Graham Hancock Petroglyph & Rock Art tour, Utah
14 Dec 2011 1 Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: ayahuasca, hancock, native, psy, shaman, shamanism, substance, trance, utah
Why is Marijuana Illegal? | Examining the Health Aspects of Cannabis
04 Dec 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: cannabis, consciousness, health, hemp, marijuana, medical marijuana, nature, substance, thc
Countless studies have highlighted the industrial and medicinal uses of marijuana (cannabis), yet the federal government claims that it has ‘no accepted medical use’ and continues to classify it in the same category as heroin, MDMA, and PCP. Despite the ruling, the medical marijuana market is priced at around $1.7-billion — that’s almost as much as the explosive Viagra market, coming in at around $1.9 billion.
Why do so many individuals suffering from disease swear by marijuana if it has no real medical use? And furthermore, were the thousands of studies on the medicinal benefits of marijuana completely incorrect?
Studies have found marijuana use to be beneficial in treating multiple sclerosis, Tourette syndrome, obsessive-compulsive disorder, brachial plexus neuropathies, insomnia, pain, memory disorders, anxiety disorders, cancer, neurodegenerative disease, and many more conditions.
Research has shown marijuana to be beneficial to health, yet Marijuana has been classified as dangerous by the federal government, outlawed, and made illegal. Many pharmaceuticals, on the other hand, have gone unchecked despite causing more fatalities than traffic accidents. In fact, even slightly more than the recommended dose of Tylenol can kill you, while THC-free hemp will simply boost your immune system.
You do not have to smoke marijuana to enjoy its benefits. THC-free hemp, which comes without any mind-altering effects, is a great health superfood that is used by many. For the government to classify marijuana in the same category as heroin and PCP while allowing deadly pharmaceuticals to go unregulated shows how little they truly care about public health.
History Of Hallucinogenic Substances For the Explorers of Inner Space
12 Nov 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: consciousness, Explorers, freedom, Hallucinogenic, peace, psy, shamanism, spiritual, substance
The history of mankind’s involvement with hallucinogens seems to go back thousands of years. Some modern scholars speculate that the soma of the ancient Hindus was indeed a hallucinogenic substance that was used for purposes of religious ritual and ecstasy. The use of opiates in China and the Far East is well documented. The religious uses of hallucinogenic mushrooms by Native Americans is also a well documented fact, as well as being a point of controversy in modern legislation.
However, the modern West only really became involved with hallucinogenic drugs after World War II. It was in 1948 that LSD was first produced from rye mold by Albert Hoffman, who was at the time looking for antibiotic substances in fungi. Also around this time, mescaline was identified as the active agent in certain hallucinogenic plants. Within a few years after being recognized, these substances began to cause severe polarization in opinions about their use and benefit.
On one hand, there were in the 1950s and early 1960s, small groups of avant garde intellectuals who began to associate religious and mystical qualities with the effects of these drugs on human perception. Perhaps best known in this regard was Aldous Huxley’s “The Doors of Perception”, which highlighted Huxley’s personal experiences on mescaline. Also in this vein was Alan Watts’ “The Joyous Cosmology” which also extolled the philosophical and mystical virtues of the hallucinogenic experience.
On the other hand, during this same period, hallucinogenic drugs such as LSD and mescaline were seen by the medical and psychiatric fields as being agents that seemed to simulate psychosis. Initially, the term “hallucinogenic” did not even exist. In the 1950s and 1960s these drugs were generally called “psychomimetics”, meaning that their effects mimicked symptoms displayed by psychotics and paranoids. Perhaps the crowning tribute to this view of LSD was the book “One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest” by Ken Kesey, which reflected Kesey’s experiences as a volunteer in medical experiments on the effects of LSD. Incidentally, Kesey, in the late 1960s went on to be one of the leaders of the West coast psychedelic movement with his “Band of Merry Pranksters” (as described in the book “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Tests”).
So from the very beginning the hallucinogenic drugs have been viewed from totally opposite points of view: doctors initially equated the drugs’ effects with psychosis, and intellectuals equated the drugs’ effects with profound religious experiences.
