The Drug War Is The Inquisition
Racism, of course, was originally a form of anti-tribalism, driven by the economic value of enslavement. We are no longer overtly racist, in our public laws at least, but we are still politically driven by industrial power centers, still brutally anti-tribal, structurally violent, to millions of our children, our tribal primitives, and to our shamanic adults. Our contemporary slaver war, our Drug War, is a direct descendant, via the Inquisition, of Roman slave law, called Prohibitio by the Romans, Prohibition.

Home
  • Why Entheology.org?
    Our simple and concise mission statement including information regarding submissions. We pay you for reprint rights on any research paper we'd like to include here at Edoto...just click for details.

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  • Plants of the Gods
    Absolute essential read for anyone interested in sacred entheogens. Includes detailed history and preparation of 97 psychoactive and/or sacred plants.

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  • Annual Causes of Death in America
    The REAL truth is the most sobering statistic.

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  • Annual Causes of Death in America
    The REAL truth is the most sobering statistic.

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  • Extracting Salvinorin from Salvia Divinorum
    This is a concise extraction method for educational purposes only.

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  • Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
    Extremely important information regarding MAOI's, complete with Diet Card.

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  • Traditional Quid Preparation
    Information regarding the traditional praparation of Salvia divinorum for divination by the Mazatecs.

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  • Pharmacology of Bufotenine
    Exhaustive case study regarding Bufotenine, 5-MEO-DMT, and related substances.

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  • Study on Calea Zacatechichi (Dream Herb)
    Calea zacatechichi is a plant of extensive popular medicinal use in Mexico. An infusion of the plant is has been reported to have psychotropic properties that have been clinically-proven to induce dreaming, and increase the frequency of dreams as well.

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  • In Depth Report Regarding DMT
    In this article I wish to draw attention to a strange property of DMT which sets it apart from other psychedelics, namely, it's ability to place users in touch with a realm that is apparently inhabited by discarnate entities of an intelligent nature.

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  • The Science of Ethnobotany
    Ethnobotanists share two decades of experience living with the indigenous peoples of Central and South America, the Caribbean, and Southeast Asia.

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  • Entheogens and the Future of Religion
    The book should prove to be a welcome complement to other serious studies in mysticism (including those that take a fundamentally different tack).

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  • Tukanoans
    The Tukanoans are one of the most known cultures that utilize ayahuasca as their sacrament. They are one of about 70 tribes who share this practice.

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  • Ayahuasca, shamanism, and curanderismo in the Andes
    The term ayahuasca comes from the Quechua, meaning literally "the vine of souls," although it is also called "the visionary vine" or the "vine of death." The folk term refers to the botanical species of liana known as Banisteriopsis Caapi , which is also

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  • The Santo Daime Religion
    In this paper, the reader will be introduced to the sect of Santo Daime, a Brazilian religion which combines Christianity with the indigenous practice of using ayahuasca, a native entheogenic plant.

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  • Santo Daime Church Wins Court Case
    Freedom of Religion versus the Psychotropic Substance Treaty - The Verdict

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  • Ayahuasca: Human Consciousness and the Spirits of Nature
    Anything with the name Ralph Metzner even remotely attached to it is a safe buy. An elder statesman responsible for dramatic shifts in consciousness within this nation and throughout the world...

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  • DMT: The Spirit Moecule
    Covering a groundbreaking psychedelic substance that is actually found in human cerebrospinal fluid, Rick Strassman tells a first-person story of his research on the profoundly mysterious substance dimethltryptamine (DMT).

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  • The World As You Dream It: Shamanic Teachings from the Amazon and Andes
    John has done a lot to honor and preserve the indigenous teachings and the ethnobotanical environment.

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  • Shapeshifting: Shamanic Techniques for Global and Personal Transformation
    John has done a lot to honor and preserve the indigenous teachings and the ethnobotanical environment.

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  • Canada to Decriminalize Cannabis
    The Liberal government is preparing to move ahead in the new year with legislation to decriminalize marijuana, Justice Minister Martin Cauchon said yesterday.

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  • Solubility of Active Components – Quick Guide
    Brief discussion on active components of plants and whether they were traditionally extracted into alcohol, water, or other solvents.

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  • Amanita Muscaria
    This mushroom could very well be human's oldest hallucinogen, as it has been identified as Soma of ancient India.

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  • Anadenanthera - Yopo, Cebil, Villca
    YOPO or PARICA (Anadenanthera peregrina or Piptadenia peregrina) is a South American tree of the bean family, Leguminosae. A potent hallucinogenic snuff is prepared from the seeds of this tree.

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  • Anadenanthera peregrina - Yopo
    Under Construction.

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  • Argyreia nervosa - Hawaiian Baby Woodrose
    Hawaiian Baby Woodrose seeds are perhaps one of the least understood of modern-day entheogens and exotic botanicals. There is much controversy in regards to its true place in Shamanic and traditional history outside of its native culture and home; India.

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  • Argyreia nervosa - Hawaiian Baby Woodrose
    Hawaiian Baby Woodrose seeds are perhaps one of the least understood of modern-day entheogens and exotic botanicals. There is much controversy in regards to its true place in Shamanic and traditional history outside of its native culture and home; India.

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  • Banisteriopsis caapi - Ayahuasca
    Used in the western half of the Amazon Valley and by isolated tribes on the Pacific slopes of the Columbian and Ecuadorian Andes.

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  • Brugmansia aurea - Golden Angel's Trumpet
    Under Construction.

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  • Brugmansia sanguinea - Blood-Red Angel's Trumpet
    Under Construction.

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  • Brunfelsia grandiflora - Brunfelsia
    Under Construction.

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  • Caesalpina sepiaria - Yun Shih
    This plant was reputedly used in China as hallucinogen, this is nearly all we know about this plant.

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  • Calea zacatechichi - Dream Herb
    Calea zacatechichi is a plant used by the Chontal Indians of Mexico to obtain divinatory messages during dreaming.

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  • Cannabis sativa - Marijuana
    The original home of Cannabis is thought to be central Asia, but it has spread around the globe with the exception of Arctic regions and areas of wet tropical forests.

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  • Areca catechu - Betel Nut
    Betel nuts have been used as a drug for thousands of years. The practiced is thought to have started in south-east Asia and there is archaeological evidence to support this view.

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  • Modern Day Shamanism in Hawaii
    Serge is doing his part to save the shaman traditions of his culture when he formed Aloha International; a world-wide network of people studying and practicing the Hawaiian shamanic traditions.

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  • Ibogaine a One-Way Trip to Sobriety
    Besides running a seed-distribution business, the peace and pot activist Marc Emery has started a new project that he's especially passionate about, one he says can cure cocaine and heroin addiction at a low price.

