Can Find In Your Backyard (Konbini)
  • Uneasy alliance — Native Americans and the Summer of Love (Canton Daily Ledger)

Iboga/Ibogaine

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Jail bosses own up over Spice 'zombie' drug epidemic as fumes land another SIX guards in hospital (Daily Record)
  • AG Schneiderman announces legal action against local synthetic drug sellers (Watertown Daily Times)

Dissociatives

Opiates/Opioids

  • A New Vaccine Could Make The Brain Immune to Heroin and Opioids, Scientists Say (Science Alert)
  • Because Of The Drug War, There Is Virtually No Heroin Without Fentanyl In Many Places (HuffPost)
  • Could a heroin vaccine cure the west's drug epidemic (The Guardian)
  • U.S. Opioid Deaths Nearly Doubled Since 2009 (TIME)
  • New Study Finds Heroin Users Less Likely to Overdose If They Know What Drugs They're Actually Taking (Reason)
  • Heroin deaths skyrocket nationwide; prescription drugs are big problem in Oregon (The Oregonian)
  • Seattle Ballot Initiative Would Block Safe Drug Injection Centers (Reason)
  • For Trump, Opioids Are Still Not a Crisis (TIME)
  • Afghanistan and the CIA Heroin Ratline (Sputnik International)
  • Baltimore health clinic offers naloxone training to combat opioid epidemic (The Washington Times)
  • How this Catholic saint might be the patron of opioid addicts (Catholic News Agency)
  • The Heroin and Opioid Crisis Is Real (Urban Milwaukee)
  • New Family Pharmacy Hosting Narcan Training Day (The Newtown Bee)

Absinthe

  • Filming an Absinthe Haze (Reason)

Kratom

  • Energy drink manufacturers behind kratom ban? (The Nation)
  • How To Grow A Kratom Tree From Seeds? (Kratom Guides)
  • The List of 5 Best Kratom Strains Available in the US Today (Kratom Guides)
  • A Response to the Dean of Students Email on Kratom Abuse (The George-Anne)
  • The 5 Natural and Legal Painkillers Similar to Kratom (Kratom Guides)

Kava

Khat

  • Yemeni left Switzerland to help addicts quit 'Khat' (Al Arabiya)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • MAPS Now Accepts Bitcoin—Plus, Other Ways You Can Support Psychedelic Research (Psychedelic Times)
  • The Middle Age Trip: Musings on Midlife Psychedelic Use and Psychotherapy with Neal M. Goldsmith, Ph.D. (Psychedelic Times)
  • Depression Cure? Could Psychedelic Drugs Like Special K, LSD, And Psilocybin Mushrooms Be An Answer? (Inquisitr)
  • Decoding the Tripping Brain (The Scientist)
  • World's largest honey bee makes rare hallucinogenic honey (Mother Nature Network)
  • 5 Common Beliefs About Psychedelics That Are Total Bullshit (High Existence)
  • Sugar is as addictive as cocaine, study (Blasting News)
  • Border Patrol Sets Up Immigration Checkpoint in New Hampshire; Makes Nearly Twice as Many Drug Arrests (Reason)
  • The coming revolution in psychedelic medicine (Red Dirt Report)

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.

This Week in Psychedelics - 8.18.17

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Dahtamnay, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Cannabis

