Daily Archives: April 27, 2017

Investor Watch: Checking on Shares of Nanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN) – Stock Rover

Posted: April 27, 2017 at 2:23 am

Doing some trend analysis on shares of Nanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN), we note that the trendspotter opinion is currently Buy. This signal uses a system combining volatility, momentum, and wave theory to help identify the general trend. The trendspotter strength signal is currently Minimum. This signal is compared to the historical performance where maximum would be considered the strongest, and minimum would be touted as the weakest. In terms of direction, the trendspotter signal is currently Weakest. This signal may indicate if the Buy or Sell is weakening or gaining strength, or if the Hold is leaning towards a Buy or Sell.

Investors are often focused on stock price support and resistance levels. The support is simply a level where a stock may see a bounce after it has fallen. If the stock price manages to break through the first support level, the attention may shift to the second level of support. The resistance is the opposite of support. As a stock rises, it may see a retreat once it reaches a certain level of resistance. After a recent check, the stocks first resistance level is 1.42, and the second resistance level is 1.45. On the other side, investors are watching the first support level of 1.33, and the second support level of 1.27.

Changing lanes, well look at what some of the short term technical indicators are reading for shares ofNanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN). The signal from the 20-day moving average is revealing a Buy. The 20-50 day MACD Oscillator, which can be used to identify bullish or bearish directional movement is currently showing a Buy signal.

Lastly will look at the Bollinger Band signal, specifically the 20 day reading. This indicator can be used to identify short-term overbought and oversold zones, to confirm divergences between prices and indicators and to predict future price targets. The 20-Day Bollinger Band currently is signaling a Hold forNanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN). Bollinger Bands are among the most popular and powerful of the many indicators that traders can choose from. As the name implies, Bollinger Bands are price channels that are plotted above and below price. The outerbands are based on volatility in price, which means that they expand when price fluctuates and trends strongly, and the Bands contract during sideways consolidations and low momentum trends.

Nanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN) currently has a 1 month MA of 1.278. Investors may use moving averages for various reasons. Some may use the moving average as a primary trading tool, while others may use it as a back-up. Investors may keep an eye out for when the stock price crosses a particular moving average and then closes on the other side. These moving average crossovers may be used to help spot momentum shifts, or possible entry/exit points. A cross below a certain moving average may signal the start of a downward move. On the flip side, a cross above a moving average may suggest a possible uptrend. Investors may be focused on many different time periods when studying moving averages. The stock currently has a 3 month MA of 1.263, and a 6 month MA of 1.32.

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Investor Watch: Checking on Shares of Nanotech Security Corp (NTS.VN) - Stock Rover

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Reddit Conspiracy Nutjobs Are Deadset Convinced That WW3 Kicks Off Today – Pedestrian TV

Posted: at 2:22 am

President Donald Trump. That still looks incredibly strange written down, but hey, that's the crazy fucking world we live in, isn't it?

The Trump presidency, even in its relatively early stages, has made a lot of people feel pretty uneasy about the state of certain international relationships.

Most notably, tensions between the US and North Korea are at a nerve-wracking high, prompting fears of a nuclear strike from the hermit nation and its unstable as fuck leader, Kim Jong Un.

In a number of threads that reference "4/26", today's date (the clocks have ticked over in the US at the time of writing), a bunch of people have presented evidence that allegedly points to a North Korean attack.

Essentially, this all has to do with Operation Gotham Shield - a legitimate training exercise that's happening in New York and New Jersey to test preparedness for a nuclear strike in the country.

Internet nutjobs reckon this exercise will be used to pass off an actual nuclear attack as a routine exercise, even though it's been in planning for "about a year", the Federal Emergency Management Agency told Motherboard.

A number of conspiracy outlets like InfoWars are joining the circus, throwing the theory around like terrifying confetti, but the Reddit post's author, "Fuckaduckfuckaduck", decided to take things even further, suggesting the exercise is merely a distraction.

"What if North Korea's nuclear test isn't their usual underground test? What if it's a "test' of their newly unveiled submarine based ballistic missiles... from a sub off the coast of the U.S.?," they said.

To support this wild claim, the user provided a list of plane crashes, explosions, earthquakes and scientific discoveries that have historically happened on April 26. How this ties into the intentions of North Korea is anyone's guess.

He also cites Operation Jade Helm, which InfoWars presenter Alex Jones reckons isObama's "secret plan" to impose martial law and take away all the guns in Texas.

Will it happen? Not bloody likely, but the prospect of nuclear war is as scary as it's ever been. The unpredictable nature of both President Trump and North Korea is truly terrifying.

Photo: Signs.

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Reddit Conspiracy Nutjobs Are Deadset Convinced That WW3 Kicks Off Today - Pedestrian TV

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ICBM test launch: How Minuteman III missile could unleash hell in WW3 – Daily Star

Posted: at 2:22 am

THE US has announced it will test fire an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) today but what is it and how far can it reach?

WIKIPEDIA

An ICBM is a long-range guided ballistic missile with a minimum range of 5,500 kilometres.

In theory, it is thought US and North Korea which are around 8,000km apart could strike each other with an ICBM.

The primary purpose of the missile is to delivery several warheads containing nuclear weapons on multiple long range targets.

ICBM were first deployed by the Soviet Union in 1958, following by the US in 1959 and China some 20 years later.

As Donald Trump has promised to start an arms race, we take a look at the futuristic weapons being developed for the US military.

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The Lockheed Martin HULC is an exoskeleton that allows soldiers to carry loads of up to 200lbs for long distances

UN

Peak speed for an ICMB is around 14,500mph or 6-7km/s with a 10 minute acceleration period.

At that speed an ICBM fired from Moscow could reach New York in around 20 to 30 minutes.

ICBMs can be deployed from multiple platforms, including missile silos, submarines, heavy trucks and mobile launchers on rails.

Russia's RS-24 Yars Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) can strike anywhere in the US with ten nuclear warheads, according to reports.

US nukes are like Ferraris: beautiful, intricate, and designed for high performance.

China has developed a similar platform, and the US has no way to defend against such devastating nukes.

In comparison, the US's Minuteman III ICBM carries just one warhead, and was introduced in the 1970s.

Dr. Jeffrey Lewis, publisher of Arms Control Wonk, said the US possess the most accurate nukes in the world.

He said: US nukes are like Ferraris: beautiful, intricate, and designed for high performance.

Experts have said the plutonium pits will last for 100s of years."

WIKIPEDIA

The US have contraversially began installing the THAAD anti-ballistic missile system on South Korea in a bid to nip Kim Jong-un's budding nuclear capability in the bud. The move has seen tensions between the US and North Korea soar to new heights

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A truck is seen carrying parts required to set up the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile defense system that had arrived at the Osan Air Base in Pyeongtaek, South Korea

US military personnel will test fire the deadly Minuteman III ICBM at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California between 12-6am (UK time) on Wednesday April 26.

Air Force Global Strike Command confirmed it will carry out the test to ensure the effectiveness, readiness and accuracy of the weapon.

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Syria: The new front line in a potentially global conflict (WW3 – Part Two) – Independent Australia

Posted: at 2:22 am

In this series, political editor Dr Martin Hirst outlines the fault lines and front lines that could escalate localised and regional conflicts into a global war with possible nuclear consequences. In this second instalment, the focus is on Syria, where U.S. and Russian forces are facing off in a proxy war that shows no sign of ending any time soon.

[Read Part One HERE]

Attention! Your attention, please! A news flash has this moment arrived from the Malabar Front. Our forces in South India have won a glorious victory. I am authorized to say that the action we are now reporting may well bring the war within measurable distance of its end"

Bad news is coming thought Winston. And sure enoughas from next week, the chocolate ration would be reduced from thirty grammes to twenty.

~ George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four

Of course, the end of the war does not come any closerand, for Winston, the bad news keeps coming. Syria is our Malabar Front.

In mid-February this year, four Russians were killed by a roadside bomb near the embattled Syrian city of Homs. They were "advisors" with Syrian Government forces. That same week, a Russian airstrike killed three Turkish soldiers in an all-too-common "friendly-fire" incident on the Syrian "battle space".

A month later, a very credible Reuters dispatch put the number of Russian fighter deaths at 18 so far in 2017. A number of Russians were among heavy losses sustained in the battles around Palmyra with forces identified as "Islamic State".

Russia has been involved in Syria, on the side of the Assad Government, since mid-2015. Russian planes bombed a market in the anti-Assad stronghold of Aleppo in September 2016. The Syrian Network for Human Rights published research showing Russian airstrikes, in support of Assads forces on the ground, had killed over 2,700 civilians.

Russia was not the first global power to drop bombs in Syria. The Americans stepped in first in September 2014and since then has been bombing IS targets in Syria.

Australia has around 800 personnel deployed on missions in Syria and Iraq, offering co-operation and enthusiastic support for the American effort against terrorism. In September 2016, Australian aircraft were involved in a botched U.S. air strike which killed Syrian government troops accidentally.

Task Group Taji: 300 Aussies with the combined Australian-New Zealand military training force located at the Taji Military Complex northwest of Baghdad.

Special Operations Task Group: 80 Australians providing "military advice and assistance to the Counter-Terrorism Service of the Iraqi Security Forces."

Air Task Group: 400 personnel in support of airstrikes over Syria and Iraq.

Australia also has six F/A-18 Hornet fighter jets in the theatre, as well as an E-7 Wedgetail airborne early warning and control aircraft and a KC-30A Multi Role Tanker Transport.

These aircraft have to date conducted a total of 1,646 sorties and released 641 munitions in the conflict.

(Image:ABC News screenshot)

The Russian bombing of Aleppo in the last quarter of 2016 prompted a falling out between Washington and Moscow over the air war in Syria. Then Obamas administration Secretary of State John Kerry condemned the airstrikes, which had also allegedly deliberately hit hospitals in rebel-held areas.

Kerry also announced an end to U.S. cooperation with Russian forces in combatting the ISfactions in October 2016but, by the end of the year perhaps sensing that without Putin there was no solution in Syria Kerry had changed the U.S. tune again, urging Russia to help broker a ceasefire in Aleppo, but not calling for Assad to step down.

Of course, as we know, this is the situation inherited by Donald Trump in January 2017 after his inauguration. Trump pledged to go after ISIS in Syria and Iraq and claimed he would be able to defeat the terrorist threat quickly.

Like most of Trumps promises, this one has not been kept, nor can it be.

On the ground, Trumps plan was to create so-called "safe zones" for Syrian refugees inside Syria. However, this is a fraught strategy that has, so far, not been implemented. When it was raised earlier this year, the plan was seen to be too dangerous, given the global focus on Syria.

Even Trump seemed to back away from it in an interview with The Guardian.

What we should do is focus on ISIS. We should not be focusing on Syria, Trump told The Guardian. Youre going to end up in World War III over Syria if we listen to Hillary Clinton.

He continued: Youre not fighting Syria anymore, youre fighting Syria, Russia and Iran, all right? Russia is a nuclear country, but a country where the nukes work as opposed to other countries that talk.

Russia also issued a veiled warning to the Trump administration.

Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin, said in a conference call with reporters Thursday that its important for the US to think about the potential consequences of establishing safe zones in Syria.

While Trumps plan for refugee safe zones seems to have evaporated, the U.S. has continued to be aggressive in Syria. In response to a regime-launched chemical weapon attack in rebel-held Idlib, Trump authorised the launch of 59 cruise missiles into a Syrian Government airfield in the first week of April.

It was a strange, if symbolic, gesture. The Syrian planes that dropped the sarin gas bombs on Idlib flew from the airbase that was bombed. But Washington told Moscow the attack was imminent. Moscow told Damascus and the Syrian Air Force moved its assets.

This convoluted exercise both defines and obscures the tangled web of global fault lines and power lines that criss-cross Syrian airspace, and complicated the battlefield.

Trump is behaving strangely for someone who acknowledges the dangers in escalating the war in Syria.

Almost a month after the cruise missile strike, the strategic goal of the attack on the Shayrat Airbase is not clear. Even the White House and the State Department continue to send mixed signals on the raid.

Secretary of StateRex Tillersononly added to the confusion with this statement:

This clearly indicates the president is willing to take decisive action when called for, the secretary said. I would not in any way attempt to extrapolate that to a change in our policy or posture relative to our military activities in Syria today. There has been no change in that status. What exactly does he mean by that? Is it still not a U.S. priority to take out Assad? Spicer cut off questioning before anyone could follow up.

The situation in Syria is made both more complex and more dangerous because of the deeply-embedded Russian presence, and the alliance of military and strategic convenience between Moscow, Damascus and Tehran.

The Russia-Syria-Iran alliance is a Gordian knot for the West. Russia wants to keep Assad in power and so too does Iran. The U.S. cannot remove Assad without Russian and Iranian approval, and help.

Neither is inclined to be helpful.

Syria will remain in a state of dangerous stasis for the foreseeable future. While ever Washington and Moscow use Syria as a pawn, a bargaining chip, or a proxy battle field, the potential for a more extensive conflict to begin there will only grow.

The problem many of us confront when thinking about Syria is that there does not appear to be any "side" in this war that can be supported without reservation.

If we are to come to grips with a region that could springboard us into a global war, we need to come to terms with the various factions, which well look at in Part 3 of this series.

In case you missed it, Part 1 of this series, 'Are we already fighting World War 3?' examined the potential for global war to break-out in north Asia in response to either North Korean nuclear testing, or Chinese expansion in the region.

You can follow Dr Martin Hirston Twitter@ethicalmartini.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License

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Russian AND Chinese troops on North Korean border put on ‘HIGH ALERT’ as WW3 fears rise – Daily Star

Posted: at 2:22 am

RUSSIAN and Chinese troops have been put on high alert after North Korea was warned it faces "great losses" if it fires another missile.

The US and its allies are carrying out military drills around the peninsula, simulating an attack on North Korea.

And part of America's THAAD missile defence system was moved into position to shoot down any missiles fired at the despot nation, cranking up the pressure on Kim.

But North Korea has vowed to continue with its nuclear missile programme, promising to win any upcoming war and reduce the United States to ash.

GETTY

Since 2008, photographer Eric Lafforgue ventured to North Korea six times. Thanks to digital memory cards, he was able to save photos that was forbidden to take inside the segregated state

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Taking pictures in the DMZ is easy, but if you come too close to the soldiers, they stop you

It is more likely than ever that the situation will cross the point of no return

One-time ally of the Hermit Kingdom, China has now issued a chilling threat of what would happen if they launch another missile and put troops on high alert.

World power Russia has also done the same, in a possible move to block refugees from crossing into their territory.

An editorial piece from Chinese propaganda rag the Global Times threatened the North Korean capital with serious consequences if it launched another nuke.

GETTY

It said: "The game of chicken between Washington and Pyongyang has come to a breaking point.

"It is more likely than ever that the situation will cross the point of no return.

"All stakeholders will bear the consequences, with Pyongyang sure to suffer the greatest losses."

Putin has an arsenal of state-of-the-art weaponry at his fingertips. Could this be the hardware that wages WW3?

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The T-90 tank: equipped with a 125mm smoothbore cannon and remote controlled anti-aircraft gun

The US and China have previously clashed on how to deal with the North, with Donald Trump accusing President Xi of not doing enough to reign it in.

But The Donald has since praised President Xi for imposing trade sanctions on the despot nation.

Military insiders claim China has placed a huge platoon of troops on the Korean border ahead of any conflict earlier this month.

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Countess Amanda Feilding Has Spent 50 Years as … – Alternet

Posted: at 2:21 am

Photo Credit: Amanda Feilding. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Amanda Feilding was born to British aristocracy,yet her path has been anything but stuffy and traditional.She's an artist and drug policy pioneer whas spent most of her life exploring altered states of consciousness. In the drawn-out hours of her isolated childhood in the towering Beckley Park Tudor outside of Oxford, surrounded by three moats and a vast countryside, the young Countess of Wemyss and March was often left alone to daydream. These hours of childish reverie spurred a lifelong fascination with shifting perceptions of reality.

Photo: Amanda Feilding. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation. Photo by Robert Funke.

Now in her early 70s, Feilding has spearheaded some of the most groundbreaking psychedelics research in the history of modern science. Despite seemingly insurmountable government resistance due to the global war on drugs, which has demonized any substances that might alter our minds, Feildings 50 years of work has helped to re-legitimize the study of mind-altering substances. She continues to work to shift the global mindset toward a more realistic and rational approach to drugs.

Photo: Amanda Feilding through a looking glass. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

When she was 16 years old, in 1961, after the nuns charged with her education refused to allow her books on Buddhism, she says she decided to leave school and find my own education out in the big wide world." Without any money, she traveled and ended up out on the deserts in Syria where she lived with the Bedouin and all sorts of adventures happened.She met dervish dancers who introduced her to cannabis, and studied comparative religions with Robert Charles Zaehner, a leading British professor of religion whod written the book,Mysticism Sacred and Profane.

Five years later she was introduced to LSD, and says the experience started a new phase in her life. Another big shift came about a year later, in 1966, when Feilding met artist-scientist Hugo Bart Huges. Huges studied medicine at theUniversity of Amsterdam, but wasnt awarded a medical degree because he was a vocal advocate of cannabis use. Huges introduced Feilding to trepanation, the ancient practice of drilling a hole in ones skull in order to improve cerebral circulation and alter consciousness.

[He had] fascinating hypotheses and it gave me a whole new take on myself, and humanity, why we are such a neurotic species, and how we come to create the incredibly wonderful things we do, Feilding said.Eventually, she performed trepanationon herselfand made a short art film titledHeartbeat in the Braindepictingthe process.

Photo: Young Amanda Feilding. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Ultimately, Feildings own experiences in consciousness exploration convinced her that humanity could benefit from realistic research into psychedelics and altered states. In 1998, she founded the Beckley Foundation, a drug science and policy think tank responsible for innovating the first study looking at LSD in humans in more than four decades. The foundation also conducted groundbreaking brain imaging research showing the effects of LSDandpsilocybin(aka "magic mushrooms"),anda recent successful study of psilocybin for addiction cessation.

When she founded the Beckley Foundation almost 20 years ago, Feilding brought well-known scientists, including Albert Hofmann (the "father of LSD") and Alexander Shulgin (the biochemist responsible for resynthesising MDMA, aka ecstasy or Molly) onto her scientific advisory board.

While Feilding is a countess, her family actually had very little money, and her decision to call her organization a "foundation" was a bit of a misnomer, she says.

Foundation sounds as if it's a monied body which gives out funds," she said. "I hadn't realized that when I chose the word foundation, I just thought if it sounded rather founded in the establishment, it would make people feel safe and take me seriously."

Feilding spoke in depth to AlterNet about her storied life as one of the first modern women to use mind-altering substances to explore her consciousness, and her work in the field of psychedelics science, an area that remains heavily male-dominated. She discussed why she thinks psychedelics could be one potential solution to humanitys self-destructive tendencies, and how these drugs could save the world by shifting the way we relate to ourselves and our planet.

The following Q&A has been edited for length and clarity.

April M. Short: Exactly how did the Beckley Foundation come about, and how has its focus shifted over time?

AF: In the '60s, psychedelics weren't illegal. I got to use and know them very, very well, because that's really what I was studying and I've always used myself as a laboratory. I found I could titrate them and use them by controlling the blood glucose level, and in my opinion, improve performanceimprove what I did. That was very exciting. Then they became illegal, which was obviously a terrible mistake. Then we had all of those terrible things which came out of that approach: Intolerable suffering caused around the world; people's lives being ruined by being shut up in jail, by being killed, by violence and corruption and disease. Every bad genie in the bottle was allowed out because of that mistaken decision to criminalize these basic compounds which, if used wisely, are very useful.

During that period, one couldn't really talk about drugs because they were too taboo.At that point I tried to get out to the public the value of not being in that everyday level of consciousness necessarily all the time; the value of seeing things from a different perspective. As you couldn't talk about taking psychedelics or you'd be shut up in jail or something, I talked about trepanation, which is an ancient operation done since 10,000 years ago to alter consciousness, but at a much lower level than psychedelics.

Photo: Amanda Feilding in 1970. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Probably it achieves the level of a child under the age of a teen. It's a very slight lift, but I used that as a metaphor for the alteration of consciousness. Then in [the mid '90s] the war on drugs became so ridiculous and it was so obvious one couldn't do any research until one tried to reform it, so I set up the Beckley Foundation.

I actually had first called it the Foundation to Further Consciousness, then I changed the name to the Beckley Foundation, to do two things. One, to reform global drug policy and try to get it based on scientific evidence, based on rational approach and regulation of these substances. And twomost importantly, because this was my passionto explore the phenomenon of consciousness and its altered states, and how these states can be brought about and used to the optimum benefit of the individual and indeed society.

That is still my aim, because I think knowledge of consciousness and how we can change it is fundamentally interesting to mankind. Basically, if we can enhance our consciousness, maybe we can use that enhanced consciousness to help us survive. It might help us also be healthier and happier.

That really became my life's work, which it had been before. With the Beckley Foundation, I realized I could be more effective. Being a femalewhich is always a slight disadvantage in these worldswithout any letters after my name, since I left school at 16... I thought I'd be more effective if I was a foundation.

I got a very impressive board of internationally recognized scientists who very kindly said they'd be on my scientific advisory board, including Albert Hofmann, Sasha Shulgin, and a lot of top English ones, like Colin Blakemore and David Nutt.

Photo: Amanda Feilding with Albert Hofmann. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Then I set about the tourings. I was horrified particularly by how, in the drug policy world, cannabis, although it was 80 percent of global illegal drug use, was never mentioned at the U.N. or other state meetings. They never mentioned it, although it sustained the war on drugs. Because, you couldn't spend billions of dollars on something one percent of the world did [i.e the other drugs], it was cannabis that built the percentage up to whatever it was.

The two substances that I knew could be used beneficially, cannabis and psychedelics, were prohibited and locked away in Schedule Ithe [category for] the most highly classified dangerous substances with absolutely no medicinal value. Which absolutely was not true. I knew from years of experience that these substances have immense medicinal and psychological value, so I really concentrated on bringing them into focus, while at the same time trying to show how utterly misplaced the prohibitive approach to drug policy was. To do that, I held meetings with as many intellectuals, thinkers and leaders in that area as possible, in the House of Lords.

I had a series of very good conferences which looked into these key issues and they were quite influential. We produced reports; an important one is calledCannabis Policy: Moving Beyond Stalemate[published 2010] which was the first one to address cannabis policy on a global level, for both health and policy/how it is controlled.

It had the world's leading drug policy analyst, who was Peter Reuter, and Robin Room. They were people the U.S. government and the U.N. went to for advice. The report found that cannabis should be decriminalized, definitely, and regulated. It made a big difference at certain high levels, like the policy director of the U.N. said it made all the difference.

What I tried to do was hit key issues, and then try to find the very best people to write about them and get them out there. But it wasn't really what Iloved doing. What I loved doing was research into consciousness. How these psychoactive substances work in the brain, and to what degree the hypothesis of the changing blood supply and changes in neural activity underlie the changes in levels of consciousness.

Photo: Feilding (center) in the House of Lords. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

When brain imaging came about, which was in the '90s, incredibly recently, that's really when I decided I should set up the Beckley Foundation because as a foundation I could much more easily get into the brain imaging world than as a private individual.

I ran it on almost no money at all, and actually have been running it ever since, 18 years, and it's been, I would say, successful at helping reform global drug policy. It's really brought about quite a lot of important changes. I've done several of these very important seminars, then in 2011 I wrote a public letter which was signed by nine presidents and 13 Nobel Prize winners, etc., saying the war on drugs must end. I think that was quite influential.

All the time I was also doing scientific research and entering into collaborations. When I found a scientist who I thought I could work with, I suggested that we collaborated, and over the years we've had some wonderful collaborations.

We've done some very exciting research. In the last year, just to give you an example, we did the Beckley/Imperial Research Programme,which I set up with Professor David Nutt about 10 years ago, when he was still at Bristol. Then he moved to Imperial, then it became the Beckley/Imperial Research Programme. This year, we did the first brain imaging study using LSD in human subjects. It took me 50 years, basically, to achieve that goal, which is really rather ridiculous. But it was very fascinating because it showed many of the hypotheses that we had held in the '60s were true.

One of the marvelous images in it shows the communication of the brain, comparing placeboordinary everyday consciousnesswith the LSD state. This is focusing on the visual center, and in the ordinary state there is a little area of activity in the visual center and the few related centers closeby. Whereas, in the heightened state of awareness, the whole of the brain is lit up with activity. It's a very visual expression of what is happening in the brain, on a psychedelic (see illustration).

Image: LSD brain scan comparing activity in the visual center on placebo vs. LSD. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

What is exciting about our research is gaining a better understanding of how the brain works, and the system called the default mode network, which is a network superimposed above most other networks and is very dominant in times of non-activity. It's a network which contains several key hub points which act as sensors, to repress certain impulses and control what enters consciousness and what doesn't.

In other words, it's the physiological basis of what in the '60s we termed the ego, the condition reflex mechanism which directed the blood to where it was needed. It's giving a much deeper picture of what we were looking at in the '60s when I first had my realization about how fascinating mechanisms of the brain are. It's very exciting.

Another [study], also through the Beckley/Imperial Research Programme, was the first study to use psilocybin combined with psychotherapy in the treatment of chronic, treatment-resistant depressionthat means people who have been depressed for 20 years and none of the available treatments have helped them. In that category of people there's a high level of suicide, it's a horrible state to be in.

It was a small pilot study, 20 people. It was a 67% success rate. That was very high, that was after the first week then it dropped off slightly to 43% at three months, then stayed there more or less for a bit.

What the research shows is the use of psychedelic enables a change to happen. That, and other research shows that the blood supply to the default mode network, the superimposed controlling mechanism, is reduced. The inhibiting effects of this network over the rest of the brain is lessened, so the whole of the rest of the brain kind of rises, like an anarchical state of happiness, and celebrates by communicating with itself, with each other.

There's a massive cross-communication in the brain which is normally kept repressed. You can see it some rather wonderful illustrations we've done in our research of two circles. One has got a bit of connectivity happening and the other is a mass of connectivity (see illustration).

Image: The subject on the right was given psilocybin, showing increased connectivity in the brain. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Mental illnesses like depression, addiction, post-traumatic stress disorder, OCD, etc. are based on two hub centers of the default mode network becoming hyperactive in their conversation between each other. It's like, "I'm so depressed," or, "I need another drink," or whatever it is. That becomes the fixed pattern and what the psychedelic seems to do is, by depriving the energy from the default mode network, that grip, that repressive grip is lost and it enables the brain to shift into a new setting. A freer, looser, more open setting.

People remark, questionnaires and things, there's an afterglow to a psychedelic, which can often make them more open, more happy people. Other people, family members and so on, also report this, that there seems to be a deep level of change, of the person being more open.

It's small research at this point, but we supported research at John Hopkins of overcomingnicotine addiction, tobacco smoking addiction withpsilocybin. That was a study we started years ago, and that had an amazing 80 percent success rate, and is now undergoing a bigger more controlled study.

What it indicates is that something furiously interesting is happening, and we should really quickly try to make up for the lost time and research this on a bigger scale. Then, more importantly, provide access to psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy for people in need. That can spread both from, most obviously, people suffering from all of those terrible afflictions which can ruin lives, to the other end of the spectrum which is helping people with marriage problems, wanting to break through into a new area of spirituality, transformation, or overcoming neurotic blocks. There are all sorts of blocks which are kind of based on this rigid thinking that sets into the default mode networks.

Image: The areas that contribute to vision are moreactive under LSD (right), which was linked tohallucinations.

There are two main hub centers, which psychedelics seem to shake free and enable the person, the self, to go to a deeper level of the personality. To approach the trauma, get through the layers of repression, which protect the trauma and protect the person from the suffering which is held within the trauma, the memory of the trauma. It is good for the personality to free the trauma and let it go.

AMS: Right. They let [the trauma] get processed without activating those fear centers and other triggers in the brain.

AF: Funnily enough I was talking last night to a very interesting psychiatrist who had given psychedelic psychotherapy in America before it was illegal. He said you could do two years normal psychotherapy with a psychedelic in one sitting. You just got to a deeper level of a person.

It's criminal for the authorities to make it so difficult to research these things. It took me, you could say, 20 years before I was able to do a brain imaging study of LSD. Of course psychedelics can be dangerous when misused, but not that dangerous. Of all the drugs, tobacco and alcohol kill far more many people. Alcohol kills far more people than all illegal drugs put together. It's wrong to deprive people, not only to ruin people's lives by putting them in prison and all the other horrible things which happened, but also to deprive people of possible treatment. Basically ancestors have always used these substances as medicines, and it's not good enough that the U.N. is saying they have no medical applications and are deeply dangerous, because it just isn't so. They do have medical applications.

Photo: Amanda Feilding giving a speech. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

It's urgent that countries, individual countries can do this. They don't have to wait for the U.N. They can reschedule cannabis and psychedelics into a lower schedule, which frees up doctors to be able to prescribe them and scientific research to be able to be done with them. That is a very first step to take in drug policy. That, and decriminalizing all drug use, basically. It doesn't do anyone any good by criminalizing it.

I think maybe we're getting a little bit nearer to those steps, and that's very exciting. I think maybe the older generation, more of them who have experimented with psychedelics in their youth, and in the younger generation they've grown up to kind of see more clearly that it's all been a little mad, this overreaction to these compounds which are treated as if they are more dangerous than nuclear weapons. They're protected in a higher grade of security than nuclear weapons.

That's what I've fought for the past 50 years, is how do you take these wonderful fruits of the gods, you could call them, out of this misplaced prison box they've been shut up in? To teach society that they have great value, they need to be treated with respect, but they can uplift man and bring out the nobler qualities and increase creativity and love the neighbor, love the world. They're capable of I think making man and woman the noblest creatures that they can be kind of thing.

Hopefully it's getting unraveled. People will benefit at many levels, beginning with maybe helping treat these horrible illnesses which are becoming a plague. I also think that very low dose of LSD could be very beneficial for conditions of cerebral insufficiency, like dementia and Alzheimer's. Indeed, it's been shown they can have amazing effects at clearing cluster headaches, or treating cluster headaches.

There are these different areas where we can, with the best science, work out how to improve things. That's what I find very exciting to be involved in.

AMS: Given your background as a British countess, how did you first become interested in psychedelics, the war on drugs, consciousness and all of the things youve spent the last 20-plus years focused on?

AF: I had a fairly interesting, but in many ways very beautiful upbringing, but in complete isolation at the edge of the moor. I had nothing much to do except kind of think about consciousness and life and death, all those sorts of things. That became my passion, the subject of consciousness in its altered states, that was always my passion for some reason, from a very early age. Then I started studying Buddhism, Hinduism, Eastern religion when was about 10. I got rather obsessed with them.

I started out studying, then Iexperienceda change in consciousness, first when I was 16 through smoking cannabis, and then five years later when I first experienced LSD. That was a major change. Then about a year later, I met this scientist, Hugo Bart Huges, who had these new hypotheses about the brain, the physiology underlying consciousness, how the distribution of blood changes with different levels of consciousness. The level of consciousness is dependent on the cerebral circulation, and obviously the brain function, which follows. [Meeting him] was a very changing element, because it also enabled me to understand how one could live and work at this elevated level of consciousness.

It was a new way of looking at consciousness, physiological basis to consciousness. This is pure hypothesis, but I think probably we'll find that quite a lot of it is true: the underlying action of the psychedelic substance is to increase the blood supply and neuroactivity in the brain.

Photo: Young Amanda Feilding. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

At first I couldnt see how you could sustain an altered level of consciousness, [like LSD]. ... I found that by keeping your glucose, blood sugar level normal [while on LSD]you could do that by eating vitamin C, so the body can make adrenaline which puts glucose into the bloodsuddenly you can do all those cognitive tasks also, but at a higher level. That was very, very exciting. I could think, talk, I read the complete works of Freud, I did all sorts of things which you wouldn't normally imagine doing on LSD. You can do them with extra inner psychic energy, and that was very exciting.

At that point, I realized that LSD is a tool you can use to enhance your consciousness. For me, that was a major breakthrough. I thought, humanity could be incredibly brilliant, but in some ways its suffering from a lack of consciousness.

AMS: Right, humanitys basic flaw.

AF: We overcompensate for it by all the brilliant things we do, which are totally amazing, but underneath it all we are somehow faulted, sad, suffering, and doing horrible things. Horrible and stupid things. It has always been my passion to try to understand better why is humanity suffering in this way? Why does it impose this suffering upon itself?

Humanity's been developing ways ever since we stood uprightsport/adrenaline, standing on the head, fasting, deep breathing, yogic exercises, eating psychoactive substances, even getting pregnant gets you high. There's all sorts of different ways. They're all techniques we've evolved, which can enhance, can increase the volume of blood in the brain and the action of the brain cells.

Anyway, that became my particular passion, and my aim was to find doctors to research this information.

What can be more fascinating than the core of what we are? In a funny sort of way, it's not really a subject anyone is interested in, least of all science.

Photo: Amanda Feilding, 2012. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Now, consciousness has become an acceptable subject but expanded or altered consciousness is way beyond the path. Until maybe now. I think just now this last year or two, possibly, the tide has turned. Possibly a realization is breaking through at some level that these compounds, which alter our state of consciousness, can actually be interesting.

I think they're highly interesting, because I think our survival depends on our consciousness.Therefore the more we can know about how we work, and how we might be able to adapt it, the better for the individual and also for society. Anyway, that became my gain, in a way, to try to learn more.

AMS: Its interesting that just as were facing drastic climate change and a threat to life on this planet as we know it, psychedelics research and consciousness exploration are experiencing a kind of renaissance. Scientific study of psychedelics and consciousness is becoming more and more acceptable.

AF: Right. In a way, it's very tied up. LSD was discovered roughly the same time as the atom bomb, a kind of internal complement to the atom bomb. I think the '60s explosion of the culture of LSD has been very denigrated, but actually there are a lot of good new concepts that are working their way through society, like healthy eating and spirituality. The philosophies of the East, caring for the environment, compassion, all of those sorts of things came out of the '60s and LSD.

Then came this terrible hand of neurotic repression, because, after all, society is just a projection of the internal world, which is the brain controlled by the ego. Or as it is now called, the "default mode network, which is the repressing structure or network within the brain. Then we had the awful closing down with the war on drugs. It's really deprived patients in need of possible treatment for 40 or 50 years, and now I think were slowly coming out of that period, hopefully.

AMS: Could you explain a little more what you mean by repression?

AF: Really, it's repression of directing the blood supply to where it's most needed, to the center where you have to perform, to decide, whatever that is. But it's controlled by understanding and it turns into repression of thought. Repression of parts of the brain, and consciousness, so whole parts of the brain get deprived of blood supply, their function is kept low.

This is what we've observed in our very recent research on the default mode network, on the brain energy, looking at changes in how the networks of the brain control our consciousness.

Now through our research, which is what I intended, were finding out to what degree the different thoughts are reality. That's very exciting.

AMS: How did you get involved in the drug policy side of things?

AF: Ive always thought, even before they became illegal, it was quite obvious it was a crazy mistake to criminalize these compounds, and indeed all drugs. It just drives them underground, and has all sorts of terrible consequences, which it did have. Now, hopefully, people are beginning to recognize these harms on a bigger scale. That's why I got involved in drug policy, because I realized I couldn't do any scientific research into these areas until we actually changed drug policy. It was really impossible to get near them.

AMS: You mentioned being a woman in the research world without all the letters after your name. I recently spoke with Katherine McLean, who has done a good amount of research at Johns Hopkins University on psilocybin, psychedelics and the consciousness of well-being. She made it very clear to me that typically, women are less vocal in general when it comes to consciousness and psychedelics, and all of the things we're talking about today.

Would you talk about why you think that might be, and your own experiences and choices as a woman in this arena?

AF: Yes. I think there's no doubt, generally, the consciousness and the outside world is male dominated. I think that's a projection of the ego, which is a controlling mechanism based on repression, controlled by the world. I think on the whole, males are more controlled by the world than females, who tend to be more intuitive and emotionally motivated. Not necessarily, but maybe as a general gender.

In my own home life, women, the female was always equal. I wasn't brought up with that feeling of intellectual inferiority by being female, but I notice it very much in the male world. I used to say what I wanted to say to my partner, and ask them to say it for me if I wanted to get it noticed.

Photo: Young Feilding. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

Particularly, we are very much a world which is controlled by symbols. If you don't have the letters after your name, you can't expect to be taken seriously that you know anything about the subject. I tend to work behind the shadows, and try to talk through people who do have the letters after their name because then they're taken more seriously.

The aim is to change society for what I consider the better, which is being freer and more open. Indeed, it's more like what our research is showing us, that's why it's rather exciting, this imaging research that we're doing at the moment mainly at the Beckley/Imperial Research Programme, is that when you reduce the repressive part of the ego, the default mode network, there is more general activity. There's more possibility of creative, of putting together an original idea. Seeing something in a new way, and obviously that can turn into chaos.

One doesn't want it to go too far, so there's a happy medium where you have a bit of extra stimulation that's still under the control of the ego. You need control to be able to concentrate. I think the best is a balanced male-female interaction, actually.

AMS: I've thought a lot about feminine and masculine qualities of psychedelics and various plants that are psychoactive. The things we label in society as masculine and feminine, I think are brought out in a more balanced way often when people ingest these substances and are brought to these different levels of consciousness. Do you agree, and could you speak to that if it applies?

AF: Yes, I do think so. I think they have a tendency to lift a person above their lower conditioning into a slightly higher, more elevated level of consciousness which is slightly above those verbal conditioning of right and wrong. In that way, I think psychedelics are wonderful aid to relationships. I think a gentle dose of a psychedelic can help a couple see each other's points of view more easily, because the restrictions imposed by the thinking of the ego's default mode network are kind of fairly male in their verbal controlling repressive approach.

Not to say that females aren't also flawed, but a loosening, a general loosening, that can be to everyone's advantage and in overcoming conflicts like between warring nations, it's more easy to see the other person's point of view when you raise a little higher up the mountain in the psyche.

I think that's to be gained. I think in the male-female dance, I think both are slightly different qualities and the ideal is a blending of the best of the both.

As a female in a male-dominated society, I have noticed how one's words are taken less seriously because one's female.

AMS: Right. Things are still so male-dominated. There are so many examples to show that patriarchy is still very much alive and well in the whole western society model. Maybe because of that, or relating to that, I've noticed a trend in my personal experiences interviewing people about psychedelics, especially plants, that they bring out this so-called feminine energy. The intuitive, compassionate, dreamier, more encompassing approach to the world. That, in turn, becomes this leveling, balancing effect.

AF: I absolutely agree. Just as the atom bomb is the expression of the male mind working at its most excessive, psychedelics enhance the female approach in a sense of being freer and looser and more intuitive. More multitasking, more of the different areas of the brain are communicating and functioning. That is a fact.

Amanda Feilding. Photo by Robert Funke. Courtesy of the Beckley Foundation.

What our research has done, one knew these things long before the science was done, but the science is a kind of modern religion and it shows the data on which people, the male brain, can finally believe it because it's shown through scientific data, if you like. Everyone who took a psychedelic long before brain imaging still had the realization that it's an experience of consciousness where the controlling constrictions and repressions of the ego are turned off.

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Countess Amanda Feilding Has Spent 50 Years as ... - Alternet

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‘Higher State of Consciousness’ From Psychedelics Is Not Just A … – TheFix.com

Posted: at 2:21 am

Anyone whos had a spiritual experience on psychedelic drugsbe it magic mushrooms, acid, mescaline, etc.can relate to the feeling of breaking through, and transcending ones ego and the pettiness that we tend to get caught up with in day-to-day life.

Some call it a higher state of consciousnesswhich, to those those who arent familiar with this experience, may sound like a load of hippy-dippy BS.

But its more than thatpsychedelic substances really do cause the brain to enter this higher state, according to a new study by a team of UK scientists.

[A higher state of consciousness] has a very specific meaning in terms of this study, and that meaning can get a little conflated with the hippy idea of a higher state of consciousness and psychedelic drugs, study author Anil Seth of the University of Sussex told Newsweek.

In their study, Seth and his team sought to measure the mathematical diversity of brain activityin other words, how unpredictable the activity of the brain is, Seth explained.

Researchers studied the brain activity of people given LSD, psilocybin (magic mushrooms), and ketamine.

When someone is unconsciouswhether theyre asleep or sedatedthis is thought of as a lower state of consciousness. Seth and his team guessed that brain activity would become more diverse, or unpredictable, in someone experiencing the opposite of thatand they were right.

This study brings psychedelic research a step closer to understanding just how substances like these can have a therapeutic effect for people struggling with depression, schizophrenia, and other mental health issues.

If we can understand the brain basis of hallucinations then well understand a lot more about hallucinationsand not just about psychedelia but also schizophrenia and other conditions, said Seth. Well also understand a lot more about how our visual experiences in the normal world happen.

Some doctors already use ketamine in a psychotherapeutic setting. The drug has been shown to be effective in treating depression, PTSD, and other conditions, according to the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS).

As for psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, research from scientists at NYU Langone Medical Center and Johns Hopkins University have found it to be an effective tool for treating depression and anxiety in terminally ill individuals.

By studying the changes in brain activity caused by these drugs, we are gaining a better understanding of what exactly is happening in a persons brain as their consciousness is expanding.

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'Higher State of Consciousness' From Psychedelics Is Not Just A ... - TheFix.com

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Submersive Drops New Two Track Trance Package titled Rock Bottom – EDM Sauce

Posted: at 2:20 am

Submersive Drops New Two Track Trance Package titled Rock Bottom
EDM Sauce
Trance is a style of dance music that not many people have made waves in within recent years. Submersive is an artist who is doing just that. With legendary acts having paved the way for dance music through trance, it is definitely a fine tuned genre ...

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Submersive Drops New Two Track Trance Package titled Rock Bottom - EDM Sauce

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Armin van Buuren Releases Highly-Anticipated ‘A State of Trance 2017’ Mix [LISTEN] – Your EDM

Posted: at 2:20 am

The fourteenth edition of Armin van Buurens award-winning mix compilation series is finally here A State of Trance 2017!

This year, the finest in trance music is brought to you by the legendary DJ and producer in a mixdown and 2-part album release: On The Beach and In The Club.

Collectively, ASOT 2017 boasts 28 official tracks, including 2 new releases from the man himself. The Train and This Is a Test have wowed his fan bases across the world and will also be available as singles today via Armins own Armind imprint. The compilationalso featuresAndrew Rayel, Gareth Emery, MaRLo, Omnia, rjan Nilsen,Super8 & Tab, and so many more!

Armins ASOT project has been going strong since 2004 and this year theres a little something for everyone, whether you want to vibe out under the sun, or get down on the dance floor. Listen to the full ASOT 2017 mix with 100+ songs below, and get your copy of the On The Beach and In The Club albums here!

Tracklist On The Beach 1. Alpha 9 The Night Is Ours 2. Joonas Hahmo X K-System Ymana 3. Alexandre Bergheau Summers Gone (Yoel Lewis Remix) 4. Fatum Draco 5. Rodg Right Away 6. Yoel Lewis Tuviana 7. Omnia & DRYM Enigma 8. Eskai & SNR Swipe 9. Orjan Nilsen feat. Rykka The Hardest Part 10. Gareth Emery & Standerwick feat. HALIENE Saving Light 11. Denis Kenzo feat. Sveta B. Just To Hear 12. MaRLo & First State Falling Down 13. Ashley Wallbridge Naughts & Crosses 14. Bobina Lazy World 2017 15. Protoculture The Descent 16. Tom Fall Kaamos 17. Super8 & Tab Cosmo 18. Radion6 World Of Tomorrow 19. Armin van Buuren The Train

In The Club 1. Armin van Buuren This Is A Test 2. Andrew Rayel feat. Emma Hewitt My Reflection 3. Kyau & Albert Trace 4. Eximinds & Whiteout Lacrimosa 5. Jurgen Vries The Theme (Radion6 Remix) 6. Alexander Popov Eyes To Heaven 7. Davey Asprey Fallout 8. Gaia Saint Vitus 9. Armin van Buuren I Live For That Energy (ASOT 800 Anthem) 10. Armin van Buuren & Garibay I Need You (feat. Olaf Blackwood) (Standerwick Remix) 11. Heavens Cry Voices 12. Armin van Buuren presents Rising Star feat. Betsie Larkin Again (Alex M.O.R.P.H. Remix) 13. Bobby Neon & Nick Arbor feat. Lokka Vox What You Said (MaRLo Remix) 14. Robert Nickson Heliopause 15. Ultimate & Moonsouls feat. Marjan No One Else 16. Shinovi Indian Summer 17. DRYM Wraith 18. Scott Bond & Charlie Walker vs Trouser Enthusiasts Sweet Release 19. Allen Watts Arizona

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Armin van Buuren Releases Highly-Anticipated 'A State of Trance 2017' Mix [LISTEN] - Your EDM

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Salma Hayek on ‘From Dusk Till Dawn’ Striptease: I Had to Put Myself in a Trance to Perform With a Snake – Yahoo Movies

Posted: at 2:20 am

Salma Hayek remembers how she got the role of a snake-dancing stripper vampire in the Quentin Tarantino-penned, Robert Rodriguez-directed thriller From Dusk Till Dawn (1996). But she doesnt remember all that much about the actual filming. Hayek said at multiple points during our recent Role Recall interview that her memories of filming the scene were blurry because she had gone on trance due to some serious ophidiophobia.

Quentin told me, Oh, by the way, youre dancing with a snake. I said, I cant do that, I cant do that. Its my greatest fear, Hayek recalled (watch above). To prod the actress, Tarantino claimed that Madonna was interested in the role, and that she would have no problem being wrapped in python.

So it was good because I had to overcome my greatest fear. I had to go on trance to do the dance And there was no choreography. It was improvised. Because you cant choreograph a snake, we dont know what shes going to do!

Hayek was recruited to the project after doing a favor for friend Rodriguez. He and Tarantino were working on the anthology film Four Rooms (1994) and needed a stripper, so Rodriguez reached out to his Desperado star on the day of filming. He said, Just put a bathing suit on, and we wont see your face.'

So I did it and from that dance, Quentin wrote me the part in From Dusk Till Dawn, Hayek explained. Where of course he makes me dance only for him. George Clooney was like, How come she doesnt look at us? [Quentin said], Because Im the writer.'

Hayek will next be seen in How to Be a Latin Lover, in theaters April 24.

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Salma Hayek on 'From Dusk Till Dawn' Striptease: I Had to Put Myself in a Trance to Perform With a Snake - Yahoo Movies

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