I was reading
the thread on how 'Drugs, Inc.' has chosen DMT as their newest target, and it got me thinking about what we might have to do to change public perceptions about DMT, and Entheogens in general.
Thus far, DMT has been a largely unknown drug, hardly a household name like heroin or cocaine, and certainly never covered in school health classes, which has given us a certain degree of safety.
Obviously that is changing. It's getting harder and harder to find MHRB, Psychotria, or Chaliponga for sale in the US and as evidenced by Nat. Geo. DMT is entering the public consciousness and "the most powerful psychedelic in the world."
This is all very hypothetical, but what if, instead of letting the image of DMT get cemented by The Power That Be, and then fighting that conception, we were to act first, and fight to get DMT accepted and (dare I say it) decriminalized now, while public perception is largely unformed.
I am not an expert in US Law, drug-related or otherwise, but is it seems to me that perhaps the best thing that could happen would be for a high-profile case of someone importing MHRB or any other DMT containing plant to go to court.
That way, there would be discussion and discourse on the legality of possessing DMT-containing plants, and possibly discussion of DMT in general.
Right now the DEA can paint the drug however they want without needing to justify anything other than that it's a "hallucinogen" and public consciousness will fill in the rest.
But if it were a matter of debate and discussion, we have a lot on our side:
- DMT is endogenous to human beings, and almost every living thing.
- DMT has been used in religious ceremonies for thousands of years with no apparent ill effects.
- The DEA has already set a precedent for DMT use through the UDV church exemptions.
- DMT is nonaddictive
- The DMT trip is short and immobilizing, so intoxicated individuals are not dangerous.
- The DMT using community contains upstanding citizens, many of whom do not use other drugs, as opposed to the classical conception of heroin or crack users, who all end up addicted sooner or later.
I'm not saying that I hope any of you guys get arrested, but we've all been following the cannabis legalization fight, and it's been quite an uphill battle against entrenched public opinions and the alcohol, tobacco and pharmaceutical industries.
If we were to act proactively, maybe we could fight that.
Or at least try and get the Feds from getting on our backs about the plant matter.
In the meantime, I hope everyone has some Phalaris grass.
EDIT: I know that this should probably go in the form about the Coalition For Entheogenic Liberty, but I still have my little seedling in a flowerpot, so I can't post there.
"There are many paths up the same mountain."