  • Marijuana politics emerge as 2020 flash point (Politico)
  • Medical Marijuana Research Act of 2017 (NORML)
  • The Federal Government Is Finally Exploring Marijuana As a Medical Alternative to Opioids (Reason)
  • Does Anti-Pot Prejudice Explain NRA's Reluctance to Condemn Philando Castile Shooting? (Reason)
  • Medical cannabis giants eye UK for next 'green rush' ahead of the industry's first conference in London (The Telegraph)
  • SMART Bill Reintroduced in Congress (NORML)
  • Three men jailed for turning nuclear bunker into £2m-a-year cannabis factory (The Independent)
  • How Liquor Companies Screwed Up Pot Legalization in Nevada (Reason)
  • Washington State Responds To Attorney General Sessions' Veiled Threats (NORML)
  • Arkansas Has Received Zero Applications to Grow or Dispense Medical Cannabis (Leafly)
  • What Every Cannabis Entrepreneur Needs to Understand About the Cole Memo (Entrepreneur)
  • This Cannabis-Infused Meal Box Wants to Be the New Blue Apron (Leafly)
  • Governors Challenge Jeff Sessions' Tendentious Questions About Legal Pot (Reason)
  • Nevada Judge Clears Way for More Cannabis Licenses (Leafly)
  • L.A. City Council approves new Cannabis Department Head (Los Angeles Times)
  • Cleansing With Cannabis: 4 Ways to Treat Tension With THC (Leafly)
  • Holy smoke! The church of cannabis (The Guardian)
  • At This LA Rehab Center, Cannabis Is an 'Exit' Drug (Leafly)
  • California finds 'pot of gold' in wine and weed (CNBC)
  • Utah Launches Medical Cannabis Drive (Leafly)
  • Peachtree NORML Challenges the Faith and Freedom Coalition (NORML)
  • Smoking Versus Edibles (The Atlantic)
  • How to Corner Your Bowl of Cannabis (Leafly)
  • Why marijuana isn't just 'cannabis' (The Oregonian)
  • How and When to Flush Cannabis Plants (Leafly)
  • Little evidence shows cannabis helps chronic pain or PTSD (Fox News)

LSD

  • Acid redux: My long, strange, cancer-fighting trip back to tripping (Salon)

Psilocybin/Magic Mushrooms

  • Scientific Discovery Could Lead to Mass-Produced Magic Mushroom Drug (Daily Beast)
  • Magic mushrooms and the roots of witchcraft (The Spectator)
  • Spores in Space: These Mushroom Trips Last Light-Years (Dope Magazine)
  • Psilocybin mushrooms got rid of my anxiety and depression (Psymposia)

MDMA/Ecstasy

  • Studies Show Only 40.5% Of Pills Sold In UK Contain MDMA, 34.7% Of MDMA Pure In US (Your EDM)
  • Father who lost two sons to MDMA says drug should be legalised (Metro)
  • Police say blue Tesla 'ecstasy' pills could contain meth and cocaine (Mixmag)

Ayahuasca/DMT

  • Of Molecules and Minds: The Science of Ayahuasca (Psymposia)
  • Soldiers of the Vine: Healing PTSD with Ayahuasca (Psychedelic Times)
  • What Does It Actually Feel Like To Take DMT? (The Debrief)
  • Dutch addiction experts warn of dangers of 'trippy tea' (The Irish Times)

Synthetic Cannabinoids/Psychoactive Research Chemicals

  • Experts warn of fairly new drug that mimics LSD (KSBY)

Dissociatives

  • Fast forward to pain free: Ketamine Infusion Therapy changes lives in the community (WOODTV)
  • Springfield murder defendant testifies he was too high on PCP-laced pot to understand his rights (MassLive.com)
  • Man high on PCP crashes van, shoots at random cars in Cleveland, police say (Cleveland.com)

Opiates/Opioids

  • The Justice Department Wants to Put Small-Time Fentanyl Dealers in Federal Prison (Reason)
  • The New Alcohol Epidemic Kills More Than Two and a Half Times as Many People as The Opioid Epidemic (Disinfo)
  • New York becomes first state to cover co-pays for Naloxone (WHAM)
  • Heroin Death Rate Among Teenagers Rises As Heroin Use Falls (Reason)
  • Trump's Opioid Emergency Response (Reason)
  • China-US Cooperation and the New Opium War (The Diplomat)

Kratom

  • What Is The Difference Between Slow, Moderate, And Fast Kratom (Kratom Guides)

Kava

  • Fijians consumed $140M worth of kava last year (Fiji Village)
  • Kava bar ban in Lighthouse Point faces new legal challenge (Sun Sentinel)

