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  • CBS News, without any flowers in its hair, is in San Francisco because this city

  • has gained the reputation of being the hippie capitol of the world.

  • In the 1960s, a counter-culture sprang up based on peace, love, and psychedelic drugs like LSD.

  • The kids who take LSD aren’t going to fight your wars. Theyre not going to join your corporations.

  • Timothy Leary had an insight that if you changed yourself

  • it would change the world and change the society.

  • Authorities quickly cracked down on the drug, fearing its alleged health effects.

  • Instant insanity

  • Chromosome damage

  • It may affect your unborn children.

  • The frightening thing about LSD, of course, is that it lurks in the bloodstream like a tiger.

  • But today, half a century later, some psychedelic drugs are making a comeback

  • -- not on the streets, but in the laboratory, which is where it all began.

  • There’s really no other example that I can think of in science

  • where an entire area of research was put on the deep freeze for decades.

  • In January of 1967, thousands of young people gathered

  • in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park to mark the dawn of a new era.

  • There was political speakers. There was countercultural speakers.

  • There was rock music and yes, the LSD flowed like wine.

  • A psychologist who had taught at Harvard, named Timothy Leary, praised the power of LSD,

  • an increasingly popular mind-altering drug.

  • Turn on, tune in, drop out.

  • For Leary, turning on with LSD was the key to achieving a higher level of consciousness.

  • When people say "What’s the use of LSD?" I translate that into "What’s the use of my head?"

  • That’s a fascinating problem. Suppose man can use more of his brain.

  • People that took the drug felt if everybody can have this experience, the world

  • would be a profoundly different place, a much better place and within months

  • this drug, this sensibility, this countercultural revolution, if you want to call it that,

  • attracted mass media from around the planet. And that blew it up.

  • The city of San Francisco has been warned of a hippie invasion come summer

  • in numbers almost too staggering to comprehend.

  • I think a lot of people intuited in the establishment that LSD was a direct threat to industriousness.

  • I mean, what, you want to drop out, not get a job? You know just go and live on the street in San Francisco?

  • I think this was seen as profoundly threatening to the social order.

  • Psychedelics are not groovy, ok? Psychedelics are dangerous.

  • Former New York City Police Commissioner Howard Safir

  • was an undercover narcotics agent in the late 1960s.

  • Back then everybody thought of LSD was for hippies until suddenly kids

  • who looked like they were straight showed up in emergency rooms.

  • There is a steady flow into San Francisco hospitals of young people who have freaked out

  • and been picked up by the police in a state of desperate terror.

  • I had seen people on the street who had no idea where they were.

  • I had arrested people on LSD who were incredibly violent.

  • So it wasn't the peaceful, non-harmful, easy drug that Timothy Leary professed it to be.

  • There is nothing smart, there’s nothing grown-up or sophisticated in taking an LSD trip at all.

  • Theyre just being complete fools.

  • Headlines warned of additional dangers including genetic damage,

  • involuntary hallucinations, and even suicide.

  • 20-year-old Diane Linkletter killed herself on October 4th.

  • After Diane Linkletter fell from a sixth-story window in 1969,

  • her father, TV personality Art Linkletter, blamed LSD.

  • Anybody who has said anything which would encourage my daughter to take LSD

  • was unwittingly a part of being her murderer.

  • I think that raised public consciousness probably as much as anything that happened in the '60s.

  • President Nixon went to the Narcotics Bureau today to sign a drug bill.

  • In 1970, the Controlled Substances Act made LSD a Schedule I drug,

  • the class of dangerous substances with high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use.

  • But before it became a street drug,

  • LSD had been developed in the labs of a Swiss pharmaceutical company.

  • They weren't sure what it could be used for and they sort of fanned it out to the scientific community.

  • It was all legal in those days. Nothing controversial about it at all.

  • Bill Richards helped conduct scientific research with LSD and other psychedelics

  • as a young researcher in the 1960s. He says the early experiments in the 1950s were rudimentary.

  • You'd simply be given the drug and see what happens.

  • Do you find any difference between one half of your body as opposed to the other half?

  • Well, I have sort of a wavering tendency. I don’t know which half is trying

  • to get into the other half, but somehow or other I seem to be going like that.

  • Most people got mildly psychotic and the thought then

  • was that it might help us understand schizophrenia or other severe forms of mental illness.

  • The CIA investigated LSD as a potential truth serum,

  • and the Army tested the effect LSD might have on soldiers in battle.

  • Some early test subjects had bad reactions, and some scientists began to use LSD

  • in a more controlled manner, as one step in an ongoing program of psychotherapy.

  • There was a lot of excitement about the potential of psychedelics in treating alcoholism.

  • And then we moved into working with terminal cancer patients, treating anxiety and depression.

  • Youve taken head-on the biggest thing that’s bothered you.

