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Monthly Archives: January 2021
Opinion: White Renegade of the Year 2020 – Prescott eNews
Posted: January 3, 2021 at 9:45 pm
[Disclaimer: The views expressed in opinion pieces on the PrescotteNews website are solely those of the authors. These opinions do not necessarily represent those of the staff of Prescott eNews or its publisher.]
Theres an idea of a Joe Biden but no real person. He is the president-elect, but he seems almost irrelevant even before he takes office. Does he even know who will be in charge? Just this week, he called Kamala Harris president-elect.
His campaign offered nothing new. The Atlantic described his victory this way:
He won while giving the same speeches, and telling literally the same stories, that he had for years. . . . He was established enough not to seem a revolutionary in a year of politics stretched between poles, but still offered enough of a contrast to win progressives support if only as a tool to remove Trump. Throughout, he was boosted by voters sense of his personality, from the people who cried in the arms of a man they felt could ease their pain to all the union guys who saw their stories in his Norman Rockwell tales of Scranton.
Who came up with that image? Who let the candidate of BLM channel Norman Rockwell?
Joe Biden didnt run a real campaign. Journalists mostly protected him from negative stories while repeatedly attacking President Trump. Social media banned President Trumps voters on major platforms. Whatever President Donald Trumps faults, his supporters turned out in large numbers for mass rallies, cheering their champion. Only handfuls showed up for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. He ran the 21st-century equivalent of a front porch campaign, and won because of favorable media.
When dissident reporters broke stories that threatened the candidates image, mainly about Hunter Biden and a sexual assault on a woman who worked for the then-senator, the major media buried them. It was after the election that we learned the federal government is investigating Hunters business dealings in China. If this had been known before November 3, that alone might have tipped the election. While President Trump barnstormed furiously, Joe Biden seemed almost a bystander to his own campaign. Outside forces shoved him over the finish line.
It is Donald Trumps supporters, not Republican supporters, who will march on Washington on January 6. Donald Trump may not even realize it, but he represents something bigger than himself. For better or worse, President Trump became an avatar of American nationalism and implicit white identity.
His failures ironically show the potential of such a movement. He inspires fanatical loyalty, even though he didnt stop mass immigration, protect his supporters, drain the swamp, destroy political correctness, or really put America First. Paradoxically, its because President Trump is so unimpressive that we can see how powerful the ideas he represents really are. If a champion emerged who could do what President Trump merely talked about, he could change history. He could re-direct this nations fate as dramatically as an Augustus or a Constantine. President Trump aroused something visceral and real. All we need is a real leader to arouse the same thing.
What did Joe Biden arouse? What is Joe Biden except the goofy, gaffe-prone white sidekick, the Homer Simpson of television and film. The satirical newspaper The Onion made Biden out to be a harmless oaf during the Obama Administration. In the age of Black Lives Matter and Critical Race Theory, a weak and almost comical white man is the ideal leader for a progressive movement. Nave whites feel they can vote for him because they cant see him truly believing nonsense about transgenderism, reparations, or abolishing the police.
He may say he wants to fight for transgender and gender-nonconforming people, but it rings as false as Kamala Harriss childhood Kwanzaa memories. This was a strength for Mr. Biden in the election. He was able to win over just enough older white voters to stop President Trump. Mr. Bidens own words were: Do I look like a radical socialist with a soft spot for rioters? Perhaps not. However, his vice president, of whom we would never have heard if she were white, was promoting a bail fund for BLM protesters.
To quote Mr. Biden again, he is a transition candidate. He says the transition will be to a country that is no longer divided, but what unity is possible with people who despise our identity and history? Mr. Biden represents the transition to a post-white, post-American age. The pose of Joe from Scranton, American everyman, will fade quickly once we see who and what he has unleashed.
But does he care? There are very few stances on which Joe Biden has not reversed himself, but he is constant in one way: He is a politician, almost a caricature of the Beltway Establishment. His hair plugs and cosmetic surgery symbolize his willingness to do anything, say anything, or be anything so long as he can be the face of the System. Mr. Biden represents the white men who would give away their country if it meant they could stay on top, not caring that le deluge would follow.
Joe Biden probably couldnt be hired at a Taco Bell today because of his past. Earlier this week, the New York Times helped humiliate a white teenager because of a three-year-old, four-second Snapchat video, even though the young woman was a Black Lives Matter supporter. Joe Biden has officially and repeatedly taken stances and made associations that could get any of you reading this fired.
Even by the standards of his time, Mr. Biden was never a progressive on race. In 1972, he sounded far more like a white nationalist than Donald Trump ever did. He called school busing a phony issue which allows the white liberals to sit in suburbia, confident that they are not going to have to live next to a black. (Even black liberals today dont want to live next to a black). In 1975, Joe Biden dismissed what we would now call white privilege and affirmative action:
I do not buy the concept, popular in the 60s, which said, We have suppressed the black man for 300 years and the white man is now far ahead in the race for everything our society offers. In order to even the score, we must now give the black man a head start, or even hold the white man back, to even the race. I dont buy that.
This concept now rules the media, schools, and entertainment.