The story of LSD climaxed in the early 1960s with the research of Timothy Leary at Harvard University. Initially, Leary, who was a Harvard psychologist researching the nature of personality, had only an impartial scientific interest in these so-called psychomemetic drugs. He soon found out however that their effects were so great as to cause him to essentially abandon his roots as an elitist East coast intellectual and to become the founding father of the psychedelic movement in the United States. It was Leary’s contention that hallucinogenic drugs opened up to human perception things long lost from Western tradition, things that were well understood in older cultures and religions. Timothy Leary recognized, like other intellectuals a decade before him, that these drugs have the potential to cause profound religious and mystical experiences, experiences that could easily be distorted and misconstrued by Western reductionistic intellectuals as being symptoms of insanity. Leary, like any other person made sane by LSD, came to the conclusion that it was the modern West that was insane, not some poor individual in a psychiatric ward who was experiencing visions and hearing voices.
Graham Hancock & Joe Rogan on the war on drugs
06 Oct 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: ayahuasca, consciousness, drugs, freedom, humanrights, nature, peace, psy, substance, war
Graham Hancock & Joe Rogan talk about how over the past 40 years society has been conditioned to ignore individual consciousness.
Inside Story – Is Mexico losing the war on drugs?
04 Sep 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: consciousness, drugs, freedom, humanrights, justice, mexico, nature, peace, substance, us, war
What will it take to root out drug violence in Mexico?
The Last Chance Of Freedom
02 Sep 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: consciousness, drugs, freedom, global, humanrights, marijuana, nature, peace, substance, war
The war on drugs is a failure. It has failed to prevent drug abuse. It has failed to keep drugs out of the hands of addicts. It has failed to keep drugs away from teenagers. It has failed to reduce the demand for drugs. It has failed to stop the violence associated with drug trafficking. It has failed to help drug addicts get treatment.
But the war on drugs has also succeeded. It has succeeded in clogging the judicial system. It has succeeded in swelling prison populations. It has succeeded in corrupting law enforcement. It has succeeded in destroying financial privacy. It has succeeded in militarizing the police. It has succeeded in hindering legitimate pain treatment. It has succeeded in destroying the Fourth Amendment. It has succeeded in eroding civil liberties. It has succeeded in making criminals out of hundreds of thousands of law-abiding Americans. It has succeeded in wasting hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars. It has succeeded in ruining countless lives.
Clearly, the financial and human costs of the drug war far exceed any of its supposed benefits. Clearly, the drug war violates the Constitution and exceeds the proper role of government. And clearly, the drug war is a war on personal freedom, private property, personal responsibility, individual liberty, personal and financial privacy, and the free market.
But the war on drugs is also something else. It is the most senseless of the government’s wars.
If the federal government is going to make a harmful substance illegal, then it seems logical that that substance should be tobacco. It is the cultivation, processing, sale, and use of tobacco that should be illicit, not marijuana. The number of deaths attributable every year to marijuana smoking is a big fat zero. And marijuana does have some known health benefits. If smoking cigarettes causes cancer; causes strokes and heart disease; causes fatal lung disease; is addictive; harms fetuses, children, and nonsmokers; poses serious risks to your health; and kills you, then it only makes sense to criminalize tobacco instead of marijuana.
But what about other illicit drugs such as LSD, cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine? There is no question that deaths have occurred from the use of those drugs. But more than 100,000 people die every year from drugs prescribed and administered by physicians. And more than two million Americans a year have in-hospital adverse drug reactions. Thousands of people die every year from reactions to aspirin.
Now, lest there be any misunderstanding, I am not in favor of any government at any level banning tobacco. That is because I am not in favor of any government at any level banning the buying, selling, growing, processing, use, or possession of any substance. And that is because, as a libertarian, I believe in individual liberty and personal responsibility instead of a nanny state run by bureaucrats looking out for my health and safety.
The war on drugs is senseless, just as a war on any other substance would be.
Legalization opinions
23 Jul 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: california, consciousness, drugs, freedom, global, humanrights, legalization, life, love, marijuana, native, nature, opinions, peace, substance, us
Since 1996, 16 states and the District of Columbia enacted legislation permitting the medicinal use of marijuana. Such statutes surely represent a step in the right direction, but this type of regulation has faced considerable opposition on behalf of the federal government. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the federal government maintains the position that marijuana holds no medical value. What’s more, Draconian federal penalties for possession and distribution of cannabis remain unchanged. Perhaps state level reform efforts should shift focus from decriminalization for medical use to outright legalization.
