A HUNDRED years ago a group of foreign diplomats gathered in Shanghai for the first-ever international effort to ban trade in a narcotic drug. On February 26th 1909 they agreed to set up the International Opium Commission—just a few decades after Britain had fought a war with China to assert its right to peddle the stuff. Many other bans of mood-altering drugs have followed. In 1998 the UN General Assembly committed member countries to achieving a “drug-free world” and to “eliminating or significantly reducing” the production of opium, cocaine and cannabis by 2008.
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How to stop the drug wars | The Economist
Published March 18, 2009 consciousness , news , paradigm shift Leave a CommentFilmmaker Rob Spence plans to implant camera in eye to become ‘Eyeborg’ | News.com.au Top stories | News.com.au
Published March 16, 2009 Uncategorized Leave a CommentA ONE-eyed filmmaker is going to implant a camera in his eye to make a film from his point of view.
Rob Spence, a documentary filmmaker from Canada, has been unable to use his right eye since it was damaged in a firearms accident as a child.
After wearing an eyepatch for many years, he recently got a prosthetic eye implanted – and decided he wanted to become what he calls an “Eyeborg” – a part-human, part-camera cyborg.
“I was looking at the small camera on my cellphone, and I got to thinking about the Bionic Man,” he said in a recent video on his website.
“I want to turn my prosthetic eye into a wireless camera,”
Full story here.
What Would It Look Like? | global oneness project
Published March 4, 2009 consciousness , paradigm shift , sustainability , ultraculture Leave a CommentWhat if the world embodied our highest potential? What would it look like? As the structures of modern society crumble, is it enough to respond with the same tired solutions? Or are we being called to question a set of unexamined assumptions that form the very basis of our civilization?
This 25-minute retrospective asks us to reflect on the state of the world and ourselves, and to listen more closely to what is being asked of us at this time of unprecedented global transformation.
for the full story on this worldchanging website and opportunity click here.
Singing to the Plants: Extreme Celebrity Ayahuasca
Published February 24, 2009 entheogenics Leave a CommentSinging to the Plants: Extreme Celebrity Ayahuasca.
From Steve beyer’s always fascinating blog...
Extreme Celebrity Ayahuasca
Three celebrities
It’s actually not a bad idea for a television reality show. Get several very minor celebrities, pack them off away from their home comforts, and subject them to a range of programs that claim to enhance inner peace, happiness, and understanding. That at least was the premise of a short-lived BBC program called, naturally enough, Extreme Celebrity Detox, on which the guest celebrities performed t’ai-chi exercises in the Slovenian Alps, practiced Taoist sexual yoga in Thailand, did body-cleansing hatha yoga in the Himalayas — and drank ayahuasca in the Peruvian Amazon.
Edgecentral: Monday Too Far Away: Rainbow Serpent Fest 09
Published February 18, 2009 news , trance , ultraculture Leave a CommentEdgecentral: Monday Too Far Away: Rainbow Serpent Fest 09 by Graham St John.
You have to travel a long way up river to find him.
So far above the headwaters there’s barely a trickle. Under the withering south-eastern Australian sun in January, under the direct pressure of quality sound, in that primal real estate between the speaker stacks on Monday afternoon, on the Market Floor, Rainbow Serpent Festival. It doesn’t get much better than this. And somewhere, amid all that optimising, under all that tweaking of sophisticated hardware, in a vibrant undergrowth of bronzed bodies and baked wet ware, the Colonel is getting his freak on. This is not the bird-frying Colonel of take-out restaurant fame. He’s not your rank and file denizen of the trance floor. Somewhere in this theatre of the absurd, this paddock of pizzazz, this cavalcade of crank, the highest, rankest and most de-commissioned officer in the PLA (the Psychedelic League of Australasia), Colonel Kurtz, is at large.
for the full story click here
Psychoactive Compound Activates Mysterious Receptor
Published February 17, 2009 entheogenics , news Leave a CommentPsychoactive Compound Activates Mysterious Receptor.
ScienceDaily (Feb. 13, 2009) — A hallucinogenic compound found in a plant indigenous to South America and used in shamanic rituals regulates a mysterious protein that is abundant throughout the body, University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers have discovered.
The finding, reported in the Feb. 13 issue of Science, may ultimately have implications for treating drug abuse and/or depression. Many more experiments will be needed, the researchers say.
Scientists have been searching for years for naturally occurring compounds that trigger activity in the protein, the sigma-1 receptor. In addition, a unique receptor for the hallucinogen, called dimethyltryptamine (DMT), has never been identified.