If there is one slogan that defines our current political and cultural regime, it is Diversity Is Our Strength. Its not, and Jared Taylor has explained why. So did President-Elect Biden. He scoffed at the idea that if a heterogeneous society becomes a totally homogeneous society that somehow were going to solve our social ills, adding:
I think the concept of busing, which implicit in that concept is the question you just asked or the statement within the question you just asked, that we are going to integrate people so that they all have the same access and they learn to grow up with one another and all the rest is a rejection of the whole movement of black pride, is a rejection of the entire black awareness concept where black is beautiful, black culture should be studied, and the cultural awareness of the importance of their own identity, their own individuality. And I think thats a healthy, solid proposal.
In this 1975 interview, Mr. Biden faulted liberals for rejecting things out of hand because if George Wallace is for it, it must be bad (in this case, opposition to busing). The same could be said about the way liberals act towards Donald Trump today.
Jared Taylor says racial solidarity is natural; so did the former Joe Biden. Black kids dont want to come to your school any more than you want to come to their school, then-Senator Biden told an audience of white schoolchildren in 1976.
Jared Taylor tells us diversity leads to tension and even violence. So did then-Senator Biden: Unless we do something about this [integration policy], my children are going to grow up in a jungle, the jungle being a racial jungle with tensions having built so high that it is going to explode at some point. USA Today tried to explain this away, even to the point of denying he ever talked about a racial jungle.
When Joe Biden said racial tensions were going to explode he was right. Id say it happened last year. To see, and not to speak, would be the great betrayal, said Enoch Powell, perhaps the last Great Briton to serve in government. If thats true, how much worse is it to see, to speak, and then do nothing? Senator Biden later called for unrelenting immigration, non-stop and said that white European stock becoming an absolute minority would be a source of our strength.
Joe Biden worked with segregationist Senator James Eastland to defeat forced busing, and spoke fondly of the senator. Today, Democratic challenger Jon Ossoff is saying Republican Senator Kelly Loeffler is campaigning with a Klansman because she appeared in a picture with alleged former Klan leader Chester Doles. She obviously had no idea who he was and immediately denounced him. President-Elect Biden will be campaigning in Georgia for Mr. Ossoff this weekend, though he clearly cant meet Mr. Ossoffs standards for morality.
Near the beginning of his political career, Joe Biden opposed reparations for slavery and said he would be damned if I feel responsible to pay for what happened 300 years ago. However, accepting responsibility is precisely what the white privilege conspiracy theory is all about. To say you do not feel responsible is white fragility.
This isnt a fringe doctrine; its probably part of your childs curriculum in public schools. In fact, high on the agenda of President-Elect Bidens incoming Education Secretary, Miguel Cardona, is bringing back the Obama-era guidance on school discipline. This policy ordered an end to racial disparities in school discipline because disparities can be caused only by racism. Thus, whatever he once said or may secretly believe, Mr. Bidens Administration will act otherwise.
It would be one thing if Joe Biden simply said a few things back in 1975. However, hes been fairly conservative on race, crime, and even education for decades. In 1984, he and Senator Strom Thurmond expanded civil asset forfeiture to punish drug dealers. In 1989, Senator Biden attacked then-President George H.W. Bush from the right on crime, drugs, and border security. We have no more police in the streets of our major cities than we had 10 years ago, he complained.
hat same year, Senator Biden said that there was no answer for drug addicts committing crimes except to put them in jail permanently. In 1991, he said his plan on drugs was much tougher than the Presidents [George H.W. Bush] and had more ways to apply the death penalty. In 1993, he blasted predators on our streets. In 1994, celebrating the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, he took credit for converting the government to a tough-on-crime approach:
Every major crime bill since 1976 thats come out of this Congress, every minor crime bill, has had the name of the Democratic senator from the State of Delaware: Joe Biden.
Joe Bidens plan for criminals? Lock the S.O.B.s up. The 1990s version of Joe Biden was tougher than President Trump in 2020, who was bragging about criminal justice reform.
Mr. Biden has a long record of, shall we say, politically incorrect statements. He saw Barack Obamas potential. [Obama was] the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy, he said. However indelicate, this shows Mr. Biden was shrewd, knowing that Americans want to believe in integration and are looking for the correct package. The fact that this is cynical doesnt mean its not true.
You cannot go to a 7-11 or a Dunkin Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent, he told us in 2006. Im not joking. Recently, leftists successfully purged the character Apu, a convenience store owner, from The Simpsons.
In 2007, he told blacks:
I spent last summer going through the black sections of my town, holding rallies in parks, trying to get black men to understand it is not unmanly to wear a condom, getting women to understand they can say no, getting people in the position where testing matters. I got tested for AIDS. I know Barack got tested for AIDS.
It is very hard to imagine Joe Biden or any other white man wandering through the black sections preaching about condoms, but it shows that he knows the truth about blacks and AIDS.
Once again, this isnt American Renaissance saying it. Its the president-elect, a man who won the Democrat nomination because blacks backed Biden. If you have a problem figuring out if youre for me or Trump, then you aint black, he said in 2020. Blacks deserve this condescension because Mr. Biden knew they would vote for him. Thats how I get elected every single time, he said in the same 2020 interview.
