The Supremes Debate Medical Marijuana
It's California pot patients' second effort to break the legal yoke that the federal Controlled Substances Act holds around state laws that let sick people use cannabis if they have a valid recommendation for it from their doctor. In the first case, U.S. v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative in 2001, patients argued that "medical necessity" trumped the federal law, much as ambulances are allowed to break the speed limit.

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  • 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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  • Claviceps purpurea - Ergot Alkaloid
    Ergot: A Fungus Disease Of Rye That Contains LSD

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  • Conocybe siligineoides - Conocybe
    Conocybe Siligineoides is a sacred fungus endemic only to Mexico.

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  • To Save the Forest, the Trees Must Go
    In the name of science, the United States Forest Service has proposed the experimental logging of half a million acres in two forests in the Sierra Nevada...

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  • Site Offers Home Delivery of Marijuana
    Canadian activists for the medicinal use of marijuana celebrated a court victory on Thursday by launching an Internet site offering home delivery of cannabis for seriously ill people.

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  • City Tries to Prohibit Substance
    Though it's legal for anyone to buy and sell Salvia Divinorum – an organic substance St. Peters police are referring to as "chewable marijuana" – police, along with at least one store in the city, are trying to keep it out of the hands of minors.

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  • Father Fights for Drug Use in Religion
    A member of an American Indian tribe wants to be able to give peyote to his 4-year-old son during spiritual ceremonies.

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  • St. Peters police and mayor want to restrict sales of herb
    St. Peters is poised to limit the sale of an herb that has been reported by a Web site to have LSD-like effects, and in so doing could become the first city in the nation to restrict the substance.

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  • Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drug Deaths on Rise Worldwide
    A new study shows that premature deaths from tobacco, alcohol, and other illegal drugs are rising worldwide, Reuters reported February 25th, 2003.

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  • Medical Marijuana Loses Again
    A federal judge has refused to block the U.S. government from potentially prosecuting two pot-smoking women whose doctors say marijuana is their only medical solace.

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  • Get Ready for PATRIOT ACT II
    The "fog of war" obscures more than just news from the battlefield. It also provides cover for radical domestic legislation, especially ill-considered liberty-for-security swaps, which have been historically popular at the onset of major conflicts.

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  • Get Ready for PATRIOT ACT II
    The "fog of war" obscures more than just news from the battlefield. It also provides cover for radical domestic legislation, especially ill-considered liberty-for-security swaps, which have been historically popular at the onset of major conflicts.

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  • Ninth Circuit Court Blocks DEA Hemp Rule
    The Court granted the hemp industry's Motion to Stay the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA's) "Final Rule," which was issued March 21, 2003 and would have banned the sale of nutritious hemp foods containing harmless trace amounts of naturally-oc

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  • Help Keep the Heat on Drug Czar!
    Last Thursday, June 5, the Marijuana Policy Project, working in conjunction with the Drug Policy Alliance, scored a remarkable victory in Congress when the House Government Reform Committee placed strong (and new) restrictions on the use of the National Y

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  • Herb Inspires High Expectations
    For hundreds of years, salvia divinorum, also known as diviner's sage and magic mint, has been part of the culture of the ancient peoples of the Sierra Mazateca. In a manner similar to peyote, it has been used by local indigenous peoples to induce an alte

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  • Drug's Roots are in Spiritual Ceremonies
    In the case of salvia divinorum, the plant has been used for hundreds of years in specific ceremonies and for explicit reasons. It has, like the blends used in First Nations ceremonial pipes or sweat lodges, long been used with knowledge and reverence. In

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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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  • Headshrinking the American
    Government-funded researchers and private companies are working on a new breed of pharmaceuticals designed to police your blood, identify illegal drugs, and block them from entering your brain. The CCLE is concerned that some courts may require use of the

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  • Patriot Act II Partially Signed Into Law
    On December 13, when U.S. forces captured Saddam Hussein, President George W. Bush not only celebrated with his national security team, but also pulled out his pen and signed into law a bill that grants the FBI sweeping new powers.

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  • COURT ALLOWS MEDICINAL USE OF MARIJUANA
    The Bush administration had asked the court, for the Ninth Circuit, to hold a new hearing on that ruling, issued by a three-judge panel in December on a lawsuit filed by two women with chronic illnesses. But in an order issued Wednesday and made public on

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  • UDV Wins Ayahuasca Case
    At 1:44 pm Eastern Standard Time today, December 10th 2004, the entire Supreme Court of The United States convened and determined to deny the Department of Justice’s request for that Court’s further intervention in the UDV’s legal case.

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  • UDV Wins Ayahuasca Case
    At 1:44 pm Eastern Standard Time today, December 10th 2004, the entire Supreme Court of The United States convened and determined to deny the Department of Justice’s request for that Court’s further intervention in the UDV’s legal case.

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  • No More Drug War! - HR 1528
    We're in the fight of our lives in Washington, DC. High-ranking members of Congress want to take the war on drugs to a whole new level.

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  • Liberal Bible-Thumping
    Even aside from his arguments that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married and that St. Paul was a self-hating gay, the new book by a former Episcopal bishop of Newark is explosive.

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  • Liberal Bible-Thumping
    Even aside from his arguments that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married and that St. Paul was a self-hating gay, the new book by a former Episcopal bishop of Newark is explosive.

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  • Liberation?: Afghanistan’s 2nd Largest Heroin Crop Ever
    The department's annual drug-trafficking report, released in March, warned that Afghanistan was "on the verge of becoming a narcotics state." This year's heroin crop will likely be the 2nd largest ever in Afganistan's history, notedly HIGHER than when th

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  • Liberation?: Afghanistan’s 2nd Largest Heroin Crop Ever
    The department's annual drug-trafficking report, released in March, warned that Afghanistan was "on the verge of becoming a narcotics state." This year's heroin crop will likely be the 2nd largest ever in Afganistan's history, notedly HIGHER than when th

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  • LOUISIANA CRIMINALIZES MANY BOTANICALS
    The penalty for possession is imprisonment with or without hard labor for not more than 5 years and, in addition, a possible fine of up to $5,000. The penalty for manufacture or distribution is imprisonment with or without hard labor for not less than 2 y

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  • LOUISIANA CRIMINALIZES MANY BOTANICALS
    The penalty for possession is imprisonment with or without hard labor for not more than 5 years and, in addition, a possible fine of up to $5,000. The penalty for manufacture or distribution is imprisonment with or without hard labor for not less than 2 y

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  • Backlash from FDA's Bogus Marijuana Report
    The FDA’s claim, of course, is patently false. Numerous credible scientific studies document marijuana’s medical benefits, most notably a 1999 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report commissioned by the White House drug czar’s office.

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  • Backlash from FDA's Bogus Marijuana Report
    The FDA’s claim, of course, is patently false. Numerous credible scientific studies document marijuana’s medical benefits, most notably a 1999 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report commissioned by the White House drug czar’s office.

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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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  • Federal Court Blocks Marijuana Initiative in Nevada
    A decision by Nevada's elections officials illegally disqualified thousands of signatures from people who filled out voter registration forms on the same day they signed petitions.

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  • Older Americans Have Stake in Medical Marijuana Struggle
    72% of Americans age 45 and over think marijuana should be legal for medicinal purposes with a doctor's recommendation, according to a poll commissioned by AARP, the nation's leading organization advocating on behalf of older people.

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  • House Approves Stem Cell Bill Opposed by Bush
    The House passed a bill on Tuesday to expand federal financing for embryonic stem cell research, defying a veto threat from President Bush, who appeared at the White House with babies and toddlers born of test-tube embryos and warned the measure "would ta

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  • Alaska Re-Criminalizes Marijuana
    The new law, which makes it a crime to possess any amount of marijuana in the privacy of one’s home, directly contradicts a September 2004 Alaska Supreme Court ruling allowing adults aged 21 and older to use and possess up to four ounces of marijuana in t

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  • Senior PC World Editor Killed for Pot
    Four masked men burst into the Pittsburg home of Rex Farrance, 59, about 9 p.m. Tuesday, fatally shooting him and pistol-whipping his wife after demanding money, police said. No arrests have been made.

