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VideoHorizon: Psychedelic science by Bill EaglesFeb 8, '08 5:27 PM
for everyone
In the late 1960s, human experiments with psychedelic drugs were brought to a halt. Government reacted to the anarchy of the hippy ... all ยป counter-culture. The drug-crazed Charles Manson slayings came to symbolise public fear of the street use of LSD. Funding ceased, and the few researchers who battled on were ostracised. But lost in the blanket ban were remarkable research projects in the field of psychiatry that held out new hope for the treatment of schizophrenia and alcoholism. Bill Eagles' extraordinary film tells the story of a handful of dedicated scientists who have struggled to make psychedelic research respectable again. In the USA, psychiatrists Rick Strassman and Charles Grob, and neuroscientist Deborah Mash each quietly began investigations with unknown psychedelic compounds, to avoid the alarm bells of LSD. Strassman pursued the Federal Drug Administration for permission to do safety trials of DMT. Mash works on treating cocaine addicts, achieving success with Ibogaine, a psychedelic derived from a West African plant. Their success hinges on the patient having a 'peak' experience, entering the realm of the mystical or religious. The early researchers had spotted this. Now it was dramatically reinforced by unique new evidence from Brazil. Unable to work in the USA, Grob visited Brazil to track down the ritual use of Ayahuasca, a leaf rich in the powerful DMT. For centuries it has been used amongst the shamans of the Amazon. But today, in urban Brazil, tens of thousands of men, women and children are taking the drug as part of an ecstatic Christian cult experience. The Brazilian Government asked Grob to look at long-term damaging effects of the drug. Instead, he found no evidence of toxicity or brain damage, and also that long-term users functioned better in their community. In 1992 Brazil legalised ritual use of Ayahuasca. The FDA took careful note. Then in the early 1990s, leading lights of the US computer industry began admitting that many breakthroughs in Silicon Valley in the 70s and 80s had been inspired by regular psychedelic drug use. Nobel Prize winner Kary Mullis, and founding father of Microsoft, Bob Wallace, reveal on camera the psychedelic influence on their creativity. This anecdotal evidence raised support for the psychedelic researchers. Now Strassman has received approval from the FDA for research into LSD itself.

Director: Bill Eagles
Executive producer: John Lynch



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10 CommentsChronological   Reverse   Threaded
b422 wrote on Feb 8
Go to Google Video Page to view in it's entirety Link
48 minutes
keithdcrawford wrote on Feb 8
WHERE DO I SIGN UP?
b422 wrote on Feb 8
You and me both brudda', I think it would be easiest just to go down to Brazil.
keithdcrawford wrote on Feb 8
yeah
i talked to God once...man i shoulda listened
k8girl wrote on Feb 9
Dontcha just love Google video? I have been watching a lot of documentaries on there lately.

I have bookmarked it and will be watching this soon. Thanks!!
b422 wrote on Feb 9
Sometimes it actually feels like I'm learning something;)
keithdcrawford wrote on Feb 9
NOT ME!
revatman wrote on Feb 11
they made lsd illegal the year I was born.

how ironic is that?
revatman wrote on Feb 13
i've heard before that controlled use of psychedelics helps with a lot of mental issues, addictions and various other similar ailments. it's too bad that our government is so narrow-minded.
b422 wrote on Feb 13
There is still such a conservative base behind what happens and what doesn't,... playing it "safe" perhaps? At what cost?
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