The issue is not just that Joe Biden once said sensible things and now doesnt. Its certainly not that hes the real racist. Its that the next president of the United States is being held to a lower standard than the teenager who had her life ruined because of a single word. He is exempt from a terrifying cultural movement that is costing careers, reputations, and lives.
Egalitarianism is, as the immortal Sam Francis explained, a political weapon. Whether Mr. Biden believes in it if indeed he believes in anything is irrelevant. He uses it cynically to punish ordinary whites who do not have his wealth, political connections, and media support. In its effects, it shows the hate that lies behind the platitudes about love.
Joe Biden campaigned on restoring decency to the White House. Leave aside the plagiarism that ended his 1988 presidential campaign. Leave aside Hunters antics. Leave aside whether Joe Bidens family profited from his government position. Leave aside the accusations that Mr. Bidens current marriage (an enduring love story according to Oprah magazine) began by destroying someone elses marriage. One thing even the liberal press admits is that for years, Joe Biden spread a false claim that a drunk driver killed his first wife and baby daughter. The other driver was sober and blameless. Mr. Biden repeatedly made the claim despite the drivers family asking that he stop.
The crazed, angry faces illuminated by torches. The chants echoing the same anti-Semitic bile heard across Europe in the 1930s. The neo-Nazis, Klansmen, and white supremacists emerging from dark rooms and remote fields and the anonymity of the web into the bright light of day on the streets of a historically significant American city.
An independent report found that city authorities egged on violence. President Trumps predictions that what began with General Lee would culminate with destruction of George Washington has come true. And Charlottesville is nothing compared to the violence unleashed by the BLM movement.
A President Biden will punish whites. Hell push for that unrelenting stream of immigration. Hell impose more gun control. He wants to eliminate racial disparities in incarceration impossible unless blacks suddenly stop committing crime or go unpunished. Hell also unleash Kamala Harris, whose plan for combatting violent hate is to muzzle pro-white speech. Hell throw the book at whites who have said far milder things than he has. Hell be the national version of Virginias Governor Ralph Northam, who collectively punished Virginias conservatives to atone for having once been in black face.
To quote Enoch Powell again, every political career, unless cut off at a happy juncture, ends in failure. That may not be true of Joe Biden. He has pursued the White House for longer than Ive been alive. To what end? To get there, he abandoned every accomplishment he once championed. Our cities are decaying, our patriotism is scorned, our national unity is gone. He will preside over further decline. Hell be president because this system needs collaborators, and Joe Biden is happy to play the kapo.
It doesnt matter to me whether this embarrassing puppet really won the election. Hes the crab that somehow got out of the bucket. His career shows that whites have no stake in propping up a system that enables someone like him to win public office. Joe Biden has been in office for most of the long American decline from 1965. Its fitting he will now preside over the denouement.
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2021 in books: what to look forward to this year – The Guardian
Posted: at 9:45 pm
January
4 Winners of five Costa category awards announced.8 The Father released Florian Zeller directs an adaptation of his own play, starring Anthony Hopkins.11 TS Eliot prize for poetry.19 Centenary of the birth of Patricia Highsmith, queen of psychological suspense.22 Netflix adaptation of Aravind Adigas Booker winner The White Tiger.Release of film Chaos Walking, based on first book of Patrick Nesss eponymous trilogy.26 Costa awards ceremony, with book of the year announced.
Fiction
Luster by Raven Leilani (Picador)In the years buzziest debut, a black American millennial tackles the difficulties of work, love, sex and being seen for who you really are.
The Living Sea of Waking Dreams by Richard Flanagan (Chatto & Windus)A family grapples with mortality while Australia burns, in a magical realist fable about extinction and Anthropocene despair from the Booker-winning author of The Narrow Road to the Deep North.
Memorial by Bryan Washington (Atlantic)His story collection Lot won last years Dylan Thomas prize; this deft debut novel explores the complications of family and a gay relationship on the rocks.
A Burning by Megha Majumdar (Scribner)Three lives entangle in contemporary India, in a debut about class and aspiration that has been a sensation in the US.
The Art of Falling by Danielle McLaughlin (John Murray)Debut novel about a woman rebuilding her marriage, from the celebrated Irish short story writer.
A River Called Time by Courttia Newland (Canongate)Ambitious speculative epic set in an alternate London where slavery and colonialism never happened.
People Like Her by Ellery Lloyd (Mantle)Smart, gobble-at-a-sitting thriller about life as a yummy mummy influencer and the dark side of Instagram.
Girl A by Abigail Dean (HarperCollins)Incendiary, beautifully written thriller debut about siblings living with the emotional legacy of childhood abuse in a House of Horrors.
The Stranger Times by CK McDonnell (Bantam)Pratchettesque romp set around a Manchester newspaper dedicated to the paranormal whose reporters get sucked into a battle between good and evil.
Childrens and teen
Amari and the Night Brothers by BB Alston (Egmont)Film rights have been snapped up for the first in a new supernatural adventure series with a black heroine.
Concrete Rose by Angie Thomas (Walker)From the US YA sensation, this hard-hitting prequel to the award-winning The Hate U Give focuses on Starrs father as a young man.
Poetry
Living Weapon by Rowan Ricardo Phillips (Faber)The award-winning American essayist and poets first collection to be published in the UK combines civic awareness with an interrogation of language and self.