Miscellaneous Psychedelics/Psychoactives/Drug Policy

  • The foundation of Western philosophy is probably rooted in psychedelics (Quartz)
  • A Researcher Wants to Test the Effects of Microdosing on Cognitive Ability and Productivity (Futurism)
  • Woman Banned from US After Border Agent Finds Proof of Drug Use on Phone (VICE)
  • Police Can Hurt Dark Net Drug Rings by Leaving Dealers Bad Reviews, Study Suggests (Motherboard)
  • Most Drug Expiration Dates Are Bogus, and the FDA Knows It (Reason)
  • Philippines Sees the Bloodiest Night of Duterte's Drug War With 32 Killed in Raids (TIME)
  • Illinois Democrat Says Elect Him Governor and He'll Commute All Low-Level Drug Sentences (The Intercept)
  • Shane Mauss Brings Psychedelic-Comedy Show A GOOD TRIP to Australia this October (Broadway World)
  • From Blackhawk Pilot to Plant Medicine Activist: A Conversation with Ian Benouis (Psychedelic Times)
  • Music For Mystery: A Discussion with Psychedelic Futurist Michael Garfield (Reality Sandwich)
  • Why Shamanic Practices Are Making a Comeback in Contemporary Art (Artsy)
  • How Heartbreak and Psychedelic Drugs Brought Shakey Graves to the World (Riverfront Times)
  • Texas Cops Spent 11 Minutes Searching a Woman's Vagina, Found No Drugs (Reason)
  • This Philosopher Thinks Psychedelic Drugs Lead to the Truth of Experience (Big Think)
  • Could religions have originated under the influence? (Los Angeles Times)
  • Iran Parliament Edges Towards Softening Drug Laws to Curb Executions (U.S. News & World Report)
  • Could psychedelic drugs be the ticket to improved mental health? (Cosmos)

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 - 8.12.17

Image by Pedro Travassos, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Pedro Travassos, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. Although the general consensus in the tech community supports the idea that autonomous vehicles will eventually largely replace human-operated ones, so far humans are still able to see the world better than self-driving cars. As of right now, autonomous vehicles are probably better than inexperienced, tired, drunk, visually-impaired, or elderly human drivers, but they're no match for competent and experienced drivers. A big factor in that equation is the current state of these cars' sensors, which are still quite limited. However, self-driving cars already have human-operated vehicles beat in scenarios like driving in the dark or in situations that test reaction time. Ultimately though, autonomous vehicles are coming and in my opinion they will be a significant improvement over the typical unreliable human driver.

2. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the digital rights watchdog group, has submitted a court filing arguing that federal agents at international airports should be required to obtain a warrant before demanding access to citizens' technological devices. Warrantless border searches are currently allowed under an exception to the Fourth Amendment, and they have more than doubled under the reign of Donald Trump. EFF has argued that that since devices like laptops and cell phones store highly personal information, "agents should be required to show they have probable cause to believe that the device contains evidence of a violation of the immigration or customs laws", and that border agents should not be able to examine a device's contents until after a judge has issues a warrant. In addition, the US Customs and Border Protection Agency restricted border searches to only locally-stored data back in July, but the EFF asserts that distinguishing between local data and cloud-based data isn't straightforward, and that data stored in the cloud can "appear as a seamless part of the digital device when presented at the border". For the record, I'm firmly on the side of the EFF here—I don't believe border agents have legitimate reasons to pry into our digital devices en masse, but I would support their right to do so if a judge granted search warrants on a case-by-case basis.

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

Weekend Thoughts - 5.27.17

Image by Andy Kaye, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

Image by Andy Kaye, courtesy of Creative Commons licensing.

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

1. A couple months ago I wrote a bit about how Border Agents have been requesting U.S. citizens to turn over passwords for their devices and social media accounts. As a response to Maciej Cegłowski's demand for software developers to create a "travel mode" that would prevent account access during the period that a traveller is expecting to be outside of the country, the password manager application 1Password has announced that a "travel mode" feature has in fact been created and will be included to everyone with a 1Password membership. Although this is the first company (that I am aware of, anyways) that has developed this type of functionality, hopefully we will begin to see it become more frequently offered by all types of software manufacturers. In the long run, our privacy and security concerns may be further protected against the prying eyes of the government with this type of feature.

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