Ex-Wham singer George Michael dies
Singer George Michael dies at 53, publicist says
For more details, see the BBC News website
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Friday, December 2, 2016 1:06 PM EST |
The attorney general of Michigan said in a court filing that a pending recount — initiated by Jill Stein, the Green Party candidate — would put the state’s voters at risk of “paying millions and potentially losing their voice in the Electoral College in the process.” |
In Wisconsin, a lawsuit argued that the recount could “unjustifiably cast doubt” on Mr. Trump’s victory there. |
And in Pennsyvania, lawyers for Mr. Trump and his allies are seeking to halt legal proceedings to contest the statewide election results. |
Read more » |
“Terence McKenna viewed cannabis, psilocybin, DMT, LSD, and other psychedelics as ‘catalysts of intellectual dissent.’ He wrote in The Archaic Revival (1991) that his assumption about psychedelics had always been that they were illegal ‘not because it troubles anyone that you have visions’ but because ‘there is something about them that casts doubts on the validity of reality.’ This makes it difficult, McKenna observed, for societies—even democratic and especially ‘dominator’ societies—to accept them, and we happen to live in a global ‘dominator’ society.”And another article, NY Mag called The Truth About Psychedelic Drugs and Mental Illness by Jesse Singal said:
“Psychedelic drugs are confusing, and it’s easy to get very different views about them depending on whom you ask. On the one hand, enthusiasts — not to mention a small body of scientific research — have long claimed that, when taken responsibly and with the proper supervision, so-called classical psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms) are a safe way to smooth the path toward tranquility and spiritual enlightenment. On the other hand, ever since the cultural spasms of the 1960s and a subsequent government crackdown on these substances, the archetype of the hallucinogen burnout has loomed large in the public imagination; that is, people who try LSD or ‘shrooms’ — sometimes even just once! — are forever ruined by flashbacks and other symptoms that eventually drive them to a state of full-blown psychosis.”To put it simply, one could argue that alcohol has less horror stories that have made their way into public history than that of psychedelics, which has created fear and a generalized taboo that keeps many governments from taking into consideration scientific research that would suggest otherwise. And though alcohol is, without question, many countries’ biggest and most deadly recreational drugs, it’s the most legal, and the most addictive. But too many people drink and the alcohol industry is far too powerful for this drug to ever be considered as dangerous as psychedelics.