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  • U.S. Renews Bid to Destroy Opium in Afghanistan
    After the biggest opium harvest in Afghanistan’s history, American officials have renewed efforts to persuade the government here to begin spraying herbicide on opium poppies, and they have found some supporters within President Hamid Karzai’s administrat

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  • More Illegal Federal Harassment
    On Tuesday, agents of the Pecos Valley Drug Taskforce in conjunction with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration searched the home of a registered medical marijuana patient who has lost the use of his legs and suffers chronic pain and muscle spasms due

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  • Pot Dispensaries Closing Under Threat of Feds
    The DEA puts pressure on building landlords of Medical Marijuana facilities in a maneuver to shut down legal clinics.

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  • States Must Tackle Medical-Marijuana Issue
    Workplace Safety is made key issue in Northwest States' Medical Marijuana Initiatives

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  • Moses High On Drugs: Isreali Researcher
    New study examines the possible use of psychoactive plants by Moses on Mt. Sanai, and in the religious rites of biblical times.

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  • Moses High On Drugs: Isreali Researcher
    New study examines the possible use of psychoactive plants by Moses on Mt. Sanai, and in the religious rites of biblical times.

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  • Ira Glasser Remembers William F. Buckley, Jr.
    William F. Buckley, Jr., conservative intellectual--and supporter of drug policy reform--passed away February 27, 2008. He is remembered by Ira Glasser, president of DPA's board and former executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union.

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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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  • Outrageous Anti-Pot Lies: Media Uses Cancer Scare Tactics
    Headlines suggested a study proved pot is a greater cancer risk than tobacco -- but the media didn't even wait for the report to be released.

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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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  • Salvia Divinorum Creates Catch-22
    Florida follows the lead of eight other states and considers ban on Salvia divinorum.

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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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  • Massachusetts Aims For Marijuana Decriminalization in November
    Thanks to a carefully-crafted initiative campaign by the Committee for Sensible Marijuana Policy (CSMP), Massachusetts may be the next state to take the step to decriminalize marijuana.

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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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  • Ken Kesey's Mexico - On the Lam With Ken Kesey
    Journalist Lawrence Downes goes down Mexico way in an attempt to conjure the trail blazed by Ken Kesey, novelist, psychedelic prophet and hero of “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, along with his band of Merry Pranksters in the 1960s.

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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.

  •  
  • 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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  • Marijuana May Prevent Cancer, Not Cause It
    Clinical research begins to demonstrate a link between Cannabinoids and halting the spread of a wide range of cancers.

  •  
  • 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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  • Ayurvedic 'Viagra' To Be Tested On Humans
    Researchers in India are studying the effects of Ayurveda herbal medicines for treatment of erectile dysfunction and premature ejaculation.

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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.

  •  
  • 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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  • New Medical Trials Study Therapeutic Uses of LSD
    A new Swiss research study of LSD as a therapy is the first in 36 years. The clinical trials are to determine its usefulness in easing anxiety and relieving pain in patients suffering from illnesses such as cancer and multiple sclerosis.

  •  
  • The Future of Psychedelics
    Author Daniel Pinchbeck discusses the 2008 World Psychedelic Forum held recently in Switzerland, and the potential for studying psychedelic therapies in the shifting world political climate.

  •  
  • 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

  •  
  • How the Internet Fuels the Global Psychedelic Community
    This year and the next, the United Nations will evaluate the War on Drugs. Since its official start in 1998 we have been bombed with official statistics on drug use, drug addiction, drug trafficking, street prices, courtcases and all the like. But what do

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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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"I need to medicate. I'm not feeling well," Angel McClary Raich says outside the Supreme Court on Monday, Nov. 29.

Raich, who has dark hair, pale olive skin and rimless oval glasses, is reed-thin – she struggles to keep her weight over 98 pounds. And no wonder she's thin; the 39-year-old Oakland, Calif. woman suffers from scoliosis, endometriosis, severe headaches, chronic nausea, unexplained seizures and episodes of paralysis, uterine fibroid tumors, a brain tumor too deep in her head to be removed, and a mysterious wasting syndrome where she loses life-threatening amounts of weight.

She has taken more than 30 different medications to deal with her conditions, including Vicodin, methadone, Tegretol, Paxil, Depakote, Dilantin, Promethazine, Marinol and cannabis. Cannabis is the only one that's been effective. She has to consume more than two ounces a week, in smoke, vaporization, food and cannabis-oil balm, but she no longer needs a wheelchair and can spend time with her two teenage children. "Cannabis gave me back my limbs," she says.