Nonfiction
A Swim in a Pond in the Rain by George Saunders (Bloomsbury)The Booker-winning author of Lincoln in the Bardo considers the art of fiction through seven classic Russian short stories by Chekhov, Turgenev, Tolstoy and Gogol.
Francis Bacon: Revelations by Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan (William Collins)A definitive biography, written with the full cooperation of the Bacon estate and with unrivalled access to the artists personal papers.
Begin Again: James Baldwins America by Eddie S Glaude Jr (Chatto & Windus)Exemplifying the resurgence of interest in Baldwin, this blend of biography, criticism and memoir with the novelist at its heart is an indictment of racial injustice in Trumps America.
Empireland: How Imperialism Has Shaped Modern Britain by Sathnam Sanghera (Viking)One of a new wave of books on British imperialism, this study, from the likable journalist and author of The Boy With the Topknot, looks at the legacy of empire from the NHS to Brexit and Covid.
Breathtaking: Inside the NHS in a Time of Pandemic by Rachel Clarke (Little, Brown)The palliative care doctor who scored a hit with her book Dear Life gives an insider account of hospital life as Covid-19 changed everything.
Saving Justice by James Comey (Macmillan)The former FBI director and author of A Higher Loyalty looks into how institutions of justice in the US were eroded during the Trump presidency.
The Unusual Suspect by Ben Machell (Canongate)The remarkable story of how a British student with Aspergers became obsessed with Robin Hood following the global financial crash, and began to rob banks.
4 Centenary of the birth of Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique.23 Bicentenary of the death of John Keats in Rome.
Fiction
Light Perpetual by Francis Spufford (Faber)The author of Golden Hill imagines the lost futures of children killed in the blitz, in a sparkling, humane panorama of miraculous everyday life.
No One Is Talking About This by Patricia Lockwood (Bloomsbury)Following her acclaimed comic memoir Priestdaddy, a fast and furious debut novel about being embedded deep in the digital world.
Mother for Dinner by Shalom Auslander (Picador)Outrageous comedy about identity politics and family ties centred on the Cannibal-American Seltzer clan.
We Are Not in the World by Conor OCallaghan (Transworld)Delayed from 2020, the examination of a father-daughter relationship by a rising Irish star.
Maxwells Demon by Steven Hall (Canongate)Long-awaited follow-up to ultra-inventive cult hit The Raw Shark Texts features a man being stalked by a fictional character.
Open Water by Caleb Azumah Nelson (Viking)Black British artists fall in love in an intense, elegant debut.
Voices of the Lost by Hoda Barakat, translated by Marilyn Booth (Oneworld)In a war-torn country, six characters share their secrets, in this international prize for Arabic fiction winner.
Childrens and teen
How to Change Everything by Naomi Klein with Rebecca Stefoff (Penguin)A guide to climate change billed as the young humans guide to protecting the planet and each other.
Nonfiction
Fall by John Preston (Viking)The author of A Very English Scandal turns his attention to the last days of disgraced media tycoon Robert Maxwell.
What Does Jeremy Think? by Suzanne Heywood (William Collins)A set of revealing insider political accounts, written up by the author after conversations with her husband, the former cabinet secretary Lord Heywood, who died of cancer aged 56 in 2018.
Consent: A Memoir by Vanessa Springora, translated by Natasha Lehrer (HarperCollins)The memoir, by the director of one of Frances leading publishing houses, of her sexual relationship as a teenager with a leading writer.
Bessie Smith by Jackie Kay (Faber)The national poet of Scotland has written a new introduction to her study of the American blues singer, whom she idolised as a young black girl growing up in Glasgow.
Keats by Lucasta Miller (Cape)A new biography in nine poems and an epitaph by the author of The Bront Myth, to coincide with the bicentenary of the poets death.
Brown Baby by Nikesh Shukla (Bluebird) A memoir from the Bristol-based editor of The Good Immigrant, which is also an exploration of how to raise a brown baby in an increasingly horrible world.
Karachi Vice by Samira Shackle (Granta) An impressive account of the inner workings of the Pakistani city, as exposed by the stories of five individuals.
The Code Breaker by Walter Isaacson (Simon & Schuster)The biographer of Leonardo da Vinci and Steve Jobs returns with a book about Crispr, the revolutionary tool that can edit DNA.
How to Avoid a Climate Disaster by Bill Gates (Allen Lane)The co-founder of Microsoft discusses the tools needed to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions.
Raceless by Georgina Lawton (Sphere)Reflections on identity along with recollections of growing up as a mixed-race girl raised by two white parents who pursued the untruth that the authors darker skin was the product of a so-called throwback gene.
Aftershocks by Nadia Owusu (Sceptre)A descendant of Ashanti royalty recounts growing up without a mother, travelling from country to country and feeling an absence of home her experience told through the metaphor of earthquakes.
19 Bicentenary of the birth of the explorer, linguist and author Richard Burton, who translated The One Thousand and One Nights and the Kama Sutra into English.
Fiction
Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro (Faber)An Artificial Friend considers humanity and the meaning of love in Ishiguros first novel since winning the Nobel literature prize.