Read the full story
The Journeybook launch/ @ Earthfreq Sat Feb 14
Published February 12, 2009 Uncategorized Leave a CommentI’ll be doing a book launch at Earthfreq this Saturday the 14th Feb and signing books and meeting interesting entheo-peeps in South East Queensland, Australia! Pop in and say hi!
xx rak
SAT FEB 14, 2009
Come celebrate the South East Queensland (SE-QLD) launch of The Journeybook at Earthfreq, Sat Feb 14 Jan, 2009 located in the beautiful outdoor venue of LandCruiser Mountain Park, 2hrs north-west of Brisbane. – www.landcruisermountainpark.com.au. With readings from the authors, an art gallery space, “New Maps of Hyperspace” discussion circles, workshops, performance art, music and psychedelic shenanigans aplenty…
…The Journeybook is a collection of tales of altered states, essays, history and manifesto for psychedelic culture in the 21st century. It covers the modern usage of sacramental plants and offers insights into traditional and contemporary shamanism, as well as analysis of the current state of global psychedelic culture and its place in a sustainable future. The Journeybook Facebook group is to discuss the book and the issues it raises about cognitive liberty and consciousness.
For more information visit: www.thejourneybook.com
Entangled Minds: New insights into the links between ESP and geomagnetic activity
Published February 11, 2009 Uncategorized Leave a CommentTags: solar storms
Entangled Minds: New insights into the links between ESP and geomagnetic activity.
By Adrian Ryan, in the Journal of Scientific Exploration, Fall 2008
A database of 343 free-response ESP trials conducted at centers in the U.K. was constructed in order to test the hypothesis that the relatively fast varying components of geomagnetic activity, geomagnetic pulsations, might be driving the reported associations between ESP, geomagnetic activity and local sidereal time. Local geomagnetic field-strength measurements taken at 1-second intervals during 99 trials, and at 5-second intervals during 244 trials, were converted by fast Fourier transform into power within five frequency bands. Two patterns were observed: ESP was found to succeed only during periods of enhanced pulsation activity within the 0.2-0.5 Hz band, but ESP effect was absent during the most disturbed periods of activity in the 0.025-0.1 Hz band.
The pattern of ESP effect by local sidereal time was similar to that found by Spottiswoode (1997b), and this shape was found to be attributable to the pattern of ESP results by pulsation activity in the 0.2-0.5 Hz band.
The observed patterns were demonstrated to have excellent explanatory power in terms of accounting for findings previously reported in the literature.
Go here for the full paper
Experts urge wider use of brain-boosting drugs
Published February 11, 2009 news Leave a CommentTags: consciousness
Experts urge wider use of brain-boosting drugs.
Bernadette Tansey, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, December 8, 2008
(12-07) 19:25 PST — Three job candidates sit in a quiet room, straining over a tough exam. But one of them has taken a memory-enhancing drug the other two couldn’t afford. Is the test fair?
Henry Greely, a Stanford law professor, rejects compariso…Henry Greely, a Stanford law professor, says society shou… View Larger Images
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In another futuristic scenario, a drug can help airline pilots keep focused during a long flight, though it causes some side effects. May an airline require pilots to take the drug?
Get ready to confront such questions in daily life, a group of scientists and policy experts urge in a thought-provoking commentary published online Sunday by the journal Nature.
Brain research is accelerating, and a new era of “cognitive enhancement” – the use of brain-stimulating drugs and devices by healthy people – is approaching, the authors said.
While thorny ethical and medical questions must be addressed, pharmaceutical enhancement of inborn mental gifts is a trend to be welcomed, the seven co-authors from Harvard, Stanford and other prestigious institutions said.
“We call for a presumption that mentally competent adults should be able to engage in cognitive enhancement using drugs,” said the writers, who include Stanford law Professor Henry Greely and neuropsychology Professor Barbara Sahakian at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. “From assembly line workers to surgeons, many different kinds of employee may benefit from enhancement and want access to it, yet they may also need protection from the pressure to enhance.”
Our world may be a giant hologram – space – 15 January 2009 – New Scientist
Published February 11, 2009 news Leave a CommentOur world may be a giant hologram – space – 15 January 2009 – New Scientist.
DRIVING through the countryside south of Hanover, it would be easy to miss the GEO600 experiment. From the outside, it doesn’t look much: in the corner of a field stands an assortment of boxy temporary buildings, from which two long trenches emerge, at a right angle to each other, covered with corrugated iron. Underneath the metal sheets, however, lies a detector that stretches for 600 metres.
For the past seven years, this German set-up has been looking for gravitational waves – ripples in space-time thrown off by super-dense astronomical objects such as neutron stars and black holes. GEO600 has not detected any gravitational waves so far, but it might inadvertently have made the most important discovery in physics for half a century.
For many months, the GEO600 team-members had been scratching their heads over inexplicable noise that is plaguing their giant detector. Then, out of the blue, a researcher approached them with an explanation. In fact, he had even predicted the noise before he knew they were detecting it. According to Craig Hogan, a physicist at the Fermilab particle physics lab in Batavia, Illinois, GEO600 has stumbled upon the fundamental limit of space-time – the point where space-time stops behaving like the smooth continuum Einstein described and instead dissolves into “grains”, just as a newspaper photograph dissolves into dots as you zoom in. “It looks like GEO600 is being buffeted by the microscopic quantum convulsions of space-time,” says Hogan.