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  • You Hip to the Entheogen (R)evolution?
    The last decade has been secretly psychedelic. And we have all been primed and ready for an explosion of consciousness. To get to that point, we must have an idea of where to direct our energies. The best way to do this is through a common goal of cogniti

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  • Peyote on the Brain
    Is the Secret to Alcoholism and Other Addictions Locked Up in the Hallucinogenic Drugs?

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  • Database Has Deadly Facts About Smoking
    Tobacco FactFile, a new Internet database unveiled by the British Medical Association (BMA), contains worldwide facts and figures about smoking, the Associated Press reported February 27, 2003.

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  • Database Has Deadly Facts About Smoking
    Tobacco FactFile, a new Internet database unveiled by the British Medical Association (BMA), contains worldwide facts and figures about smoking, the Associated Press reported February 27, 2003.

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  • Spiritual Regression and Modern Day Shamans
    The term “shaman” is used to describe individuals who are able to bridge the physical and spiritual realms through their ability to enter into, and induce, profound states of trance. Shamanism is less of a specific methodology than it is a cosmovision whi

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  • Saving the 'Vine of the Soul'
    The appropriation of yage by outsiders threatens to further undermine the fragile culture of the Putumayo region, already devastated by 37 years of civil war. Colombia's billion-dollar U.S.-backed campaign to rid the country of its coca fields and end nar

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  • Shamanism and Priesthood
    We have come to recognize two main types of religious practitioners, the shaman and the priest. The shaman is found typically in tribal cultures, the priest in state formations and so, presumably, later in appearance, although some overlap between the two

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  • Kieri and the Solanaceae: Nature and Culture in Huichol Mythology
    Article concerning the use of Solandra among the Huichol and the true identity of Kieri.

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  • Plants as Teachers Among 4 Mestizo Shamans of Iquitos, Peru
    In the city of Iquitos and its vicinity there is even today a rich tradition of folk medicine. Practitioners, some of whom qualify as shamans, make an important contribution to the psychosomatic health of the inhabitants of this area.

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  • Soma of the Aryans: an ancient hallucinogen?
    This paper is based upon the author's "SOMA, Divine Mushroom of Immortality ", published in 1969 in New York by Harcourt Brace & World Inc., and in The Hague by Mouton. This work is referred to in the following pages as " Soma".

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  • Chacruna - An Overview of Ayahuasca's Principal Companion
    Psychotria is distributed in the warm and tropical regions of both hemispheres. They are low to tall shrubs or small trees, sometimes epiphytic. Approximately 1,200 species are described, of which about 800 are valid taxa. Classification of Psychotria spe

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  • Botanical Jewelry
    Humans have been decorating their bodies with the beauty of natural objects for thousands of years. Primitive man wore necklaces made from the bones, claws and teeth of slain animals.

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  • Ethnobotanical Tools in the Ancient Near East
    It is suggested that art and artifact have been sources often overlooked in determining the ethnobotanical content of any early civilization. The suggestion is made that early civilizations in the area of the Fertile Crescent employed Datura, Cannabis, Cl

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  • Lessons in The Use of Mazatec Psychoactive Plants
    During the mid-1980’s I participated in a caving expedition in the Sierra Mazateca of Oaxaca, Mexico. Our group intended to explore and map the lower reaches of the Sotano de San Agustin, which at that time was the deepest known vertical cave in the weste

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  • Psychoactive Plants Traditionally Used in Madagascar
    THE FOLLOWING OBSERVATIONS refer to two plants used by some of the autochthonous peoples of Madagascar and are based on an article by a French researcher, Pierre Boiteau. The article is unmentioned in the specialist literature on psychoactive plants.

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  • the Peyote Gardens: A Conservation Crises?
    Peyote is not a dangerous drug that victimizes Native Americans as alcohol as done. Rather, it is a sacred plant having a history of use of more than 6000 years. It is only used ceremonially and as medicine. It is not addicting, nor does it cause harmful

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  • Hallucinogens and Creativity
    Since the late 1950s, when psychedelics became more potent and more easily available, many studies and interviews focused on the influence of hallucinogen on the creative process. Most interest was placed on understanding how the mind works under the infl

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  • The Way of the Shaman
    ...many educated, thinking people have left the Age of Faith behind them. They no longer trust ecclesiastical dogma and authority to provide them with adequate evidence of the realms of the spirit or, indeed, with evidence that there IS spirit. Secondha

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  • Tobacco Use - A Cross-cultural Comparison
    Tobacco in the South American Indian Tradition is used for purification, connection with the divine, and recreation. It plays a major role in many shamanistic traditions, and is an integral part of many of their cultures.

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  • Jesus as a Mythical Copycat
    There are many mythological figures who came long before Jesus, yet the mythological story of Jesus is strikingly similar to these...

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  • Jesus as a Mythical Copycat
    There are many mythological figures who came long before Jesus, yet the mythological story of Jesus is strikingly similar to these...

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  • History of the Non-Medical Use of Drugs in the US
    This speech is derived from The Forbidden Fruit and the Tree of Knowledge: An Inquiry into the Legal History of American Marijuana Prohibition by Professor Richard J. Bonnie & Professor Charles H. Whitebread, II

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  • Amazon's Green Gold
    Biotechnology firms, pharmaceutical corporations, laboratories and university researchers are scouring the Amazon rainforest in a profit-driven pursuit. Seeking the Amazon’s “green gold,” they are turning to local indigenous groups to gain access to t

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  • Cannabis: "The Aspirin of the 21st Century?"
    Cannabis, the third most popular recreational drug after alcohol and tobacco, could win a new role as the aspirin of the 21st century, with growing evidence that its compounds may protect the brain against the damaging effects of ageing.

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  • False Alarm: Kava Not Toxic to Liver
    A meta-analysis of all clinical trials investigating the effectiveness of Kava, supports Kava’s beneficial effects in treating anxiety, without any reported cases of liver toxicity.

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  • Shadows in the Sun
    Renowned anthropologist Wade Davis shows us how preserving the diversity of the world's cultures and spiritual beliefs is just as important as preserving our endangered plants, insects, and animals. This essay focuses on an ayahuasca ceremony.

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  • Indigenous Cultures from Yesterday to Today
    Shamanism is a very important part of the essence of the wisdom of the Indian. If we truly want to understand what it consists of to know our indigenous peoples we should learn to look beyond the simple phenomena that is produced by the customs, artistic

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  • U.S. Backs Colombia on Attacking SUSPECTED Drug Planes
    Such a policy, which has been criticized by human rights groups, was suspended in Colombia and Peru after a Peruvian jet fighter mistakenly shot down a private plane carrying American missionaries, killing two people, one an infant, in 2001.

