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- Date: Sat, 23 Sep 1995 22:09:58 -0500
- From: Bruce E <bruce@mindmedia.com>
- To: mind-space@macc.wisc.edu
- Subject: Re: Dream dictionaries
-
- Thanks to our friend Teleforce. here is the actual
- draft of my article. I just cut and pasted it from
- Word 2.0 for Windows. Let me know if anyone needs it
- sent a different way or if it's too much text for your
- e-mail or what? And also let me know what you think,
- add ideas, contrary evidence, etc.
-
-
- LSD PURITY - CLEANLINESS IS NEXT TO GODLINESS
-
- By Bruce Eisner, High Times, 1977
-
-
- In the late 1940s, psychologists began experimenting with LSD as a
- "psychotomimetic" drug - one that causes the taker temporarily to mime the
- condition of psychosis. Some experimental subjects, however, and eventually
- some modern mystics like Aldous Huxley, Allen Ginsberg, and Alan Watts
- discovered in LSD a shortcut to the ecstasy and egolessness of nirvana. LSD
- was recognized as the switch that turned on the clear light of the void.
- Today's acid trip, however, is far more likely to resemble a live TV
- broadcast in runny color from the from seat of a roller coaster or a scene
- from The Exorcist. The decline in psychedelic quality over the years, which
- resembles the degeneration of Christianity and Russian Communism, has been a
- consequence of greed and opportunism on the part of manufactures and
- distributors. They offer to substitute immediate sensory gratifications for
- the original spiritual ideals. But the history of underground chemistry is
- also one of ingenuity and courage though influenced by haste and
- amateurishness. Its is the story of how LSD-25, the most powerful and
- spiritual molecule known to humanity became a "street drug."
- Originally all LSD was made by Sandoz Pharmaceutical company, which had
- developed the chemical and hoped to market it commercially. It came in
- glass ampules filled with blue liquid, or small tablets in bottles with
- pharmaceutical labels specifying strength.
- With underground LSD use came underground manufacture. The first recorded
- underground laboratory was set up by Bernard Roseman in 1962. Roseman, who
- now lives in seclusion in Oregon, was later arrested for allegedly
- attempting to smuggle 62,000 doses of LSD. In his LSD and the Age of the
- Mind, he has this account of the first manufacture of LSD of less than
- pharmaceutical quality:
-
-
- I have already invested a year - on and off - and all the money I could
- save on this project, and I was at the point of admitting defeat. At this
- time, I was naturally reading everything I could lay my hands upon about
- ergot alkaloids. I stumbled upon a few articles that at first seemed quite
- unrelated to LSD, but they were logical and worth a try; because by
- comparison the process was exceedingly simple, compared to Hoffmann's
- monumental preparation.
- I obtained new starting material and worked it up to the point I was sure
- was correct, where I had d-lysergic acid monohydrate, quite useless by
- itself but the prerequisite for making LSD-25 by any system. The rest of my
- ordered materials arrived and I was ready to proceed. After so many
- repeated failures, I couldn't accept the possibility that this few-day
- procedure would work.
- I went ahead nevertheless, though pessimistically, so that my seemingly
- apparent failure would not bother me too much. I worked with extreme care,
- protecting anything from heat and light. At the last step, when I was
- recrystallizing the few grams I had obtained, I was filtering the crystals
- off by vacuum and using ether. When all the ether evaporated , the
- substance started to absorb moisture from the atmosphere and was turning
- black before my eyes. All my work was gone: I stood there shocked unable
- to move for a moment. My hands instinctively grabbed an alcohol bottle and
- I pored it over the black decomposed material hoping to salvage something.
- I separated it with water and disheartedly took the black mess home. All
- night I tossed and turned and dreamt horrible, unrelated dreams.
- At the first crack of dawn, I jumped out of bed, grabbed the flask from the
- refrigerator, poured a teaspoonful and drank it down. I went back to bed
- and turned on Wagner's Parsifal. Minutes passed by and nothing seemed to
- happen. I had psychologically prepared myself for failure, so I just closed
- my eyes and lay back an listened to the wonderful sounds of Wagner. In my
- concentration, I failed to notice that the music was getting slowly louder
- and instead of just my ears hearing, all my senses seemed to encompass the
- sound., and instead of hearing the music - I was the music!
- Beautiful, soft colors emerged and exploded as climates of tone were
- achieved. An immediate understanding of the composer's intentions was
- revealed to me; I was being taken on a heavenly excursion into the world of
- pure sound and emotion. All at once, I sprang up with joy. I was in the
- state of LSD - my own LSD which I had made. I was deliriously happy and
- proud of my success.