The problem with medical marijuana lies in its inherent exclusivity. For example, California’s system reflects a kind of unequal treatment based on class separation. In order to qualify as legitimate patients, cannabis users must first obtain a costly physician’s recommendation. This affords a certain degree of legal protection, but not as much as that of a state issued identification card. Of course, those carry a hefty price tag as does purchasing medication over the counter. These financial barriers essentially reserve medical marijuana for the privileged, an affluent and largely Caucasian demographic group that’s also less likely to be subject to arrest. While wealthy suburban young adults purchase premium quality ounces in the safety of retail establishments, many inner city residents scour the streets,leaving them vulnerable to prosecution. Full legalization eliminates lingering disparate treatment within the justice system, at least at the state/municipal level.
Furthermore, legitimate dispensaries put themselves at considerable personal risk simply by existing. State law enforcement agencies often collaborate with federal agencies to raid collectives, leaving volunteers to live in fear of aggressive police tactics. There’s no way to truly prevent these nefarious activities without modifying federal laws, but legalizing marijuanaaltogether at the state level would signify unwillingness to participate in joint ventures.
The taxation issue brings up several additional arguments in favor of legalization. States would be able to collect revenue on commercial sales, which could be used to support education, health care, and other public services. Advocates need to recognize that marijuana isn’t exactly a cash cow because a significant portion of sales would still occur “under the table”. Exchanges between friends or bartering transactions cannot be subject to retail fees. Nevertheless, it’s unwise to reject a solid source of income in a struggling economy based on these technicalities.
David Icke – Don’t be afraid… It’s just a ride …
21 Jul 2011 1 Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: consciousness, freedom, gover, hicks, humanrights, icke, kennedy, life, love, native, nature, oneness, peace, shamanism, substance, us
The story of Goa
16 Jul 2011 Leave a Comment
in Uncategorized Tags: consciousness, dance, electronic, global, goa, goagil, hippies, humanrights, india, life, love, music, native, nature, oneness, peace, psy, psytrance, shaman, shamanism, shiva, soul, spiritual, substance, trance
Goa emerged on the world scene back in the 60′s with the ‘Hippie Movement’ which brought the western world to the beaches of Anjuna. Composed mostly of white teenagers and young adults between the ages of 15 and 25 years old, hippies inherited a tradition of cultural dissent from bohemians and beatniks of the Beat Generation in the late 1950s. Stories of Freaks in Goa and a slowly building counter culture made some enthusiasts hop onto an overland Bus leaving for Goa all the way from Europe (Greece). Disillusioned, disenchanted preferring an altered state of consciousness to the collective illusion the world embraces as ‘Reality’, they found home under the palm trees of Goa.
Staying in Goa was extremely affordable then and to the Hippies, money was always just a means to an end. They stayed and stayed and stayed even longer … the community doubled, tripled, increased exponentially in very little time. So began a long ongoing chapter in the history of the psychedelic culture spawning a whole new generation into an alternate reality, a different world where anything was possible and all boundaries dissolved.
This is just one of the many ways of telling the story of Goa, the Hippies, the Freaks and a generation of hipsters being exposed to a plethora of substances which dramatically alter ones perception of the world and the nature of reality.
Over the years, as capitalism and globalization began making in roads everywhere, the locals and the Goan Government started to become increasingly less tolerant toward the Hippie attitude as it conflicts with the ethics and lifestyles of modern day society. The authorities were now coming on strongly against Nudism, Drugs and Loud Music being played around residential areas late into the night. Some Hippies hence chose the path of reform and got back to the regular city lifestyle and a day job, some became Sadhus and Sanyasis and some stayed back and are still seen dancing around the shacks of South Anjuna, namely Curlies and Shiva Valley. If you ever get a chance to speak to some of these willing old timers, you would know they have a whole lot to talk about and for good reason. With the slow death of the “Hippie Era”, Goa’s reputation as the Freak Capital never diminished, but evolved into the Monsterattes we see on News Channels and read about in the newspapers. Irresponsible use of drugs and sexual predation are closely linked in the darkness of our present times and it’s only we who can change this and turn things around in a new direction we collectively envision.