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  • Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground
    For hundreds of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of illnesses. But the herb has been illegal throughout the modern era of scientific medical research. Patients swear the drug works to relieve pain, prevent seizures, and counteract th

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  • Medical Marijuana Slowly Gains Ground
    For hundreds of years, marijuana has been used to treat a wide variety of illnesses. But the herb has been illegal throughout the modern era of scientific medical research. Patients swear the drug works to relieve pain, prevent seizures, and counteract th

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  • America Destroying Coca Cultures
    There has been rioting in Bolivia for nearly four weeks now. News reports say that the riots have been over the construction of a pipeline to ship natural gas to the United States. That's true, but there's a deeper anger at work: anger toward the United S

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  • America Destroying Coca Cultures
    There has been rioting in Bolivia for nearly four weeks now. News reports say that the riots have been over the construction of a pipeline to ship natural gas to the United States. That's true, but there's a deeper anger at work: anger toward the United S

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  • Marijuana Causes AND Prevents Pregnancy!
    In the latest round of contradictions, in addition to causeing the destruction of our rainforests and the rest of the planet, the ONDCP now says that marijuana use both prevents AND causes teen pregnancy simultaneously! - WOW!

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  • Marijuana Causes AND Prevents Pregnancy!
    In the latest round of contradictions, in addition to causeing the destruction of our rainforests and the rest of the planet, the ONDCP now says that marijuana use both prevents AND causes teen pregnancy simultaneously! - WOW!

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  • Bush Making Drug Cartels Wealthy
    Terrifying reports from Afganistan point to an even more dismal possibility for the future of Iraq, all at the hands of the administration that has stepped up the dismally failed War on Drugs now targeting the sick and the dying.

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  • Garden of Eden - Day 1
    No sooner had God created Adam and put him in Eden than God began to contradict himself. He told Adam that he could eat from all the trees of the garden. ALL the trees. Then God said, “Nevertheless, you can’t eat from the tree of knowledge of good and

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  • Garden of Eden - Day 1
    No sooner had God created Adam and put him in Eden than God began to contradict himself. He told Adam that he could eat from all the trees of the garden. ALL the trees. Then God said, “Nevertheless, you can’t eat from the tree of knowledge of good and

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  • Vatican Combats Threat of 'Alternative' Religions
    Catholics from more than 25 countries are in Rome this week to hammer out a strategy for combating the threat posed to Christianity by "New Age" religions and fads.

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  • Vatican Combats Threat of 'Alternative' Religions
    Catholics from more than 25 countries are in Rome this week to hammer out a strategy for combating the threat posed to Christianity by "New Age" religions and fads.

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  • Utah High Court OKs Non-Indian Peyote Use
    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The Utah Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that non-American Indian members of the Native American Church can use peyote in religious ceremonies.

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  • Utah High Court OKs Non-Indian Peyote Use
    SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The Utah Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that non-American Indian members of the Native American Church can use peyote in religious ceremonies.

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  • Marijuana and the WTO
    This is a possible duplicate article...

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  • Marijuana and the WTO
    This is a possible duplicate article...

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  • Supreme Court to Hear Appeal on Hallucinogenic Tea
    The U.S. Supreme Court said on Monday it would decide whether the federal government must allow the U.S. branch of a Brazilian-based religion to import a hallucinogenic tea for use as a sacrament.

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  • Supreme Court to Hear Appeal on Hallucinogenic Tea
    The U.S. Supreme Court said on Monday it would decide whether the federal government must allow the U.S. branch of a Brazilian-based religion to import a hallucinogenic tea for use as a sacrament.

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  • NOT SO DOPEY
    The active ingredient of cannabis may protect against heart disease and strokes. In fact, marijuana's ability to relieve the symptoms of multiple sclerosis and AIDS, among other diseases, is pretty well agreed by patients, if not by the medical establis

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  • NOT SO DOPEY
    The active ingredient of cannabis may protect against heart disease and strokes. In fact, marijuana's ability to relieve the symptoms of multiple sclerosis and AIDS, among other diseases, is pretty well agreed by patients, if not by the medical establis

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  • NOT SO DOPEY
    The active ingredient of cannabis may protect against heart disease and strokes. In fact, marijuana's ability to relieve the symptoms of multiple sclerosis and AIDS, among other diseases, is pretty well agreed by patients, if not by the medical establis

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  • Amazonian Shamanism Conference
    The Church, "Soga del Alma" - "Vine of the Soul" - organizes a Conference for those interested in Amazonian shamanism and ceremonies managed by authentic Amazonian curandero(a)s will also be made available.

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  • Should 'Sally D' Be Made Illegal?
    There are plenty of herbal plants, such as Saint-John's-wort or morning glory, that contain emotion-altering compounds. But Salvia divinorum, known in the streets as Sally D, is making bigger legal waves on account of its short-term side effects, which so

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  • Should 'Sally D' Be Made Illegal?
    There are plenty of herbal plants, such as Saint-John's-wort or morning glory, that contain emotion-altering compounds. But Salvia divinorum, known in the streets as Sally D, is making bigger legal waves on account of its short-term side effects, which so

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  • Prince Charles Hopeful of End to Kava Ban
    PRINCE Charles is hopeful that the export ban on Fiji's traditional drink will be lifted in the near future. This was relayed by Foreign Affairs Minister Kaliopate Tavola after a brief conversation with the Prince of Wales on Thursday.

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  • Prince Charles Hopeful of End to Kava Ban
    PRINCE Charles is hopeful that the export ban on Fiji's traditional drink will be lifted in the near future. This was relayed by Foreign Affairs Minister Kaliopate Tavola after a brief conversation with the Prince of Wales on Thursday.

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  • Anti-Drug Gains in Colombia Don't Reduce Flow to U.S.
    Five years and $3 billion into the most aggressive counternarcotics operation ever here, American and Colombian officials say they have eradicated a record-breaking million acres of coca plants, yet cocaine remains as available as ever on American streets

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  • Anti-Drug Gains in Colombia Don't Reduce Flow to U.S.
    Five years and $3 billion into the most aggressive counternarcotics operation ever here, American and Colombian officials say they have eradicated a record-breaking million acres of coca plants, yet cocaine remains as available as ever on American streets

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  • Canada Approves Cannabis Spray
    Canada became the first nation Tuesday to approve a pharmaceutical prescription spray derived from the cannabis plant, a move that could shift the medical marijuana debate in the U.S.

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  • Canada Approves Cannabis Spray
    Canada became the first nation Tuesday to approve a pharmaceutical prescription spray derived from the cannabis plant, a move that could shift the medical marijuana debate in the U.S.