Another California woman, Diane Monson, 47, of Oroville, uses cannabis to control her painful back spasms, which did not respond to a decade of conventional medications, including Vicodin, Vioxx and the muscle relaxant Flexeril. But medical use of cannabis, while legal under California's 1996 law, is illegal under federal law. In August 2002, DEA agents raided Monson's garden and destroyed her six marijuana plants, after a three-hour stand-off with local police. "They were getting quite chesty with the federal guys," she recalls of the sheriff's dept. officers.

Two months after that raid, the two women petitioned the courts for an injunction to bar the federal government from interfering with their medical-marijuana use. A federal district court in California said no, but in December 2003, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the lower court to issue a preliminary injunction. The Justice Department appealed to the Supreme Court, which heard arguments on Nov. 29. A ruling is expected sometime in summer 2005.

The Commerce Clause

The key legal issue in the case, Ashcroft v. Raich, is how far the federal government can stretch its constitutional power to regulate interstate commerce. Federal drug prohibition justifies its usurpation of what are normally state police powers on the grounds that the illegal drug traffic is interstate commerce. But Monson grows her pot herself, and Raich gets hers donated by two local growers (who are anonymous parties to the suit). Therefore, they contend, as their marijuana never crosses a state line and no money changes hands, it is neither interstate nor commerce.

The two women also argue that preventing them from using medical marijuana would cause them "irreparable harm," severe pain and even death. "There are no other treatments I can reasonably recommend for Angel," Raich's physician, Dr. Frank H. Lucido of Berkeley, wrote in a deposition. "It could very well be fatal for Angel to forgo cannabis treatments." "Death constitutes irreparable harm," the patients' lawyers argue.

The case represents California pot patients' second effort to break the legal yoke that the federal Controlled Substances Act holds around state laws that let sick people use cannabis if they have a valid recommendation for it from their doctor. In the first case, U.S. v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers Cooperative in 2001, patients argued that "medical necessity" trumped the federal law, much as ambulances are allowed to break the speed limit. (Raich's husband, Robert, was one of the Oakland co-op's lawyers.) The Court unanimously rejected that claim for sale and distribution of marijuana, but left it unresolved for individual medical use.

The Justice Department's case relies mainly on a 1942 Supreme Court decision, Wickard v. Filburn, in which an Ohio farmer, Roscoe Filburn, was fined $117 for violating New Deal agricultural regulations by growing 460 bushels of wheat, twice his allowed quota. Filburn claimed that the wheat was for his family's personal use, so it was neither interstate nor commerce. The Court held that if enough farmers followed his example, it could substantially affect the interstate commerce in wheat.

Cannabis is illegal, the Justice Department adds, and the courts have said that the government has the right to ban personal possession of marijuana in order to stifle the trade in it, just as it does with machine guns, child pornography and purloined OxyContin. And the Controlled Substances Act classifies pot as a Schedule I substance, a dangerous drug with no valid medical use.

Homegrown Questions

Responding to questions from Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, John Paul Stevens, and David Souter, Acting Solicitor General Paul D. Clement repeatedly insisted that it would be impossible to allow medical use of marijuana while banning recreational use. Because marijuana is fungible, he said, police would need an "almost unnatural ability" to prevent medical herb from being diverted into the black market, and anyone arrested would claim they were a medical user.

"Any little island of lawful possession poses a real challenge to the statutory regime," Clement told the Court. Medical marijuana, he told Justice Stevens, "is an oxymoron." There is no such thing as medical use under federal law, he contended, and even if there were, there's no legal framework to regulate it.

The case will likely turn on the questions of whether Monson and Raich's home gardening constitutes "economic activity" and whether it has a substantial effect on the interstate marijuana market. Clement told the Court that it would, that marijuana is a $10.5 billion market nationally and that there are 100,000 medical users in California. The Justice Department maintains that there is no separation between private marijuana use and interstate commerce, that by possessing even homegrown pot Raich and Monson are stimulating the illicit drug market by increasing the marijuana supply.

That is an oddly paradoxical claim; medical users tout growing their own as an alternative to the illegal market. On the other hand, Clement argued that moving medical users out of the illegal market would depress prices, thus stimulating demand for pot – but if medical users bought weed on the street, that would also increase demand. The Justice Department's brief also avers that by taking cannabis instead of prescription drugs, medical users are undermining the market for legitimate pharmaceuticals.

