Virola78 wrote:Well if it is a political statement, then it must also be a religious statement, and a statement about culture in general. Because it is not only 'politics' that is left at the door, i assume.
Yeah i totally agree, but i think that the link between psychedelics and everyday life (as a natural political practice) is commonly dismissed in favor of other supposedly more relevant aspects. The religious practice is in itself a subversive practice if the sacrament is declared illegal by a dominator institution. If DMT opens a communication with the divine, yet you get canned if found with some spice by the cops, then is a problem of individual freedom and civil rights.
clouds wrote:obliguhl wrote:Now, what happens to you after god starts talking to you though the DMT experience?
Or when god starts talking to you after any other experience. What happens is that you keep it to yourself and try to not kill anyone.
Or you go and try to share that experience with the people you love. If you can potentially be declared insane, criminal, corrupt, and be fucked for life because of this act of love, then i think it gets political in any sense we may want to give it. It is one clear important aspect of the dmt experience, as is the religious.