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  • IAmShaman Shop Acquires Kona Kava Farm
    The Ethnobotanical Superstore www.IAmShaman.com has purchased Kona Kava Farm in Hawaii as a way to expand their product line into standard and unique Kava Kava products that the market has never seen before. With the recent lift of the ban by the FDA, an

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  • WHICH SIDE IS WINNING WAR ON DRUGS?
    In one survey, more than 70 percent of American cancer specialists said they would prescribe marijuana if it was legal. A poll of the British Medical Association yielded similar results.

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  • WHICH SIDE IS WINNING WAR ON DRUGS?
    In one survey, more than 70 percent of American cancer specialists said they would prescribe marijuana if it was legal. A poll of the British Medical Association yielded similar results.

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  • Pot Smoking Not Linked to Lung Cancer
    People who smoke marijuana do not appear to be at increased risk for developing lung cancer, new research suggests.

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  • Major Win for Medical Marijuana
    A San Diego Superior Court this week handed a critical victory to medical marijuana patients nationwide, affirming the ability of states to exempt qualified patients from criminal penalties, despite federal policy that prohibits all marijuana use.

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  • Major Win for Medical Marijuana
    A San Diego Superior Court this week handed a critical victory to medical marijuana patients nationwide, affirming the ability of states to exempt qualified patients from criminal penalties, despite federal policy that prohibits all marijuana use.

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  • Narcotics Control Board Destroying Coca Cultures
    In a culturally insensitive and irrational move, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) has called for the governments of Bolivia and Peru to abolish all uses of the coca leaf, including coca leaf chewing.

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  • Narcotics Control Board Destroying Coca Cultures
    In a culturally insensitive and irrational move, the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) has called for the governments of Bolivia and Peru to abolish all uses of the coca leaf, including coca leaf chewing.

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  • Peyote (Lophophora williamsii)
    Peyote (Lophophora williamsii grows in South-Eastern America and in northern regions of Mexico. In Mexico, peyote has been used for divination in shamanic rituals and in the treatment of ailments for at least 10,000 years.

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  • Tagetes lucida - Marigolds
    Tagetes lucida, widely identified as a powerfully psychoactive strain of the marigold flower, was first documented by the Aztecs. They used Tagetes lucida in their ritual incense they referred to as yyauhtl. This name was derived from the Aztecan word uja

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  • White Lotus - Nymphaea ampla
    The effects of the flower when prepared as a tea or decoction and ingested are said to be much like the opiate apomorphine. White lotus actually contains aporphine, which is closely related to apomorphine, differing only in the lack of two hydroxyl group

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  • Passiflora - Passion Flower
    The psychoactive properties of the Passiflora genus as a whole is still awaiting thorough ethnopharmacological study, however there are several species that have a rich history as entheogens.

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  • Yohimbe - Pausinystalia yohimba
    In addition to its sexual stimulant and aphrodisiac qualities, the bark of the yohimbe tree has been reported to also be hallucinogenic when smoked. The psychoactive effects are primarily due to the main active constituent yohimbine. Yohimbine has sympath

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  • Withania somnifera - Ashwagandha
    Widely used back in Mesopotamia for its medicinal and narcotic properties, this member of the Nightshade Family, was well known in ancient Egypt and characterized and classified as a sakrân intoxicant in Old Arabic.

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  • Santo Daime: The Drug-Fuelled Religion
    A new religion is spreading to Britain - its central sacrament the consumption of a hallucinogenic ayahuasca. This report is from inside the faith's heartland, the rainforests of the Amazon.

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  • Santo Daime: The Drug-Fuelled Religion
    A new religion is spreading to Britain - its central sacrament the consumption of a hallucinogenic ayahuasca. This report is from inside the faith's heartland, the rainforests of the Amazon.

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  • Ancient Shamanic Solutions
    Cultural anthropologist and author, Dr. John Broomfield, studies ancient shamanic cultures and applies ancient wisdom to modern-day solutions.

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  • Ancient Shamanic Solutions
    Cultural anthropologist and author, Dr. John Broomfield, studies ancient shamanic cultures and applies ancient wisdom to modern-day solutions.

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  • LSD, Ketamine & Cannabis Could Treat Headaches to Diabetes
    Doctors and researchers in the US and across Europe are studying legitimate therapeutic applications of psychedelic drugs with new science set to prove their case.

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  • LSD, Ketamine & Cannabis Could Treat Headaches to Diabetes
    Doctors and researchers in the US and across Europe are studying legitimate therapeutic applications of psychedelic drugs with new science set to prove their case.

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  • LSD Helped Forge Alex Grey's Spiritual, Artistic and Love Lives
    Interview with artist Alex Grey explores his use of psychotropic drugs and their influence on his art, his spirituality, and his life.

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  • Salvia Divinorum: Old Psychedelic Drug, New Appeal
    The hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum can be purchased online or at a local head shop. While the DEA and others want to limit its use, scientists say making it a controlled substance would hinder research.

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  • Salvia Divinorum: Old Psychedelic Drug, New Appeal
    The hallucinogenic herb Salvia divinorum can be purchased online or at a local head shop. While the DEA and others want to limit its use, scientists say making it a controlled substance would hinder research.

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  • Brain's Reaction To Potent Hallucinogen Salvia Explored
    U.S. Department of Energy is conducting new brain-imaging studies on animals, documenting the effects of Salvia divinorum on the brain.

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  • Brain's Reaction To Potent Hallucinogen Salvia Explored
    U.S. Department of Energy is conducting new brain-imaging studies on animals, documenting the effects of Salvia divinorum on the brain.

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  • Trip Of A Lifetime: How LSD Rocked The World
    A comprehensive overview of the life and work of Albert Hoffman, the bicycling Swiss chemist who created LSD - it explores the trailblazing, mind-altering legacy he left behind after his death on Tuesday, April 29, 2008, at the age of 102.

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  • Trip Of A Lifetime: How LSD Rocked The World
    A comprehensive overview of the life and work of Albert Hoffman, the bicycling Swiss chemist who created LSD - it explores the trailblazing, mind-altering legacy he left behind after his death on Tuesday, April 29, 2008, at the age of 102.

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  • The Shroom Tragedy
    Magic mushrooms are on the verge of being outlawed by the Dutch government for the usual sensationalized reasons as everywhere else.

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  • The Shroom Tragedy
    Magic mushrooms are on the verge of being outlawed by the Dutch government for the usual sensationalized reasons as everywhere else.