Double Blind by Edward St Aubyn (Harvill Secker)The author of the Patrick Melrose books investigates themes of inheritance, knowledge and freedom through the connections between three friends over one tumultuous year.
Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi (Viking)This follow-up to her debut Homegoing, focusing on an immigrant Ghanaian family in the American South, has been a huge hit in the US.
Painting Time by Maylis de Kerangal, translated by Jessica Moore (MacLehose)The French author took the Wellcome science prize for her bravura novel about a heart transplant, Mend the Living; this new book is set in the world of trompe lil painting.
Hot Stew by Fiona Mozley (John Murray)Her debut Elmet made the Booker shortlist; this followup tackles money and class through the inhabitants of Londons Soho.
Kitchenly 434 by Alan Warner (White Rabbit)The Sopranos authors tale of a rock stars butler at the fag end of the 1970s promises to be Remains of the Day with cocaine and amplifiers.
The Committed by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Corsair)In the sequel to Pulitzer winner The Sympathizer, that novels conflicted spy finds himself in the underworld of 80s Paris.
The Absolute Book by Elizabeth Knox (Michael Joseph)From the New Zealand writer, a propulsive parallel-worlds fantasy epic about the power of stories and storytelling.
The Mysterious Correspondent by Marcel Proust, translated by Charlotte Mandell (Oneworld)Nine previously unseen stories illuminate a young writers development.
Names of the Women by Jeet Thayil (Cape)From Mary of Magdala to Susanna the Barren, women whose stories were suppressed in the New Testament.
Redder Days by Sue Rainsford (Doubleday)Twins in an abandoned commune prepare for apocalypse, in the follow-up to her standout debut Follow Me to Ground.
The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward (Viper)A woman believes she has found the monster who snatched her younger sister as a child Full of twists and turns, this high-concept gothic horror is going to be huge.
Childrens and teen
The Wild Before by Piers Torday (Quercus)Can one hare change the world? A prequel to the Guardian prize-winning The Last Wild.
Poetry
Too Young, Too Loud, Too Different, edited by Maisie Lawrence and Rishi Dastidar (Corsair)An anthology celebrating 20 years of writers collective Malikas Poetry Kitchen, featuring work by now well-known alumni including Warsan Shire, Inua Ellams, Roger Robinson and Malika Booker herself.
Nonfiction
Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life by Jordan Peterson (Allen Lane)Having spent a year in rehab, the controversial Canadian psychologist, self-styled professor against political correctness follows up his global bestseller 12 Rules for Life.
Under a White Sky by Elizabeth Kolbert (Bodley Head)The Pulitzer prize-winning writer of The Sixth Extinction meets scientists and researchers and asks: can we change nature, this time to save it?
The Soul of a Woman: Rebel Girls, Impatient Love, and Long Life by Isabel Allende (Bloomsbury)An autobiographical meditation from the bestselling novelist on feminism and what women want.
New Yorkers by Craig Taylor (John Murray) The sequel to Taylors bestselling Londoners is another work of oral history, 10 years in the writing and drawing on hundreds of interviews.
The Diaries of Chips Channon, Volume 1: 1918-1938 edited by Simon Heffer (Hutchinson)The unexpurgated version of the often-quoted diaries of Henry Channon, social climber and Tory MP, who liked to gossip about politics and London society.
A Little Devil in America by Hanif Abdurraqib (Allen Lane)From Josephine Baker to Beyonc reflections on black performance from the author of a superb book on A Tribe Called Quest.
Inventory of a Life Mislaid by Marina Warner (William Collins)A memoir from the writer known for her books on feminism, myth and fairytales, which is structured around objects, from her mothers wedding ring to a 1952 film cylinder.
Friends by Robin Dunbar (Little, Brown)An exploration of friendship by the anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist known for the Dunbar Number, his theory that we can have meaningful relationships with only 150 people.
The Gun, the Ship and the Pen by Linda Colley (Profile) The historian best known for Britons retells modern history by considering the spread of written constitutions.
Failures of State by Jonathan Calvert and George Arbuthnot (Mudlark) Investigative journalists explore all the things the British government got wrong over Covid.
9 Bicentenary of the birth of the influential French poet, translator and critic Charles Baudelaire, author of Les Fleurs du Mal.
Fiction
Lean Fall Stand by Jon McGregor (4th Estate)An inquiry into the meaning of courage in the aftermath of a disastrous Antarctic research expedition, following the Costa-winning Reservoir 13.
My Phantoms by Gwendoline Riley (Granta)Fearless, darkly witty novel anatomising a toxic mother-daughter relationship.
Civilisations by Laurent Binet, translated by Sam Taylor (Harvill Secker)A counterfactual history of the modern world from the author of HHhH, examining the urge for power across time and space.
The High House by Jessie Greengrass (Swift)Sight was shortlisted for the Womens prize in 2018; in Greengrasss second novel, an ordinary family prepares for climate catastrophe.
This One Sky Day by Leone Ross (Faber)Set on a magical archipelago, a big, carnivalesque novel that takes on desire, addiction and postcolonialism, but is also a celebration of food, love and joy.
First Person Singular by Haruki Murakami, translated by Philip Gabriel (Harvill Secker)A new collection of eight stories that play with the boundary between memoir and fiction.
