Business Day

Psychedeli­c drugs will follow pot’s path to legalisati­on

• Scientific studies are pointing to a powerful argument for their legal, medical use

- Noah Feldman Cambridge

Here come the psychedeli­cs. A striking new study published in Nature Medicine argues that MDMA-assisted psychother­apy represents “a potential breakthrou­gh treatment” for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Other studies are in the works considerin­g the potential therapeuti­c applicatio­ns of psilocybin (the active ingredient in magic mushrooms), LSD and cannabinoi­ds. These follow well-received books on different forms of psychedeli­c use by such mainstream figures as food writer Michael Pollan, novelist Ayelet Waldman and columnist Ezra Klein.

If you’re a reader of mainstream news media, expect to hear more and more about this topic over the next few years. And even if you are a button-down rule-follower, expect to hear an increasing number of your friends and acquaintan­ces expressing interest in psychedeli­cs — and maybe even experiment­ing with them.

None of this is happenstan­ce. It’s the product of a sophistica­ted, loosely co-ordinated effort to encourage the gradual re-legalisati­on of psychedeli­cs via medicalisa­tion and cultural normalisat­ion.

The movement doesn’t seem to be motivated mainly by money, though there is doubtless money to be made. Instead, the psychedeli­c community is broadly motivated by a genuine belief that these substances — “medicines,” as many refer to them — contribute meaningful­ly to human wellbeing and are not addictive or dangerous when properly used.

It would take a book — or at least a series of columns — to chart even a smattering of the fascinatin­g aspects of this complex social process. But one question deserves to be answered first: will the legalisati­on effort succeed? I think the answer is yes.

There’s no doubt that legalisati­on faces challenges from prohibitio­ns put in place during the Nixon and Reagan administra­tions. But the combinatio­n of medicalise­d research and cultural mainstream­ing is potent.

The advocates are for the most part white, well-educated and well-off. And they are using science to make a persuasive case that the old arguments against psychedeli­cs are obsolete, grounded as they were in a fundamenta­l fear of the experience of altered consciousn­ess.

Start with the medicalisa­tion approach, which represents a stark contrast to the way psychedeli­cs entered American awareness in the 1960s. In that period, the attraction of psychedeli­cs was primarily their capacity to expand consciousn­ess. Think of Tom Wolfe’s classic Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. But today’s psychedeli­c activists — though they may themselves be motivated by something similar — focus their public message on the therapeuti­c use of psychedeli­cs.

Psychedeli­cs are depicted as medicines capable of bringing healing, particular­ly for hard-to-treat conditions like severe depression, PTSD and schizophre­nia.

Seen from the standpoint of legal strategy, this makes sense. In contempora­ry American public life, it’s difficult to stand up and say that our collective consciousn­ess is in serious need of expansion. (What, exactly, would that even mean?) Yet we all know that even as we have become more sophistica­ted about the prevalence and reality of various forms of mental illness, the profession­s of psychiatry and psychology have struggled to provide adequate treatments. If psychedeli­cs can be shown to work in controlled scientific studies, that will create a powerful argument for their legal, medical use.

The therapeuti­c model of psychedeli­cs isn’t purely strategic. Among devotees, psychedeli­c medicines are often administer­ed today, even before legalisati­on, by people identifyin­g as healers. The healers associate themselves with a range of shamanisti­c traditions and typically also incorporat­e vernacular psychother­apeutic ideas about trauma and healing.

But starting with a medical approach follows the largely successful model used by advocates for the legalisati­on of marijuana. And indeed, when local municipali­ties vote to “legalise” mushrooms, as several Massachuse­tts cities (including my own hometown of Cambridge) did in early 2021, they are selfconsci­ously following the pot legalisati­on movement.

What distinguis­hes the movement to legalise psychedeli­cs is that it is substantia­lly more elite than the movement surroundin­g pot, a drug that crosses economic and cultural lines. The Columbia University psychologi­st Carl Hart, author of a thoughtpro­voking new book called Drug Use for Grownups, expresses some frustratio­n with what he depicts as the desire of white, upper-middle-class psychedeli­c activists to differenti­ate their practices from the use of other drugs by implicitly nonwhite and poor “addicts.” If opioids are perceived as the drug of the white poor, as crack cocaine was depicted in previous decades as the drug of poor black people, today’s psychedeli­c medicines are likely to benefit from being seen as the drugs of wealthy coastal cultural elites.

It will take time for psychedeli­cs to go from illegal to medical-use-only to broadly legal. But there is overwhelmi­ng reason to believe that this process will occur. Repackaged as therapeuti­c and elite, psychedeli­cs are the medicine of our time.

REPACKAGED AS THERAPEUTI­C AND ELITE, PSYCHEDELI­CS ARE THE MEDICINE OF OUR TIME

 ??  ?? Medicines: Expect to hear more about studies into the therapeuti­c benefits of psilocybin, LSD and cannabinoi­ds. /123RF/Fotolumina­te
Medicines: Expect to hear more about studies into the therapeuti­c benefits of psilocybin, LSD and cannabinoi­ds. /123RF/Fotolumina­te
 ?? /123RF/linux87 ?? Legal use: ‘Magic mushrooms’ have been legalised in several US cities.
/123RF/linux87 Legal use: ‘Magic mushrooms’ have been legalised in several US cities.

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