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  • Brazil Appeals Court Rules Drug Possession Not a Crime
    At the end of March, a Brazilian appeals court in São Paulo declared that possession of drugs for personal use is not a criminal offense. Several lower courts had previously ruled in the same way, but the ruling from the São Paulo Justice Court's 6th Crim

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  • US Leads World in Substance Abuse, WHO Finds
    The United States leads the world in rates of experimenting with marijuana and cocaine despite strict drug laws, World Health Organization researchers said on Tuesday. Countries with looser drug laws have lower rates of abuse, the researchers report in t

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  • Absinthe - Green Fairy - Wormwood


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  • BOOK REVIEW: THE COMPENDIUM OF SYMBOLIC AND RITUAL PLANTS IN EUROPE
    Esthetically awe-inspiring, and packed with gems that spawn fodder for provocative thought; THE COMPENDIUM OF SYMBOLIC AND RITUAL PLANTS IN EUROPE is a must have for all who are interested in shamanism and plant lore. -Matthew Wiley

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  • Sacred Groves and Trees
    A Glimpse Into India's Tree And Nature Worship

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  • Chief Seattle
    The President in Washington sends word that he wishes to buy our land....

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  • Theobroma cacao


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  • Albert Hofmann
    By Robert Stone

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  • Might the Gods be Alkaloids? -by Alex Polari de Alverga


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  • The Herb Dangerous by E. Whineray, M.P.S.
    A Pharmaceutical Study of Cannabis

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  • The Herb Dangerous Part II by Aleister Crowley
    The Psychology of Hashish

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  • Marc Emery, Canada's Prince of Pot
    by Dana Larsen

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  • Tick-Tock, Tick-Tock: Who Will Be Obama’s Pick For ‘Drug Czar’?
    by Allen St. Pierre, NORML Executive Director.

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This Article First Appeared in High Times, Nov. 2001

 

The shamanic state, the state of spirit-possession, often induced by sacred herbs, is often encyclopedic - super-conscious, not subconscious. That’s why many shamans demonstrate uncanny memory.  We know that The Odyssey and The Iliad were preserved, for hundreds of years before they were written down, by mnemonic power that very few moderns could match. Imagine the power of the intellect that could sing The Iliad from memory.  Mnemosyne, the shamanic root of our word memory, is the Mother of the Nine Muses, according to Hesiod.  She could look forward as well as backward, that is, she ‘remembered’ how the world worked, so that she could prophesy as well as recall.

 

Inebriation - ritual, social, alimentary and medical - is basic to all cultures, ancient and modern.  Traditional cultures don't separate inebriative herbalism from any of the other 'archaic techniques of ecstacy' - dancing, musicalizing, socializing, ritualizing, fasting, curing, ordeal - which are part of the same shamanic behavior complex; nor do they separate medicine from food.  Since the birth of industrialization, of course, traditional tribal culture has been the object of industrial enslavement.

 

Racism, of course, was originally a form of anti-tribalism, driven by the economic value of enslavement.  We  are no longer overtly racist, in our public laws at least, but we are still politically driven by industrial power centers, still brutally anti-tribal, structurally violent, to millions of our children, our tribal primitives, and to our shamanic adults.  Our contemporary slaver war, our Drug War, is a direct descendant, via the Inquisition, of Roman slave law, called Prohibitio by the Romans, Prohibition.

 

Ecstatic  shamans make lousy, and dangerous, slaves. Female and male, they were able to unite the sexes, to bring back the first times, to make the world whole again.  Theirs was powerful primal therapy, demonized by the Church as ‘witchcraft.’ 

 

All illness may not literally be, as the shamans would say, an alienation of the soul, but alienation of the soul is always an illness. The Church’s medieval demons were animals who had lost their forest, projections of people grasping for their own roots in the earth, their own tribal memory.  The Church wanted to exorcise the demonized animals, but the curanderas  wanted to bring back the forest.  In all pre-industrial cultures, medicine and religion are a unity, inseparable, just as “medicine” is considered a specialized type of food, “the food of your soul” as Quanah put it.  These attitudes are instinctive; who ever heard of prohibiting food?  If painkillers are illegal, doesn’t that mean that pain is illegal?  Who ever heard of criminalizing pain?

 

In Germany and Scotland, in the sixteenth century, midwives were burned alive for easing the pain of childbirth.  The ostensible reason was that the pain was God’s punishment for Original Sin, and so to interfere with it was heretical, causing great pain and hurt to Our Saviour (fascism is always maudlin).  The real reason was that these shamans challenged the psycho-medical monopoly of the military-industrial theocracy.

 

Puritan Governor John Winthrop of Massachusetts plainly asserted as much in 1648, explaining why Margaret Jones had to be hanged: “she practising physic, and her medicines being such things as (by her own confession) were harmless, as aniseed, liquors, etc., yet had extraordinarily violent effects.”  Other accusations included an understanding “beyond the apprehension of all physicians and surgeons” and “some things which she foretold came to pass accordingly; other things she could tell of (as secret speeches, etc.) which she had not ordinary means to come to the knowledge of.” She sounds like a powerful shaman.

 

Even in circumstances of patriarchal conquest, women, because of their biological role as creators and primary childcare providers, tend to preserve the ancient shamanism, the ancient herbal medicine, as an aspect of their psychic wholeness, their evolutionary birthright. Women remember pre-industrial pharmacoshamanism more naturally, preserve it more easily, and so are the necessary last target of industrial cultural genocide - hence the Inquisition, which numbers women, especially midwives, as the overwhelming majority of its victims.  

 

When the European settlers called the Indians “the ten lost tribes of Israel,” they usually meant that they reminded them of practical knowledge and powers long forgotten.  Dr. Stone established that most Indians practiced Credé’s method of expelling the placenta at least a century before Credé published it. Dr. Engelmann, in 1883, described massage and manipulation techniques for the expulsion of the baby and the afterbirth that were just beginning to be adopted by official Euroamerican medicine: “Although constantly practiced by primitive people for thousands of years, these methods have been recently rediscovered by learned men, clothed in scientific principle, and given to the world as new.”

 

The Alabama-Koasatis induced contractions with boiled cotton roots.  The Zunis eased labor with ergot.  The Meskwakis used a decoction of wild yam root for the same purpose, and trillium was widely used to ease hemorrhage and promote parturition.  All these ancient techniques became official in Euroamerican medicine for the same purposes. 

 

Indian mechanical tricks, both during and after birth, were sophisticated.  Indian midwives understood infant medicine, and could herbally manipulate menstruation, lactation, conception and abortion. The Arikaras used chokecherry and mallow to stem postpartum hemorrhage.  Red baneberry was used to dissolve blood clots and heal inflammation of the breast, and various herbs were used to eliminate the afterbirth.  Most of today’s birth control pills use diosgenin, from the Mexican wild yam, which also yields cortisone; it was a basic of the Aztec armamentarium.

 

"Patent medicine" was an epithet of the prohibitionists. Most physicians prescribed the same standard antiseptics, pain killers, fever reducers and herbal specifics prescribed by most druggists, midwives and herbalists. A sophisticated herbalist or midwife was a match for all but the greatest of physicians, and most of the great physicians were sophisticated herbalists. The most popular patent medicines were alcoholic infusions of the most effective herbs. These included opium, cannabis, coca, mandrake, belladonna, henbane, datura, foxglove, lobelia, trillium, sassafras, black cohosh, skullcap, bloodroot and the many herbs called snakeroot. American pharmacology became more sophisticated thanks largely to Native American herbalism, popularized over-the-counter.