-
-
- LSD is a translucent crystal; this was a black mess. Thus, the first
- underground LSD was also the first impure batch, and its distribution may,
- somewhere, have incurred the first unfavorable consumer reaction.
-
-
-
- By 1965, use had increased sharply. Most acid at this time came in sugar
- cubes dropped with liquid Sandoz or some type of underground LSD. What
- percentage of the material was Sandoz is left to future determination.
- Augustus Stanley Owsley III, unable to obtain any pharmaceutical LSD, began
- to manufacture his own - first in Los Angeles in '65, then in nearby Point
- Richmond in '66.
- Owsley's fellow alchemist, Tim Scully, admitted to me that the 1965 batch
- was impure, but claims that Owsley and he perfected a purification process
- in 1966. Many who used both Sandoz and Owsley - the latter came in tablets
- of purple (Purple Haze) and white (White Lightning) of 270 micrograms - say
- that Owsley acid was less mystical and had more stimulant side reactions
- than the Sandoz product.
- Timothy Leary, who realized that impurities were a threat to the spreading
- psychedelic revolution, uttered prophetic words of warning at a Senate
- committee hearing in 1966, in exchange with Teddy Kennedy:
-
-
- Senator Kennedy of Massachusetts: "What is it in the quality that you are
- frightened about?"
- Dr. Leary: "We do not want amateur or black-market sale or distribution of
- LSD."
- Senator Kennedy: "Why not?"
- Dr. Leary: "Or the barbiturates or liquor. When you buy a bottle of liquor-"
- Senator Kennedy: "This is not responsive. As to LSD, why do you not want it?"
- Dr. Leary: "On possession?"
- Senator Kennedy: "Why do you not want the indiscriminate manufacture and
- distribution? Is it because it is dangerous?"
- Dr. Leary: "Because you do not know what you are getting..."
-
-
- Despite Leary's warning, LSD was made illegal on October 16, 1966.
- Owsley acid was the first large-scale commercialization of LSD. There were
- other smaller LSD laboratories before Owsley, and there were scores of
- laboratories that put out LSD at the same time that Owsley did. Some were
- making LSD of a purer form; the majority made it much worse.
- After Owsley was arrested in 1967 at his tabbing facility at Orinda,
- California, his protege Scully set up a laboratory with Nicholas Sand,
- another alchemist long involved in the psychedelic scene. They manufactured
- a quantity of ALD-52 - a cousin to LSD, which they called Sunshine - in
- large crumbly orange tablets of 270 micrograms or so.
- In the spring of 1969, Ron Stark, then a chemist with a European LSD
- factory and now a fugitive, allegedly began supplying underground acid to
- the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Since the Brotherhood was also, by this
- time, distributing ALD-52, and since both drugs were tabbed into identical
- pills (except for a few early blue tablets of ALD-52), many people didn't
- realize that there was more than one kind of Sunshine. Many counterfeit
- versions soon appeared on the market, most of which were impure, according
- to Scully.
- Sand and Scully ceased manufacturing, but Stark went on to produce over 10
- kilograms (over 35 million doses in crystal form) of what became the famous
- Orange Sunshine - the last of which actually appeared in large red and green
- tablets called "Christmas Acid."
- With the Sunshine boom came increased reports of side effects. In addition
- to stimulant reactions and symptoms akin to those of strychnine poisoning
- being reported, there seemed to be something missing in the spiritual
- dimensions of this new underground acid. Michael Hollinshead, who gave
- Leary his first taste of acid in 1960, later wrote in The Man Who Turned on
- the World:
-
-
- There was now (1968) little good acid around, and what there was - the
- so-called "street acid" - came mainly from California. There was something
- wrong with the synthesis; it was not pure. And you were never sure what it
- was exactly that you were taking, so I only dropped it on those rare
- occasions when someone gave me "Sandoz" or "crystal" acid...
- My evaluation had nothing to do with the notion that a wholly synthetic
- drug produced a wholly synthetic experience - the intellectual response -
- but was based on direct, first-hand experience (about 30 trips with street
- acid in all). And in each session I felt that there was something it lacked
- - it was too "electric," too "speedy" and too "mind-shattering." The
- earlier clarity of "insight" which I had obtained via the Sandoz acid was
- replaced by confusion, brokenness, words and worlds thrown into absolute
- dismemberment, or even absolute chaos, though, I must add, often coupled
- with a feeling that I can only describe as "sublime inflation," a super
- abundance of emotive energy, but it could not signify more a passionate
- flame and less the life-giving sun.