  • The LSD experience was closely monitored and guided,

  • with music and eyeshades used to calm and reassure the patient.

  • At the end I felt a great weight had been taken off me

  • like it was something had opened up and things could be seen in a different light.

  • There was an incredible spirit of excitement.

  • International conferences, papers published on LSD and psychotherapy.

  • But as the 1960s progressed, and as people like Timothy Leary spread LSD

  • from the laboratory to the counter-culture, the drug’s potential for therapy was overshadowed

  • by stories of its dangerous street use.

  • I'm a pretty black and white guyThere was never any thought in my mind

  • that there were positive uses for LSD.  I saw the results and the results were not pretty.

  • And after LSD was declared a Schedule I drug in 1970,

  • funding and support for psychedelic research dried up.

  • This is the most powerful tool ever discovered to look at consciousness.

  • And it was taken away.

  • Today, the psychedelic glow of the 1960s has faded, and recreational use of LSD,

  • which is still illegal, has fallen to low, but steady, levels.

  • But in the world of science, a new age is dawning.

  • Folks are studying a lot of things with psychedelics now.

  • Matt Johnson is a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University.

  • He says that instead of LSD, most research today is done with psilocybin:

  • a similar psychedelic, with one important difference.

  • It comes down to the spelling of psilocybin.

  • It’s a hard word to spell but at least it’s not spelled LSD, which is a very strong word that people react to.

  • In recent yearsmore than a dozen studies at several universities have investigated

  • the use of psilocybin and therapy to treat problems ranging from addiction

  • to depression and anxiety in cancer patients.

  • In 2010, Sherry Marcy was diagnosed with stage-three endometrial cancer. Her life changed overnight.

  • I had been an athlete all my life, so to suddenly have cancer was shocking.

  • I think I looked up from the phone call and said to Nancy, "I’m stunned."

  • After Sherry’s diagnosis, even prior to treatment,

  • it was just like this doom had descended on her and then subsequently on us.

  • Undergoing both radiation and chemotherapy,

  • Sherry began taking anxiety, sleep, and pain medications to cope with her symptoms.

  • It took away my whole identity.

  • I wasn’t who I used to be and I wasn’t the person that Nancy had formed a life with.

  • I’m about to cry now just getting back into it. It felt like I sat on the couch and did nothing all day.

  • Then in 2012, Sherry read an article that mentioned a Johns Hopkins study on psilocybin

  • and cancer patients who were suffering from depression and anxiety.

  • It sounded like it fit me. It just fit.

  • Eight weeks later, the couple traveled to Baltimore,

  • where Sherry had the first of two psilocybin doses.

  • There was sort of a ceremony about taking the pill. And then I was there for six hours reacting to the pill.

  • And I process by talking, so something I really learned about myself then,

  • because every now and then they would say,

  • "Now, why don’t you stop talking and just feel?"

  • But what happened to me was that I ended up getting totally reconnected, first to Nancy.

  • Nancy and I had a wonderful life together, and it could go on, and I hadn’t known that before.

  • And then also my kids, getting reconnected to them.

  • So there was this family dynamic that just reformed and that was - that was just great.

  • She was just lighter. Immediately a difference. And then we came home, and it persisted.

  • Today Sherry, who is now cancer-free, says the psilocybin study helped her re-engage with life.

  • It wasn’t like it was psychedelic for me. It was just me, back.

  • I don’t know how it did that exactly, except to broaden out, you know.

  • It's like you lift up your head and you take a good long look and you start seeing things again.

  • Recent brain imaging studies have investigated the impact of psychedelics.

  • Theyve found that both LSD and psilocybin foster connections

  • between parts of the brain that normally work independently.

  • It’s an exciting area in neuroscience right now. More and more groups are jumping in and it’s only just begun,

  • but people should really be aware that there are potential dangers.

  • Those dangers can range from a temporary bad reaction, to the triggering or worsening

  • of an underlying psychiatric condition, so caution is a guiding principle in today’s research.

  • But it turns out that not all of the claims made about LSD in the 1960s were true.

  • Studies have found little evidence that it damages chromosomes or causes birth defects.

  • And Diane Linkletter’s autopsy found no drugs in her system when she died.

  • On the other hand, Sherry Marcy says Timothy Leary didn’t get it right either.

  • I think the emphasis was wrong. I mean, the turn on doesn’t have to be emphasized at all.

  • The drop out is an absolute mistake. But the tune in is crucial. I tuned in.

  • Tuned in to the world, to me, to things I used to love, to my relationships to my family.

  • Tune in is what it’s all about.

CBS News, without any flowers in its hair, is in San Francisco because this city

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漫長而奇怪的LSD之旅|復古報道 (The Long, Strange Trip of LSD | Retro Report)

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    tom0615jay 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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