Hummingbird Salamander by Jeff VanderMeer (4th Estate)A climate change conspiracy thriller about ecoterrorism and extinction.
The Republic of False Truths by Alaa Al Aswany (Faber)A polyphonic novel about the 2011 Egyptian revolution.
Male Tears by Benjamin Myers (Bloomsbury)Farmers, boxers, ex-cons Short stories about men and masculinity.
Monsters by Barry Windsor-Smith (Cape)The US army runs a secret genetics programme in this epic graphic novel from the Marvel and Conan artist, 35 years in the making.
You Love Me by Caroline Kepnes (Simon & Schuster) The latest in the thriller series behind Netflix stalker blockbuster You.
Childrens and teen
Weirdo by Zadie Smith and Nick Laird, illustrated by Magenta Fox (Puffin)This first picture book from the husband and wife writers celebrates the quiet power of being different through the story of a guinea pig in a judo suit.
Bone Music by David Almond (Hodder)The Skellig authors new novel focuses on a young girl who moves from Newcastle to rural Northumberland and finds herself rewilded.
Poetry
A God at the Door by Tishani Doshi (Bloodaxe)The witty, wise and clear-eyed novelist, dancer and poet deploys both rage and sharp analysis covering issues from the precarious state of the environment to the treatment of women.
A Blood Condition by Kayo Chingonyi (Chatto & Windus)The second collection from the Dylan Thomas prize-winner explores both the personal and cultural influences of inheritance.
Nonfiction
Philip Roth: The Biography by Blake Bailey (Jonathan Cape)Renowned biographer Bailey was appointed by the American novelist, who died in 2018, and granted independence and complete access to the archive.
Go Big: How To Fix Our World by Ed Miliband (Bodley Head)Inspired by his Reasons to be Cheerful podcast, the shadow cabinet member investigates 20 transformative solutions to problems as intractable as inequality and the climate crisis.
How to Love Animals in a Human-Shaped World by Henry Mance (Jonathan Cape)Tapping into new thinking about animals and our changing perception of them, the FT journalist works in an abattoir, talks to chefs and philosophers and looks to a better future.
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Tech That Will Change Your Life in 2021 – The Wall Street Journal
Posted: at 9:44 pm
A pandemic that ravaged the world and accelerated the digital transformation of, well, everything? Not even the best of futurists or Magic 8 ball-shaking psychics could have predicted the year that was 2020. And yet while we may have missed the biggest news, our predictions for what would occur in the tech world held up decently. (OK, fine, we didnt think Quibi would die that quickly.)
Now, 2020 has become the lens through which all our 2021 predictions are glimpsed. As we continue to live in a pandemic-fighting world, innovators will aim tech solutions at our personal and professional lives, from at-home streaming movie debuts to an overdue evolutionary leap of the laptop. But we will also strive to reach a new normal, and youll see technology helping us there, too, from new hybrid work practices to high-tech masks. And accompanying each new product or service: yet another monthly subscription fee.
Now that weve rung in the new year, heres what to look for.
Masks, webcams and sanitizers for our bodies... and our gadgets. The pandemic sparked a reliance on things our 2019 selves couldnt ever have imagined. With marketers keen to capitalize on the new interest (and anxiety), 2021 will likely be full of new gizmos that boldly promise to improve it all.
One key area: better webcams for our constant video calling. Samsung has already announced that its forthcoming Galaxy smartphone, expected in early 2021, will improve video recording and calling. We anticipate laptop makers will do the same and finally ditch their crappy, low-resolution webcams.
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Big pharma is about to tune in to the potential of psychedelics – Wired.co.uk
Posted: at 9:42 pm
Psychedelic medicine will begin to cross over into the mental health mainstream in 2021. In both Europe and the US, medicines regulators have eased restrictions on using MDMA to treat post-traumatic disorder (PTSD), and on psilocybin the active substance in magic mushrooms to treat depression. 2021 will bring new clinical trials, as support for the use of psychedelics in medicine continues to gain momentum.
Clinical research into psychedelics has boomed in the past five years and investors are taking note. The US Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), which researches the topic, reached a $30 million (23 million) fundraising target in 2020, on top of $80m of historical funds. This money will enable the completion of a phase-3 trial in the use of MDMA to treat PTSD, which will be necessary to achieve Food and Drug Administration approval. In the UK, London-based mental-health care company COMPASS Pathways has raised more than $115m to fund its efforts and bring to market a psilocybin treatment for depression. In August, the company filed an application to issue an IPO on the Nasdaq.
One barrier to the use of psychedelics in medicine is government regulation. The 1971 United Nations Convention on Psychotropic Substances placed psychedelics in its most restrictive category, Schedule 1, above drugs such as fentanyl, methamphetamine and cocaine. Legal-access loopholes exist in pockets of Europe and the Americas, but now governments are being increasingly lobbied to revise what many see as out-of-date policies. In November 2020, legal, regulated psilocybin therapy was approved for use in Oregon.
It is important not to underestimate the effect of drugs such as psilocybin. In a study we carried out at Imperial College Londons Centre for Psychedelic Research, which I head, 100 per cent of participants ranked a 25mg psilocybin experience as the single most intense state of consciousness of their lives. Because of this, 2021 will see the arrival of smartphone apps for those who use psychedelics, which will focus on harm reduction, including an app being developed by Imperial called MyDelica.