 

The Rev. Andrew White, a former president of Cornell University, summed up the ‘progressive’ view of the evolution of patent medicine in the Popular Science Monthly of May, 1891: “Patent medicine had its origins in folk medicine.  We are thus enabled to examine patent medicine as a magical practice and art of gradual development and of slow and subtle transformation.  We shall argue that the blind, unthinking faith in a secret compound known as ‘patent medicine’ is, for the most part, a survival.  Further, we shall be able to show how magical practices, as of the Indians, develop into remedies of the folk, of the people who share least in progress; how folk practices, in turn, in the hands of the mediaeval leech and alchemist, become ‘occult science’; how, finally, out of leechcraft and quackery was evolved our curious system of patent medicine.  The modern doctor is the heir of the leech, apothecary, and alchemist.  He too seeks the elixir of life.  He now makes a lymph more wonderful than the witches’ ointment, which enabled people to sail through the air.”

 

Actually, he was making a lymph that was the witches ointment that enabled people to sail through the air.  The ointment was composed of various combinations of Thornapple (Datura stramonium), Deadly Nightshade (Atropa belladonna), Henbane (Hyoscyamus niger), Mandrake (Mandragora), Ergot (Claviceps purpurea) and Monkshood (Aconitum napellus), among others.

 

All but the ergot and aconite are closely related, bearing similar alkaloids: scopolamine, atropine and hyoscyamine. Scopolamine was official in 1918 as a cerebral sedative, an aid for insomnia and delirium tremens, as a pain reliever, as a producer of surgical twilight sleep in combination with morphine, and as a cure for some types of insanity (!).  Today scopolamine is official as a premedication for general anesthesia and as an antispasmodic for motion sickness, nausea and irritable bowel. 

 

Atropine was official in 1918 to check secretion, stimulate circulation and respiration, overcome muscle spasm and as a local anesthetic.  It is official today as a premedication for general anesthesia, to speed up an abnormally slow heart and as an antispasmodic.  Hyoscyamine was official in 1918 as a substitute for many of the uses of atropine, and is official today as an antispasmodic.  Aconitum was formerly official as a circulatory sedative.

 

The grain fungus ergot, the microscopic mushroom Claviceps purpurea, was the powerful entheogenic standby of ancient Greek, medieval European and Native American midwives.  It was official in the 1918 U.S. Dispensatory for the same thing it was official for in ancient Greece, shortening labor: “The effect of a small dose of ergot upon the uterus is to increase both the vigor of its contraction, and its muscular tone....  In the third stage of labor...many obstetricians recommend the routine use of egot...as a prophylactic against post partum hemorrhage....  Osborne...says that it had a powerful sedative effect upon the central nervous system and is useful in certain types of asthma, and Graves’s disease, hysteria, and especially for the nervousness in the withdrawal of morphine.” That was the official medical comment, in 1918, on the entheogen of Eleusis, the central sacrament of Classical Greece.

 

Dr. Albert Hofmann, the Sandoz chemist who made ergonovine basic to obstetrics, synthesized LSD in the same series of experiments. These experiments, conducted over a period of years in the 1940’s, also yielded hydergine, essential today in the improvement of cerebral circulation in geriatric patients, and dihydroergotamine, an important blood pressure stabilizer. Hofmann used the naturally occurring lysergic acid radical, the common nucleus of all ergot alkaloids, as the major component of LSD. 

 

Naturally occurring lysergic acid derivatives include the human neurotransmitter serotonin and the mushroom alkaloid psilocybin, also first synthesized by this seminal chemist.  The human neurotransmitter and the plant alkaloids are closely related.  That is, exactly as ancient Greek midwives used to say when they administered their ergot-based “mixture,” “the mother of your mother will help you to become a mother.”

 

It was such ancient cultural hints that led the erudite Hofmann to his seminal syntheses. The “mixture” (kykeon) used by the ancient Greek midwives  was the same brew that was drunk at Athens’ most holy temple, Eleusis. Sacramental Mayan morning glories, beautifully depicted at the ancient Mayan temple-palace complex at Teotihuacán, 500 CE,  also contain ergot-based entheogens.  That is, traditional tribal midwifery, anywhere in the world, at any time in human history, was always powerfully shamanic.  

 

Pope Innocent VIII wrote the pharmacodynamic introduction to the Malleus Maleficarum, the official legal handbook of torture of the Inquisition: “Our Apostleship requires...applying potent remedies to prevent the disease of heresy and other turpitudes diffusing their poison to the destruction of many innocent souls...”  Does that sound like the Drug War to you?  “Drug” “addiction” is a “plague,” an “epidemic,” a “scourge” of “poison”; all that comes straight out of the Malleus Maleficarum, which admits it’s all really a “turpitude.”

 

"Drug" is a medieval French word (drogue) meaning "commodity no longer in demand and therefore valueless,” as in our phrase “a drug in the market.” It was put into the language by inquisitors and is a subtle piece of implicit propaganda, replacing the ancient “medicine” words, like the Greek pharmakon, with a put-down the speaker assumes to be subjective.

 

In France, in 1635, Cardinal Richelieu, a legendary inquisitor and slaver, established the Academie francaise, composed exclusively of priests, nobles and generals. He chartered them “to render it [the language] pure.” The Church founded the Accademia della Crusca in Italy in 1582 with the same object. The Congregatio de propaganda fide, “Congregation for propagating the faith,” founded by Pope Gregory XV in 1622, gave us the word propaganda.

 

Put ‘em all together and whaddya got? Drug Propaganda. Industrial fascists distort the meaning of history so as to destroy mnemosyne, because, as Plato said, “all learning is remembering.” Slavers operate by co-opting the symbolism, and demonizing the sacraments, of the enslaved. It would have seemed very odd to Jesus, executed by Romans for resisting their military enslavement of Israel, to be told that Constantine, a Roman slaver, represented Jesus. That’s sort of like naming the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs ‘The Geronimo.’ Constantine no more partook of the war shaman Joshua’s actual sacraments than the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs partakes of Geronimo’s - however many airplanes he jumps out of.

 

The Pope's inquisitors, Kramer and Sprenger, the authors of the Malleus Maleficarum (A Hammer for the Evil Ones), are also really the original authors of the first federal drug law in American history, the Comstock Law. The American authors of that law really did look to the inquisitors for inspiration - and said so. And, as Kramer and Sprenger proudly point out in their medieval classic, they got it from the ancient Roman Prohibitio promulgated by Cato of Utica, Caesar’s aristocratic adversary, a world-class slaver: “And now let us examine the carnal desires of the body itself, whence has arisen unconscionable harm to human life.  Justly may we say with Cato of Utica: If the world could be rid of women, we should not be without God in our intercourse.”  That would be funny, if it weren’t for all that rape, torture and murder.