By that logic, the patients' lawyers respond, home rose gardeners could be accused of undermining florists, and people who take care of their own kids could be accused of undercutting professional day care. "Prostitution is economic activity. Marital relations aren't," Boston law professor Randy E. Barnett, the patients' attorney, told the Court. The law involved in the Wickard case, the patients' brief notes, exempted small farms, those growing less than 300 bushels of wheat.

Two recent Supreme Court decisions have limited the government's use of the interstate-commerce justification: U.S. v. Lopez from 1995, striking down a law banning possession of a gun near a school, and U.S. v. Morrison in 2000, invalidating a law letting women sue their abusers in federal court. Clement contended that these cases are irrelevant, because they did not involve economic activity; Barnett responds that if the Court does not back Raich and Monson, there will be no limits on the concept of affecting interstate commerce, and federal law could reach "any activity at all."

Court and Spark

Finding a majority on the Court to support the right to use medical marijuana may be difficult, though. Justices O'Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg appeared most sympathetic, with Stevens and Souter also possible allies – though Souter and Anthony Kennedy both expressed concern about medical homegrown's effect on the market. The Court's conservative bloc, Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and the ailing William Rehnquist (who was absent, but announced that he would participate in the decision) is considered most sympathetic to restricting the use of the Commerce Clause, but conventional wisdom is that their distaste for drug use will trump that.

Justice Stephen Breyer seemed markedly skeptical. He questioned whether marijuana can help patients, suggested that they should get the Food and Drug Administration to approve medical marijuana instead of going through the courts, and declared that "medicine by regulation is better than medicine by referendum."

The marijuana legalization movement has tried several times to get the DEA to reclassify pot, to move it out of Schedule I. In 1988, after more than 15 years of litigation, DEA administrative law judge Francis Young called cannabis "one of the safest therapeutically active substances known to man." The DEA rejected his conclusions, and it has also nixed subsequent claims that new scientific evidence warrants rescheduling.

In 2001, a University of Massachusetts researcher applied for permission to grow cannabis for use in clinical studies, but the DEA has been sitting on that request for three years, says Rob Kampia of the Marijuana Policy Project. (The federal government's medical pot, grown on a farm in Mississippi and distributed to approved researchers and the seven surviving legal patients, is to West Coast medical-grade homegrown as rancid wine cooler is to prime Napa Valley cabernet.)

Federal Raids

Meanwhile, medical marijuana has been a top law-enforcement priority for the Bush administration. California NORML lists about 35 federal raids on medical growers since 2001. Some have been on massive cultivation operations well beyond state legal limits – California grower Eddy Lepp, busted in August, claimed that his 32,000 plants were earmarked for more than 2,000 individual patients – but the DEA has also hit small gardens like Monson's: 25 plants in San Diego, 27 plants in Mendocino County, 12 plants in South Central Los Angeles. In November 2003, the DEA seized three plants from a 57-year-old Colorado cancer patient without pressing charges.

The Justice Department's answer to medical marijuana users is simple: Take Marinol, capsules of synthetic THC dissolved in sesame oil. "It's wrong to assume that there's any inherent hostility to these substances," Clement said, noting that the DEA had moved Marinol from Schedule II (cocaine, OxyContin) to Schedule III (codeine). (That decision came just after the 1998 election, when four states approved medical marijuana initiatives.) Yet many medical marijuana users dislike Marinol. Its effects take two to three hours to come on, while smoking is almost instantaneous, an essential trait for controlling nausea or taming migraines. And Marinol is expensive, selling for $17 a pill on the Internet. As with eating marijuana, it's difficult to control the dose; one 10-mg capsule can be as disorienting as overindulging in hash brownies.

Asked by Ginsburg what possible defense there would be for a patient like Raich, who says Marinol made her vomit, Clement said there is none, just that it was unlikely she would be prosecuted.

That's scant consolation for patients like Raich. "If they decide I have the right to live, I can spend the rest of my life with my family," she said after the hearing. A negative ruling, she added, would be "a death sentence." Either way, she says, she's not going to stop medicating.

Steven Wishnia is the author of “The Cannabis Companion” (The Running Press) and "Exit 25 Utopia."

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