We are launching this app not only because of concerns about the growth of psychedelic misuse, but also the need to establish guidelines for their safe use, and to help with ongoing research. Without these, psychedelics might no longer show the same safety and efficacy that weve become accustomed to seeing from controlled research, and set back progress.
In 2021, big pharma could also enter the psychedelic space, as we continue to understand the drawbacks of treatments such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Since they were introduced to the market in 1987, SSRIs have been hugely profitable for pharmaceutical companies, but their efficacy and safety continue to be questioned. In one clinical trial of 59 individuals with a major depressive disorder, which we completed in 2020, we compared 43 daily doses of the SSRI antidepressant escitalopram with just two 25mg doses of psilocybin plus equivalent psychological support for each condition. The results will be published in early 2021.
As patents on many conventional antidepressants begin to expire and public and regulatory opinion regarding psychedelics is changing 2021 will be the time that psychedelic therapy casts a spotlight on the limitations of current mental-health care treatments, and highlights a bold alternative.
Robin Carhart-Harris is head of the Centre for Psychedelic Research at Imperial College, London
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Psychedelics: the new cure for anxiety by Livia Herbert, Ewell Castle – This is Local London
Posted: at 9:42 pm
Psychedelics, a type of hallucinogenic, are a class of psychoactive substances that produce changes in perception, mood and cognitive processes. Despite these drugs being looked down upon by many, their positive side effects are being closely examined in laboratories acrossthe world. There is a strong stereotype that psychedelics, mainly LSD, always cause a bad trip, where people believe that by taking the drug, your mind will be altered in such a negative way that all you are left with is panic for 12 hours until the drug wears off. Bad trips were shown in campaigns to warn people that taking LSD is dangerous, they showed people thinking they can fly on acid and jumping out of windows, getting attacked by their own hallucinogens and even losing any control over their bodily functions. Indeed, bad trips do occur, but there is a way of avoiding them - by making sure three things are perfect before you trip: setting, people and mind set. By this I mean the person tripping must feel completely safe in their surroundings; they must feel both safe with the people they are with and the environment they are in. Without these two aspects considered, a bad trip may occur as the drug heightens any emotion you feel; if you are already uncomfortable before the trip, you will be extremely uncomfortable during it. The third aspect, mindset, refers to your intention; if your intention is to get really high, you will trip so hard until you cannot handle it, however, if your intention is to broaden your mind or deal with current emotions, you will be rewarded with just that. As a result of all these things being accounted for in a laboratory, with professionals, since the start of psychedelic research, beginning in the 1990s, out of a thousand volunteers, not one serious adverse has been reported. In fact, this is how psychedelics were discovered as a treatment rather than a party drug.
In Switzerland in 2014, Peter Gasser, Katharina Kirchner, and Torsten Passie published the results of their experiment, which aimed to show that LSD-assisted psychotherapy in patients with anxiety will improve their life-threatening condition. They gave 12 months of LSD psychotherapy to 10 participants who were tested for anxiety (STAI) and reported a reduction in anxiety (77.8%) and a rise in quality of life (66.7%) after a Qualitative Content Analysis (QCA) was carried out. Furthermore, they suggested that LSD administrated in a medically supervised psychotherapeutic setting can be safe and generate long lasting benefits in patients.
Slowly, the stigma around psychedelics being a street drug is fading and the real benefits are arising. The medical use of these drugs is showing more certain positive effects than any other anti-anxiety drug prescribed by doctors. With the right environment and professionals around, psychedelics have the potential to cure many mental illnesses through introspection; studies like the one in Switzerland is only the start to a breakthrough in medical history.
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How Will Psychedelics Become Medicine? A Scientific Review Of The Drug Development Pathway – Benzinga
Posted: at 9:42 pm
This article was originally published onMicrodose Psychedelic Insightsand appears here with permission.
The current pharmaceutical regulatory process is, to say the least, inherently daunting for most drug development efforts. The drug discovery and development pipeline can take up to 15 years to complete. Even then, only14 percent of drugsthat make it to their respective clinical trials will gain regulatory approval, and a large amount of money is spent whether that drug reaches approval or not. According to a2018 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Healthresearch team, just the final, pivotal clinical trials alone that support FDA approvals of new drugs have a median cost of $19 million, while a2016 Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development reportestimated the average total cost of developing a new drug at $2 3 billion. The regulatory restrictions behind the high cost and high failure rate of drug approvals also apply to the emerging psychedelic medicine industry.
However, innovators at MagicMed Industries have significantly de-risked this process for stakeholders of psychedelic medicine. Through theirunique approach to psychedelic drug development, MagicMed has addressed many of these aforementioned problems. From drug synthesis, testing, and licensing, MagicMed is employing problem mitigating approaches to the previously acknowledged drug development headaches.
MagicMeds psychedelic medicine discovery and development model expedites products to the market for multiple partners at once, simultaneously creating a diversified revenue stream for the company and low risk model for investors. This has created an overwhelming interest in MagicMed, made evident by their recent$8.1 million closing to an oversubscribed and upsized financing deal.
