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- From: fauxton@mindvox.phantom.com (zapotec blue)
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: The Non-Ordinary Conhibition Rhetoric of Terence McKenna
- Date: 19 Feb 1995 00:55:47 -0500
- Message-ID: <000q1c13w165w@mindvox.phantom.com>
-
- "We're playing with half a deck as long as we tolerate that the cardinals
- of government and science should dictate where human curiosity can
- legitimately send its attention and where it cannot. It's an essentially
- preposterous situation. It is essentially a civil rights issue because what
- we're talking about here is the repression of a religious sensibility. In
- fact not 'a' religious sensibility, *the* religious sensibility. Not built
- on some con game spun out by eunichs, but based on the symbiotic
- relationship that was in place for our species for 50,000 years before the
- advent of history riding priestcraft and propaganda. So it's a clarion call
- to recover a birthright, however uncomfortable that may make us. A call to
- realize that life lived in the absence of the psychedelic experience that
- primordial shamanism is based on is life trivialized, life denied, life
- enslaved to the ego and its fear of dissolution in this mysterious mama
- matrix which is all around us and which apparently extends to infinity and
- where our historical future actually lies. This is the other thing..
-
- It is now very clear that techniques of machine-human interfacing,
- pharmacology of the synthetic variety, all kinds of manipulative
- techniques, all kinds of data storage, imaging and retrieval techinques,
- all of this is coalescing toward the potential of a truly demonic or
- angelic kind of self-imaging of our culture. And the people who are on
- the demonic side are fully aware of this and hurrying full-tilt forward
- with their plans to capture everyone as a 100% believing consumer inside
- some kind of beige furnished fascism that won't even raise a ripple. The
- shamanic response in this situation I think is to PUSH THE ART PEDAL
- THROUGH THE FLOOR."
-
- "Years and years ago before the term "psychedelic" was settled on there
- was just a phenomenological description. These things were called
- "consciousness-expanding" drugs. I think that's a very good term. Think
- about our dilemma on this planet. If the expansion of consciousness does
- not loom large in the human future, what kind of future is it going to be?
- To my mind the psychedelic position is most fundamentally threatening when
- fully logically thought out because it is an anti-drug position, and make
- no mistake about it, the issue is "drugged." How drugged shall you be? Or
- to put it another way: consciousness. How conscious shall you be? Who shall
- be conscious? Who shall be unconscious? Imagine if the Japanese had won
- World War II, taken over America, and introduced an insidious drug which
- caused the average American to spend six and a half hours a day consuming
- enemy propaganda. But this is what was done. Not by the Japanese but by
- ourselves. This is television. Six and a half hours a day! Average! That's
- the average! So there must be people out there hooked on twenty-four hours
- a day. I visit people in L.A. who have one set on in every room so they're
- racking up a lot of time for the rest of us.
-
- You see what is needed is an operational awareness of what we mean by
- "drug." A "drug" is something which causes unexamined, obsessive habituated
- behavior. You don't examine your behaviour, you just do it, you do it
- obsessively. You let nothing get in the way of it. This is the kind of
- life we're being sold on every level: to watch, to consume, to buy. The
- psychedelic thing is off in this tiny corner, never mentioned and yet it
- represents the only counter flow toward a tendency to just leave people in
- designer states of consciousness, not their designers, but the designers of
- Madison Avenue, the Pentagon, so forth and so on. This is really happening.
- It's only a matter of how tight you draw the metaphor that you realize it.
- I've been coming and going from Los Angeles a lot recently and when the
- plane swings out over the eastern part of the city looking down is like
- looking at a printed circuit. All these curved driveways and cul-de-sacs
- with the same little modules installed on each end of them and you realize
- that as long as the Reader's Digest stays subscribed to and the TV stays on
- these are all interchangable parts. This is this nighmarish thing which
- McLuhan and others foresaw, the creation of the public. The public has no
- history, has no future, lives in a golden moment created by credit which
- binds them ineluctably to a fascist system that is never criticized. This
- is the ultimate consequence of having broken off our symbiotic relationship
- with the vegetable, feminine, maternal matrix of the planet. This is what
- ended partnership. This is what ended balance between the sexes. This is
- what set us on the long slide."
-
- "So now the culture crisis grows ever more intense. The stakes rise ever
- higher. If there were ever a time to be heard and be counted in order to
- clarify thinking on these issues it would be now because there is a major
- attack on the Bill of Rights underway in the guise of a so-called "Drug
- War" and somehow the drug issue is even more frightening than communism,
- even more insidious. McCarthy told America that communism was under the
- bed, he was wrong. Ronald Reagan and George Bush tell America that drugs
- are in the living room and they're right! It is here. It is real. It is the
- hydrogen bomb of the third world. The quality of rhetoric emanating from
- therapists and psychologists and psychoanalysts is going to have to
- radically improve or we are going to have happen to us what happened to
- genetics in the Soviet Union. We're going to be Lysenkoized. We're going to
- be made lilly-white and all opportunity for exploring this dimension is
- going to be closed off - almost as a footnote to the supression of these
- synthetic poisonous narcotics which are mostly dealt by governments anyway.
- But the psychedelic issue, as I said, it's a civil rights issue. It's a
- civil liberties issue. The reason women couldn't be given the vote in the
- nineteenth century, there was a very simple overpowering reason that was
- always given: it would destroy society. This was also the reason why the
- king could not give up a divine right, chaos would result! And this is why
- we're told drugs cannot be legalized, because society would disintegrate.
- This is just nonsense. Most societies have always operated in the light of
- various habits based on plants. The whole history of mankind could be
- written as a series of made and broken relationships with plants. Think
- about the influence of tobacco on merchantilism in 17th and 18th century
- Europe. Think about the influence of coffee on the modern office worker,
- or the way the British influenced opium policy in the far-east to rule
- China, or the way the CIA used heroin in the American ghettos in the 1960s
- to choke off black dissent and black dissatisfaction with the war. History
- is about these plant relationships. They can be raised into consciousness,
- integrated into social policy and used to create a more caring meanigful
- world, or they can be denied the way sexuality was denied until the force
- of the work of Freud and others just made it impossible to maintain the
- fiction any longer. This choice of how quickly we develop into a mature
- community able to address this issue is entirely with us. Certainly people
- like Stan Grof and others have worked valiantly to keep this kind of thing
- alive but, my god, you can count them on the fingers of one hand."
-
- "I should mention that DMT is an endogenous neurotransmitter. Yes, DMT, the
- most powerful of the hallucinogens occurs in the human brain as a normal
- part of metabolism. It also is a Schedule I drug, so you're all holding and
- this _might_ be the basis for some kind of case. To just show what absolute
- poppycock all this nonsense is: People Have Been Made Illegal!"
-
- From Terence Mckenna's Non-Ordinary States Through Vision Plants
-
- --
- "My God it's full of cars" - first time i saw the long island expressway
-
-
-