-
-
-
- At Woodstock, Hugh Romney (a/k/a "Wavy Gravy") of the Hog Farm announced
- to the crowd, "There's no such thing as bad acid, just acid that's made
- wrong." In 1969, LSD began to appear in microdots, and in 1971, on gelatin
- sheets of various shapes - dubbed "windowpane." The strength of individual
- doses swiftly decreased, and so did the purity of the average street dose.
-
- In a correspondence with City magazine in July 1975, Timothy Leary wrote:
- "After 1966, my lectures and writings were mainly concerned with a general
- theory of psychological and political relativity and made little mention of
- lysergic acid, which in truth, had been driven completely off the scene by
- Owsley speed, orange amphetamine, and the more commercially and socially
- acceptable cocaine-heroin trade."
- In Timothy Leary at Folsom Prison, a filmed dialog made for television but
- never broadcast, he amplifies: "I don't particularly recommend you take
- LSD. First of all, 99 percent of what they say about it isn't true." Ken
- Kesey also had occasion to reflect back on the acid scene in his recent book
- Garage Sale: "I can't really recommend acid, because acid has become an
- almost meaningless chemical. I mean, the first acid I took was Sandoz,
- given me by the federal government in a series of experiments (what now,
- Uncle? Don't give me that anti-American drug field bullshit: you turned me
- on ...!) and it was beautiful.
- "With perhaps the exception of Owsley's work, every bootleg batch I've
- tried from then on down has been interesting, enlightening, agonizing,
- bizarre, etc., but never anything as pure."
- Many other early trippers, including Alan Harrington (author of
- Psychopaths), Dr. Stanley Krippner (former head of Brooklyn's Maimonides
- Hospital Dream Lab) and Adam Smith (author of Powers of Mind in addition to
- his Wall Street best sellers), have also noted the decline in psychedelic
- use and linked it with the purity crisis.
- An LSD experience is a complex interaction of five influential factors:
- set, setting, guide (fellow tripper), purity, and dosage level.
- Set refers to the psychological makeup of the LSD tripper, both long term
- (genetic inheritance and childhood conditioning) and short term
- (expectations about the LSD experience and how the person feels that morning).
- Setting refers to the environment of the trip - indoors or outdoors,
- "informal suburban house," "formal hospital room," or "windy beach at sunrise."
- Set, setting and guide form the fabric of the trip. But before these
- influences can come into play, alteration in consciousness must occur.
- Thus, the nature of the biochemical used, its purity and its dosage level
- are most central in determining the course the session will take.
- In its pure form, LSD (d-lysergic acid diethyl amide) is an odorless,
- colorless, and either tart-tasting (if in the tartrate form) or tasteless
- crystal substance. The major pharmaceutical company manufacturing pure LSD,
- for research purposes, is the Spofa United Pharmaceutical Works in Prague,
- Czechoslovakia, although it has been manufactured by many others. Besides
- Sandoz Pharmaceutical Company in Switzerland, there was the Eli Lilly &
- Company with the patent for the Garbrecht process (the most efficient
- process for the manufacture of LSD), and Farmitillia of Milan, Italy, which
- perfected the deep-vat cultivation of ergot, a mold that grows on rye, among
- other places, and serves as a source for lysergic acid monohydrate, the main
- precursor of LSD. In addition, a number of U.S. pharmaceutical firms make
- small amount of LSD for testing purposes.
-
- Today, underground acid comes in many forms; in tablets of varying sizes
- and colors, in capsules (most popular from 1966 to 1968), as gelatin
- windowpane (a lamentable hardship to vegetarians, who do not eat cow hooves
- from which the gelatin is derived), plastic film, blotter paper, liquid
- vials, and many other forms - just about anything on which a liquid can be
- dripped has been used. Since LSD is a crystal and the average dose is so
- small as to be just barely visible, it is usually dissolved in a solvent
- such as ethyl alcohol and then dropped on some medium buffered with some
- inert substance. Only if a buffering substance is inert will it not affect
- the course of action of the biochemical mind-changer.
- The most common explanation regarding impurities seems to be adulteration
- with some other biochemical mind-changer such as speed (amphetamine) or
- strychnine additives. Yet, as most testing programs and drug information
- organizations are fond of repeating, there is rarely speed or strychnine in
- street acid. The most common additive is PCP (phencyclidine, or Serylan, an
- animal tranquilizer that causes hallucinogenic delirium reactions), which is
- also present when street acid is mislabeled "mescaline" or "psilocybin."
- Synthetic mescaline and psilocybin (usually psilocyn) disappeared from the
- streets a bit after pure LSD did (around 1969), and the only genuine forms
- of these drugs on the streets now are the organic staples of mushrooms or
- buttons of peyote. (Note: The acid-PCP combination is sometimes used on
- store-bought mushrooms, so caution is advised.)
- Because of the imprecise nature of the street-drug market, a number of
- street drug-testing programs were established in the 1970s. These drug
- organizations have repeatedly labeled most street samples of underground
- acid as "LSD." For example, the Straight Dope Newsletter, a compilation of
- information from U. S. testing organizations, reported on a total of 209
- samples turned in to the various organizations during the period from March
- 1973 thru July 1973, of which 183 samples were "LSD."
-
-
-
- PharmChem of Palo Alto, California, the most noted of the various street
- drug testing groups, reported in 1973: "Of 405 samples said to be LSD, 91.6
- percent were as alleged, 3.4 percent had no drug at all, 3 percent were
- actually DOM, PCP and others, and 2 percent had DOM, PCP and methamphetamine
- in addition to LSD."
- Contrast these two reports to a survey abstracted in LSD - A Total Study
- (edited by D. V. Siva Sankar): "Marshman and Gibbons tested 519 samples of
- street drugs for which the vendor's claimed composition was available. Of
- the samples alleged to be LSD, 44 percent contained LSD with two or more
- contaminants or even were mixtures of intermediate chemicals resulting from
- the failed attempts to synthesize LSD."
- There is something wrong, something impure about today's "street acid."
- One possible theory for the degeneration of LSD manufacture is given by
- Hollingshead in The Man Who Turned on the World:
-
-
- I think the problem for the underground chemists manufacturing clandestine
- acid was a shortage of ergot, without which the synthesis of d-LSD-25 is
- impossible. Until 1965, supplies of ergot could be bought with little
- difficulty from three or four European chemical companies; but pressure from
- Washington put a stop to this, doubtlessly hopeful that this would lead to
- an end of clandestine LSD. In one sense, the Federal authorities were
- right. The underground ceased turning out d-LSD-25; instead, they
- discovered a wholly synthetic substance akin to d-LSD-25....Sure the new
- stuff "worked" in the sense that any new mind-altering chemical "works" to
- produce subjective effects within the body, but it didn't seem to produce in
- those who used it any particular noticeable elevation in either head or
- heart; at least it was - and probably is - an unpopular view amongst the
- "congnoscenti" who claim that some of the street acid is capable of
- producing positive subjective effects of a "long-lasting nature," though
- they readily admit a lot of the stuff sold as "pure acid" is actually
- methamphetamine (a potent form of amphetamine first developed by the U.S.
- Army) or a stripped-down ergotamine compound by modern molecular chemistry.
-
-
- A more likely reason for the different effects of street acid and LSD is
- that by-product impurities contaminate the product at various points in
- manufacture. LSD can be made from lysergic acid derived from either
- morning-glory seeds or ergot, or from compounds made from ergot - including
- ergotamine tartrate, a pharmaceutical drug used in treating migraine
- headaches. LSD can also be synthesized totally from organic chemicals. No
- matter what process is used, if it is carried forth correctly, the resultant
- molecule is LSD.
-
- Before LSD was made illegal, the materials for its manufacture could be
- purchased from a number of chemical companies in the United States and
- Europe. Most Owsley acid was manufactured from lysergic acid monohydrate
- obtained from Sandoz before lysergic acid was proscribed. But after 1966,
- properly prepared precursors were not easily obtainable.
- The manufacturing of he necessary precursors is a long process, and a great
- many new occasions for impurities can arise. During the preparation of the
- main precursor - lysergic acid monohydrate - various ergot alkaloids and
- cycloalkamides of lysergic acid will contaminate the final product if not
- later removed by proper chromatographic procedures. Which contaminants do
- appear depends on whether the starting material was ergot, ergotamine
- tartate or morning-glory seeds. And once these proper precursors have been
- synthesized into LSD, various isomers and lumi-LSD (LSD saturated with
- water) may contaminate the final product if not removed by proper
- chromatographic procedures.
- Thus, chromatography, the highly refined procedure that the organic chemist
- uses to isolate specific chemicals, is the key process by which impurities
- may or may not be removed from he eventual LSD crystal.
- A passage from Psychedelic Chemistry, by Michael Valentine Smith:
-
-
- There is a great deal of superstition regarding purification of
- psychedelics. Actually, any impurities which may be present as a result of
- synthetic procedures will almost certainly be without any effect on the trip.
- If there are 200 micrograms of impurities present... and few compounds will
- produce a significant effect until a hundred to a thousand times this amount
- has been ingested. Even mescaline, which has a rather specific psychedelic
- effect, requires about a thousand times this amount.
-
-
-
-
-
- Most of the books on the market that give details on the LSD process - for
- example, Psychedelic Guide to the Preparation of the Eucharist, by Robert
- Brown, Basic Drug Manufacturing and The Book of Acid, by Adam Gottlieb, as
- well as Michael Valentine Smith's book - fail to describe the efficient
- chromatographic procedures, like zone-melting chromatography, necessary for
- the manufacture of pure LSD. Timothy Scully told me that both he and Owsley
- believed the tolerable limits of impurities to be on tenth of a percentage
- point (requiring 99.9% purity) - far from the 50 percent figure of Michael
- Valentine Smith! Until careful studies are done, the true figures for
- tolerable impurities will remain unknown.
- How do these impurities change the optimum course of action of LSD and the
- experience it creates? One of the theories is that, because d-LSD-25 is
- like a key (its outer electron shell has a specific shape), it fits into a
- number of tiny locks called "receptor sites." These are located somewhere
- in the brain - nobody is sure where, but one theory suggests that they
- might be in the brain stem. It is known, however, that these receptor sites
- interact only with extremely specific molecular configurations.
- The various ergot compounds, cycloalkamides of LSD and lumi-LSD plug into
- the same receptor sites as LSD does. But these compounds evidently don't
- turn the lock in the smooth, clean manner of LSD. Many of these compounds
- have effects similar to symptoms of ergot poisoning - the St. Anthony's Fire
- of he Middle Ages. These symptoms include inflamed joints, headaches,
- nausea, and hot and cold flashes.
- Isomers of LSD are another possible contaminant and indeed are reported
- present by the drug analysis groups. There are four possible isomers of
- LSD, but only the d-lysergic acid diethyl amide form is active. The other
- rotation forms - l-lysergic acid diethyl amide, d and l iso-lysergic acid
- diethyl amide (contrary to recent reports!) - are inactive. they have no
- pharmacological role, except possibly as a catalyst for some latent effect
- of LSD, or to block the action of LSD at the receptor site.
- If a contaminated batch of diethyl amine is used in the manufacturing
- process, or if the chemist purposely decides to make them, LSD homologues
- might be present in the final crystal. Molecules similar to LSD in
- structure but with some addition, subtraction or rearrangement of action,
- homologues plug into the same keyhole that LSD does.
- Some of these homologues have profound effects that vary in course of
- action and potency. For example, the strongest of he homologues, ALD-52,
- has 91 percent the potency of LSD and is said to have a slightly different
- effect upon the mind (there is some dispute about this).
- However, as Albert Hoffmann puts it in "Drugs Affecting the Central Nervous
- System": LSD has the highest and most specific effect and may therefore be
- considered as the genuine prototype of psychotomimetic compounds."
- Thus, all impurities found in LSD are like imperfect keys. Such substances
- as ergot alkaloids, cycloalkamides and other lysergic acid derivatives, and
- LSD homologues and lumi-LSD are drugs that might open the door par way. But
- only pure LSD opens the doors of perception all the way.
- In addition to manufactured impurities, impurities can also arise from
- decomposition of LSD. Dr. Albert Hoffmann points out in his paper "The
- Chemistry of LSD": "The free base as well as the tartrate of d-lysergic
- acid diethyl amide, like all lysergic acid derivatives, is very sensitive to
- light and oxidizing agents. All preparations must be stored carefully,
- protected from light and from oxygen of the air, to prevent them from being
- destroyed within a short time."
- Even if, by some chance, an underground batch were made pure, it would turn
- to bunk in time, especially if put in conventional underground packaging
- (blotter or windowpane) that does not protect it from light or air.
- Pharmaceutical LSD is stored in vacuum vials in nitrogen gas. A pure,
- viable form of black-market LSD should find its way to the consumer in a
- tablet coated with pure, inert buffering material or in a vacuum vial, but
- this expensive packaging is certainly not reconcilable with dealing for profit.