 

“All witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which in women is insatiable.  See Proverbs XXX: There are three things that are never satisfied, yea, a fourth thing which says not, It is enough; that is, the mouth of the womb.  Wherefore for the sake of fulfilling their lusts they consort even with devils....  it is no matter for wonder that there are more women than men found infected with the heresy of witchcraft.  And in consequence of this, it is better called the heresy of witches than of wizards, since the name is taken from the more powerful party.  And blessed be the Highest Who has so far preserved the male sex from so great a crime; for since He was willing to be born and to suffer for us, therefore He has granted to men this privilege...”

 

“Now there are...seven methods by which they infect with witchcraft the venereal act and the conception of the womb: First, by inclining the minds of men to inordinate passion; second, by obstructing their generative force; third, by removing the members accommodated to that act; fourth, by changing men into beasts by their magic art; fifth, by destroying the generative force in women; sixth, by procuring abortion; seventh, by offering children to devils, besides other animals and fruits of the earth with which they work much harm.”

 

“Witches who are midwives in various ways kill the child conceived in the womb....  The Canonists treat more fully than the Theologians of the obstructions due to witchcraft....  No one does more harm to the Catholic Faith than midwives.”

 

Why, this almost rises to the theological heights of Augustine himself (354-430 CE), who started his career as the Emperor’s Minister of Propaganda.  Like the senators he socialized with, Augustine thought slavery was just dandy, as 'divinely ordained' as marriage: "The prime cause of slavery, then, is sin, so that man was put under man in a state of bondage; and this can be only by a judgement of God, in whom there is no unrighteousness, and who knows how to assign divers punishments according to the deserts of the sinners....Yet slavery as a punishment is also ordained by that law which bids us to preserve the natural order and forbids us to disturb it; for if nothing had been done contrary to that law, there would have been nothing requiring the check of punishment by slavery."

 

‘Saint’ Augustine declared, in his Liber de Fide ad Petrum Diaconum, that he “most firmly holds and in no way doubts that not only every pagan, but every Jew, heretic, and schismatic, will go to the eternal fire, which is prepared for the Devil and his angels, unless before the end of his life he be reconciled with and restored to the Catholic Church.”  Pope Gregory IX, in his Decretals, used this “theology” to justify the worst horrors of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.  “Finally, it benefits obstinate heretics that they be cut off from this life; for the longer they live, thinking their various errors, the more they pervert, and the greater the damnation they lay up for themselves.”

 

German midwives, who were decimated by the Inquisition in a genuine Holocaust, called the grain fungus ergot, with which Hofmann synthesized LSD, mutterkorn. Possession of mutterkorn, according to Bishop Peter Binsfeld, who wrote his Commentarius in 1622, was the most incriminating of the indicia of witchcraft. Kramer and Sprenger detail how those who use “witches medicines” are to be stripped naked, carefully shaved of all bodily hair, and tied to “some engine of torture” for some good clean lascivious fun.

 

Kramer and Sprenger, following a text originally penned by Augustine,  promulgated the original  Reefer Madness: “‘and with our spells we kill them in their cradles or even when they are sleeping by their parents’ side, in such a way that they afterwards are thought to have been overlain or to have died some other natural death.  Then we secretly take them from their graves, and cook them in a cauldron, until the whole flesh comes away from the bones to make a soup which may be easily drunk.  Of the more solid matter we make an unguent which is of virtue to help us in our arts and pleasures and our transportations; and with the liquid we fill a flask or skin, whoever drinks from which, with the addition of a few other ceremonies, immediately acquires much knowledge and becomes a leader in our sect.’”  So much for mutter and her mutterkorn.

 

The broomstick on which the curanderas were said to fly was Scotch Broom, the common plant whose stalks and leaves, tied in a bundle, were used as a household sweeper from time immemorial. The word “broom” is related to “bush” and “bramble,” and it is the plant that gave the sweeper its name.  Smoked broom blossoms give a mild, calmative high; Canary Island Broom, the Mexican variety, is used the same way. 

 

“Flying on a broomstick” has obvious sexual implications. The curanderas under examination also gave detailed descriptions of “anointing a stick” or “greasing a staffe” or “anointing themselves under the arms and in other hairy places.”  “Antecessor gives us a horn with a salve in it, wherewith we anoint ourselves, whereupon we call upon the Devil and away we go!”  These happy curanderas were brutally slaughtered, by the tens of thousands, when trapped by the Inquisition.  Medieval Europe did not take kindly to powerful women.

 

Neither did nineteenth-century America. The first federal drug law in American history is aimed specifically at midwives, and the zeitgeist and legal language come straight out of the Inquisition.  A sanctimonious Connecticut Congregationalist named Anthony Comstock joined the New York City YMCA’s campaign against obscenity in 1868.  Financed by powerful Puritan merchants and supported by leading Doctors of Divinity, Comstock was appointed to head the Y-connected New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.

 

In 1873 Comstock engineered An Act for the Suppression of Trade in, and Circulation of, obscene Literature and Articles of immoral Use - “The Comstock Law”: “That whoever...shall sell...or in any manner exhibit...or shall have in his possession...any obscene book, pamphlet...or other representation...or any cast, instrument or other article of an immoral nature, or any drug or medicine...for the prevention of conception, or for causing unlawful abortion, or shall advertise the same for sale...shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor...and on conviction thereof, he shall be imprisoned at hard labor in the penitentiary for not less than six months nor more than five years for each offense...” Comstock was made a special agent of the Post Office Department with the power to open the mail. His New York Society served as an army of private deputies.

 

In 1878 Comstock went to Madame Restell, a famous Cockney midwife established at 52nd & 5th in Manhattan for years.  Although she was 67 and retired, she took pity on Comstock, who entrapped her by posing as a distraught husband whose hysterical wife was unable to sustain yet another pregnancy.  On receiving medication, Comstock made his drug bust and threw the old lady in the Tombs.  Facing a certain five years at hard labor, the distraught old woman cut her own throat.  Comstock proudly told the papers she was the fifteenth midwife he had driven to suicide.

 

Comstock’s last case was his most famous.  In 1915 he arrested Margaret Sanger for publishing her own magazine, Woman Rebel, which dealt explicitly with female medicine, sexual repression, labor organization and strike tactics.  She was charged on nine counts of obscenity, a possible 45-year sentence.

