Pubdate: Wed, 25 Jun 2008
Source: Idaho Mountain Express (ID)
Copyright: 2008 Express Publishing, Inc
Contact:  http://www.mtexpress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2296
Author: Dick Dorworth
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)

THOSE OLD PROBLEM CHILDREN

When Albert Hofmann died in April at the age of 102 at  his home in 
Switzerland, he would have been unknown  outside the scientific 
community had it not been for  what he affectionately called his 
"problem child,"  LSD--lysergic acid diethylamide-25, which he 
discovered/invented/synthesized in 1938 in the process  of looking 
for medicinal uses of a fungus found on rye,  wheat and other grains. 
He was a Swiss scientist in the  traditional mold searching for ways 
to improve human  life and he succeeded beyond his wildest 
expectations in unexpected ways. LSD deeply altered the lives 
of  millions of people and, thereby, the course of human  events.

LSD has been profoundly misunderstood and demonized by 
non-cognoscenti, seriously abused by some who could be  called 
cognoscenti and banned for many years in much of  the world. 
Hofmann's problem child strikes terror into  the quaking hearts and 
fearful souls of those  authorities who mistake control for order and 
who quiver with rage or uncertainty at questions (or  chemicals) that 
challenge their certainty about what is  what.

Psychedelics were well known by the time Hofmann  discovered LSD, but 
LSD was some 10,000 times more  powerful than mescaline. Through the 
1940s and 1950s,  LSD created a revolution in psychiatry. It was used 
successfully in the treatment of neurosis, psychosis  and depression. 
Some 40,000 people underwent  psychedelic therapy, perhaps most 
notably the actor  Cary Grant, who received some 60 LSD psychotherapy 
sessions and said of them, "I have been born again."  Aldous Huxley 
requested an injection of LSD on his  deathbed. And many 
psychotherapists took the drug along  with their patients, a fact not 
noted nearly enough.

Even though it was a problem child, Hofmann, who took  LSD hundreds 
of times, never gave up his belief in its  goodness and usefulness as 
a "medicine for the soul."  He never believed in it as a pleasure 
drug for the  masses. He said, "As long as people fail to 
truly  understand psychedelics and continue to use them as  pleasure 
drugs, and fail to appreciate the very deep  psychic experience they 
may induce, then their medical  use will be held back."

Like many others--perhaps including some reading these  words--at a 
certain point he realized he no longer had  a use for LSD. He turned 
to and recommended to others  older methods of attaining 
"extraordinary states of  consciousness"--breathing techniques, yoga, 
fasting,  dance, art, meditation. He said, "LSD brings about a 
reduction of intellectual powers in favor of an  emotional experience 
of the world. It can help to  refill our consciousness with this 
feeling of wholeness  and being one with nature." Which would seem to 
indicate a key element of any "extraordinary state of  consciousness" 
is nothing more complicated than  connecting the heart to the brain.

LSD was made illegal in the U.S. in 1967 and despite  its successful 
use in psychotherapy for the previous  more than 20 years the DEA 
holds that it has no medical  benefits. Its potential for abuse as 
what Hofmann  termed one of the "pleasure drugs" is well established, 
as, contrary to the rationale for its legal standing,  is its 
beneficial medical use.

Another problem child in the pharmacopoeia of medicine  is Cannabis 
sativa, more commonly known as marijuana.  It has been used for 
thousands of years for a variety  of purposes, including medicinal 
and spiritual. As hemp  it has been used in the making of fiber goods 
including  rope, many different sturdy woven products, oil, paper, 
textiles and fuel. Hemp is grown, harvested and used  well in 
virtually every country in the world except the  United States. The 
illegal marijuana has certainly been  (and is as you read these 
words) used and abused as a  pleasure drug, but its use, abuse, 
destructiveness and  danger to the social order pales in comparison 
to that  of the legal drug alcohol and, for that matter, several  others.

The marijuana laws of America, unlike marijuana itself,  have damaged 
and destroyed the lives of hundreds of  thousands of otherwise 
innocent people, flooded the  jails with people who could not be 
termed criminal in a  rational social order, created a huge illegal 
industry  of enormous profits to a criminal hierarchy far more 
dangerous to society than the most pleasure seeking of  their 
customers, including those seeking relief from  the symptoms of AIDS, 
cancer, glaucoma and the  incessant pain of many ailments.

The thing is, those old problem children are not going  to go away. 
Though this newspaper and many of its  readers do not support the 
legalization and control of  marijuana and/or LSD the way alcohol and 
nicotine are  controlled, this writer and, as the city of Hailey 
recently evinced (twice), many other readers do. Part  of the 
rationale behind such thinking is perhaps best  illustrated by a 
Florida report published this month  that analyzed 168,900 deaths 
statewide in 2007.  Cocaine, heroin and all methamphatemines caused 
989  deaths, it found, while legal opioids--strong  painkillers in 
brand-name drugs like Vicodin and  OxyContin--caused 2,328. Drugs 
with benzodiazepine,  mainly depressants like Valium and Xanax, led 
to 743 deaths. Alcohol was the most commonly occurring 
drug,  appearing in the bodies of 4,179 of the dead and judged  the 
cause of death of 466--fewer than cocaine (843) but  more than 
methamphetamine (25) and marijuana (0).

Res ipsa loquitur.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom