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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!!

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To: one_less who wrote (77001)4/6/2000 3:03:00 PM
From: Jacques Chitte  Read Replies (2) of 108807
 
>That movement died because it didn't work.<
Respectfully disagree - that movement died because the press saw fit to lie about the dangers of psychedelics, and then the Federal government saw fit to restrict them as stringently as heroin.
I maintain that psychedelics (a completely different class of drugs from the depressants - like alcohol or heroin) could have been tremendously salutary to our society if they hadn't morally horrified the churchgoers who held positions of power. Y'see, psychedelics were perceived as a sort of Antichrist. Unfairly imo.
At the same time, psychedelics are not toys. They were widely used as such in the 60s and 70s, and our society never was given the chance to grow up with psychedelics and find mature, thoughtful ways to integrate them into our way of life.
Either path (treating psychedelics as toys, or treating them as Satan incarnate) is out of balance.

The ban of the hard drugs (heroin and cocaine) is imo a primarily financial burden. (With major secondary consequences on our national dialog regarding civil liberty.) But the comprehensive ban of psychedelics, which were never an engine of underworld profit, is a spiritual tragedy, an unrecognized pharmaceutical diaspora.
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