 

“Family Limitation” was what the AMA and Comstock  had been calling “self-medication” for thirty years.  Wrote Comstock: “Surely, such a mighty medium, power, and agency as the enlightened press of the nineteenth century in free America, ought not to become the tool of the villain, the vampire, nor the ghoul, to rob the simpleminded, honest laborer; or oppress, curse and destroy the sick and afflicted.”  “Three feminine dames attached were,/Whom Satan did infect/With Belial’s spirit, whose sorcery did/The simple so molest.”  The watchword of the “progressive” inquisitors was “social control.”

 

Harvey Wiley, an Anti-Saloon League temperance fundamentalist, was the Chief Chemist of the Department of Agriculture. He was organized medicine's man in the USDA and Comstock’s most powerful ally.  Wiley’s crowning triumph, the Food and Drug Act of 1906, began the process that made the standard herbal remedies unavailable over the counter, legally forcing a doctor's prescription fee for the most common medicinal herbs. 

 

It was Wiley, in the Food and Drug Act, who invented the single greatest pharmacological lie of today’s drug laws – that there is no  distinction between whole herbs and refined alkaloids. (The greatest legal lie is that thay are constitutional.) The intentional confusion, combined with the artificial hysteria, enabled organized medicine to achieve a legal monopoly not only on the potentially dangerous refined concentrates, but on the perfectly safe bestselling herbs as well. That’s why today’s drug law contains no objective definition of “drug,” just an irrational list of “substances,” which can be either whole herbs, that is, vegetables, natural isolates or artificial compounds.  In no other area of law would such vagueness be tolerated. Of course, this was the era of “separate but equal,” and that was no coincidence. 

 

Sanger worried about access to medicine, birth control and free clinics for the poor.  Comstock and Wiley worried about exactly the opposite: restricting access to the commercial interests they represented, criminalization of birth control, and the monopolistic domination of medical fees, enforced by law.  

 

Sanger was just the sort of ghoul Comstock hated most, a qualified midwife who insisted that sexuality was “natural, clean and healthful...the creative instinct which dominates all living things.”  Given the unavailability, the illegality, of contraceptive drugs, safe abortifacients or birth control information, Sanger picked up her pen for The Call, the socialist weekly, and devoted herself to disseminating practical sex-related information: ‘What Every Mother Should Know,” and “What Every Girl Should Know.”  “No woman can call herself free who does not own and control her body.”  This, of course, applies to men too, and to lungs as well as to wombs. In 1916 Sanger had the guts to open the first birth control clinic in the U.S., in a Jewish and Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn. 

 

When Sanger got specific about gonorrhea, The Call was banned from the mails: “It was at this time that I began to realize that Anthony Comstock was alive and active.  His stunted, neurotic nature and savage methods of attack had ruined thousands of women’s lives.  He had indirectly caused the death of untold thousands.  He and a weak-kneed Congress, which, through a trick, in 1873 had given him the power of an autocrat, were directly responsible for the deplorable condition of a whole generation of women left physically damaged and spiritually crippled from the results of abortion.  No group of women had yet locked horns with this public enemy.  Women in far western states who had fought for the sacred privilege of the ballot and won it years earlier had never raised their voices against the Comstock laws.  Their own shallow emotions had not yet grappled with so fundamental an issue as sex.”

 

The shallow women to whom Sanger refers are the doughty prudes of the  WCTU and the more prohibitionist-minded of the Suffragettes, whose roots were in the old Temperance movement.  One of Congressman Charlie Rangel’s stock lies, which he repeated for years while Chairman of the House Committee on Narcotics, was that Drug Prohibition and Alcohol Prohibition are separate issues engineered by separate forces.  They were, in fact, part and parcel of the same political program engineered by exactly the same individuals. And, legally, for us today, it all started with the WCTU.  By the 1880's the WCTU was easily the most powerful women's organization in the country, with 150,000 dues-paying members in nearly two thousand local clubs. They were ably coordinated with a departmentalized national headquarters by Methodist educator Frances Willard and her "Protestant nuns."

 

Working with Anthony Comstock, the WCTU got obscenity laws in most states which criminalized the teaching of real sexual biology and contraception, even by physicians. They helped Comstock criminalize Sanger.  The church ladies even acquiesced when the AMA engineered midwifery licensing tests in most states and then refused to test qualified midwives. Below is the comment of The Masses, “Your honor,” says Comstock, “this woman gave birth to a naked child!”

 

“The internal use of drugs will be discarded by all intelligent physicians,” declared the ethereal Willard, herself, of course, not medically qualified.  The WCTU pioneered “Scientific Temperance Instruction” (DARE) in the schools, creating a whole new class of textbook, which the WCTU wouldn’t approve unless the “scientific” slant was just right.  Between 1892 and 1902 every state in the Union adopted the WCTU “physiology” texts.     

 

The church ladies were financed by the mill owners, who turned their captive audiences over to the country’s most popular fundamentalist evangelist, Baseball Billy Sunday, who pitched his slider for sobriety inside the factory gate. 

 

The mill owners’ major political action committee was the First Congregational Church of Oberlin, Ohio, home of the Rev. Howard Hyde Russell, founder of the far-right, evangelical Anti-Saloon League, which, like the WCTU, had enormous strength in Protestant churches.  The League convinced itself that Prohibition was popular with all but “aliens of the lowest type.”  “In God’s name and with His help, we will enter upon a permanent good citizenship campaign which shall mean the victorious domination of Christian conscience, whose right it is to rule, in the politics of America.”  Sounds contemporary, don’t it? 

 

The Anti-Saloon League was rolling in money from Ford, Cadillac, Packard, Dodge, Studebaker, S. S. Kresge, Vanderbilt, Morgan, Rockefeller and countless others.  By 1918 Kresge had enrolled more than 14,000 business contributors to the League. 

 

The athletic and brilliantly glib Billy Sunday was hired to hold revivals in town after town where the League had a contest on the ballot: "Whiskey is all right in its place," insisted the droll preacher, "but its place is in hell!" Billy always managed to equate alcohol not only with inefficiency, but with unionism, that other unhealthy immigrant habit: "The saloon must be destroyed!"

 

The Anti-Saloon League, basically Republican, perfected the deadly art of “nonpartisan” bloc voting.  If the Republican was wet, the League didn’t hesitate to swing its bloc vote to a dry Democrat.  It had both parties quaking in their boots. By 1915, with 40,000 cooperating congregations, it was one of the most powerful forces in the country, controlling hundreds of small towns, dozens of cities, numerous state houses and a considerable portion of Congress. This is the Congress that gave us not only the 18th Amendment, Prohibition, but The Harrison Act, this country’s seminal federal drug law, an organic part of Prohibition’s original political package. The Harrison Act was first enforced by the Narcotics Division of Treasury’s Prohibition Unit.

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