-
- Why is it that most of he underground LSD in the United States is made
- wrong? There are several other possible explanations. One chemist, for
- instance, told me that it was "because all the pros ar out of the field."
- That is to say, most underground chemists, whether motivated by altruism or
- greed, are incompetent to manufacture pharmaceutical-grade chemicals.
- Moreover, they often lack the money to buy the complicated equipment
- necessary to produce pharmaceutical-grade materials or to test their final
- product properly.
- Paranoia, too, can lead to faulty manufacture. A chemist often doesn't
- have the time to do a full scale procedure, or will take shortcuts to limit
- possible exposure to bursts.
- It would help if street-drug analysis groups perfected their methods of
- analysis. Many such groups do not have samples of the impurities that can
- exist in street acid, and are therefore unable to identify them.. In
- addition, their testing techniques are not up to the exacting task of
- determining the nature of their samples. Most rely on thin-layer
- chromatography, which can show only that LSD exists in a sample,, but not
- all of he other impurities lurking there.
-
-
-
- In a private correspondence, Dr Alexander T. Shulgin, a professor of
- toxicology at the University of California at Berkeley commented:
-
-
- In the usual analysis of LSD (such as done at PharmChem Foundation) one
- chromatographs an extract of the suspected drug, observes the resulting
- separation under UV light, and then sprays the plate with some
- color-generating agent such as paradimethylaminobenzaldehyde (PDAB). If
- there are impurities present that fluoresce (such as lysergic acid or
- iso-LSD) and that have mobility in the chromatographic separation, they will
- be seen. If impurities are present that have the intact indole-2-hydrogen
- atom, they will give blue to purple colors with PDAB.
- Both tests require, of course, that there are amounts present sufficient to
- be seen. But if the impurity does not fluoresce (as is known to occur with
- lumi-LSD or any of the photoaddition products) or will not react with PDAB
- (as would be found with 2-substituted impurities such as 2-oxo-ergots), then
- they (the impurities) would remain invisible. It is completely possible
- that an LSD sample could be grossly contaminated with impurities and, if
- they did not give any response to one of these two tests, it is highly
- likely that their presence would never even be suspected.
-
-
- Again, it would be helpful if street-drug analysis groups started looking
- for by-product impurities and established criteria for psychedelic chemical
- purity. They must stop labeling their impure samples "LSD", a habit that
- suggests purity and thereby creates much confusing in the public mind and
- among drug writers. Instead they must clearly distinguish between street
- acid and pure, pharmaceutical LSD. And if they cannot afford the equipment
- to test LSD (mass spectrometers and electron microscopes), then they should
- let the public know about their true capacities. For that matter, none of
- the commercially sold drug-testing kits is capable of determining purity.
- Many early LSD users later gave up on acid and tried other methods of
- consciousness-expansion as available LSD became impure. They thought that
- LSD did not work any more, or blamed their heads, not realizing it was a
- change in the nature of the actual chemical. Thus, the increasing number
- of impurities led many people to repress the mystical experiences they had
- had, and retreat to a comfortable, "cool" conformity. Or they turned to
- Eastern gurus and Jesus movements.
- I suspect that impurities give people body trips (euphoria) rather than the
- pure mind trips of LSD (ecstasy). People turned to other euphoria-producing
- drugs (pot is on of these) because street acid fell into the realm of
- dishonest dealing games and lost the spiritual qualities of LSD. Just the
- fact that LSD did not work any more led people into attempts to escape from
- the all-too-static reality via coke, pot, tranquilizers, alcohol and smack.
- As experiences changed, the emphasis among the makers and distributors of
- LSD changed. In the beginning, the main motivation was spiritual - to turn
- people on. Much LSD was given for free, and dealing was just an amateur
- pastime. As LSD became another in a long list of body drugs, avarice
- polluted the spiritual stream.
- The real responsibility for all this lies not with the underground, or even
- the public, victims of brainwashing with beer and TV, but with the
- government. Today, a small elite of government-sanctioned scientists
- controls LSD in the United States. Despite the good their limited research
- does, their exclusive and narrow-sighted use of these drugs seems sad in the
- face of the much greater good that psychedelics could do if more widely
- used. Many suggestions for more rational use include making LSD a
- prescription drug, creating LSD centers or making LSD a patent medicine.
- The psychedelic movement, which has been in eclipse for ten years, will
- remain dormant until people can get LSD of known strength and purity. Until
- then, if you are an acidhead, chances are you've never taken LSD.
-