Furthermore, the companys signature psychedelic derivatives library, the Psybrary, has piqued the interest of the clinical and investor community alike. This vast library of novel, IP-protected drug candidates is particularly useful to the psychedelic pharmaceutical industry, enabling MagicMed partners to get their products to the market faster and smoother. Likewise, partners can search the Psybraryfor molecules especially tailored for specific patient needs allowing endless drug candidates to be capitalized on. Partners are therefore able to test such drug candidates and further tailor them to serve even the most niche purposes.
MagicMeds approach is good for the industry, good for the company, and therefore,greatfor investors. In order to understand their approach, however, one must familiarize themselves with the current drug development pathway. Only then can we begin to ask how will psychedelics become medicine?
The traditional drug development process begins by testing a large number of molecules, roughly 5,000-20,000 compounds, for desirable properties. The pharmaceutical industry has traditionally started this process with some hypothesis, or evidence based theory, that a molecule will exhibit the desired effect. Its worth noting that a pre-existing chemical library is often used at the very beginning of the drug development process in pharmaceutical endeavours. The Psybrary would fulfill a similar resource role to the psychedelic pharmaceutical industry, listing numerous drug derivatives based on the core structures of psychedelic molecules.
In the past, pharmaceutical companies would create new molecules using synthetic chemistry. MagicMed uses not just synthetic chemistry, but synthetic biology/enzymatic catalysis in conjunction with cutting edge technology. The end result is not just more drug candidates, but more diverse drug candidates. New mental health drugs are very much needed at this time of societal distress and resulting individual emotional crisis and anxiety. Considering this, the need for diversity among novel drugs cannot be overstated.
Once compounds reach the pre-clinical development phase, molecules are tested in various pharmacology assays to determine whether or not the candidates will move forward to pre-clinical testing. This includes receptor-binding assays and cardiac-focused assays (e.g., hERG assays) to ensure the drug has a chance to cause the desired effect without producing adverse side effects. After in-vitro assays are performed, a select few drugs will be moved into animal testing to test toxicity and potential efficacy. This is the final step before the clinical trial process begins.
The best of the best candidates will be moved into clinical trials via filing an IND with the FDA or the appropriate documentation within your jurisdiction. From here, there are three clinical trial phases:
Finally, the FDA reviews the companys preclinical and clinical data to determine if it gains approval. If the drug is found to do more harm than good, it will not be approved. The very few drugs products that make it through the approval process can then be brought to market.
This timely and expensive process is excessive, but mandatory. However, there are ways to expedite this process.
Of the thousands of drugs that are initially screened, only one is likely to be approved for your targeted effect. If thats the case, then creating more drug candidates from the outset can increase a companys chance of reaching approval. MagicMeds combination of synthetic chemistry and synthetic biology create beneficial structural and functional diversity in the pool of potential drug candidates. MagicMed then performs preliminary testing on these novel candidates, which in turn, reduces their partners costs. As the candidate proceeds along the development path, MagicMed is able to further tailor a specific psychedelic derivative to meet a partners needs, as desired. Finally, the partner exclusively licenses the drug candidate of choice and continues to develop it through the clinical trial process on to marketing approval.
Using the Psybrary, MagicMed can screen drug candidates for the desired effect their partners are looking for. This inherently expedites the product-to-market process for the industry at large. Additionally and importantly, this allows MagicMed to contribute to multiple IP-protected pharmaceutical candidates, multiple treatment outcomes, and multiple mental health markets.
The company further solidified their status as a key player in the psychedelic pharmaceutical development process in October when they announced their partnership with the University of Calgary. A research agreement with the University was signed to accelerate the development of the Psybrary, and thus accelerating the pace of this industrys drug development efforts.
All of the points discussed above illustrate why investors are turning to MagicMed.MagicMed Industries recentlyannounced a very successful close to their upsized and oversubscribed financing deal of $8.1 million.The private placement of MagicMed units, led by Gravitas Securities Inc., was initially a $2.5 million offering. However, due to significant investor interest, the offering upsized to the aforementioned $8.1 million.
Moreover, investor appetite is demonstrated by The Conscious Funds significant contribution to this recent round of funding. The leading early-stage venture funds investment in MagicMed communicates to the psychedelic industry the sheer importance and magnitude of MagicMeds operations.
With $8.1 million already raised, MagicMed is already a de-risked investment opportunity for years to come. By partnering with multiple other drug developers to move their desired derivative molecules through preclinical and clinical testing, the company has solidified a diverse revenue stream (not to mention, potentially copious amounts of drug patent royalties). This low risk, high reward opportunity is not lost on investors, and certainly, not lost on the countless partners who will work with MagicMed as the psychedelic renaissance unfolds.
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Scientists Are Eyeing Shrooms As A Legitimately Effective Treatment For Depression – Scary Mommy
Posted: at 9:42 pm
Julia Meslener for Scary Mommy and George Marks/Retrofile/Getty
Weve legalized pot as a treatment for everything from nausea to anxiety to glaucoma. Weve even made it recreational (now, as they say in Hamilton, everything is legal in New Jersey). These days, scientists are dragging another drug from your dorm-room days into medical legitimacy: psychedelics. For those of you who spent college drinking light beer after you turned 21, psychedelics like magic mushrooms and LSD are powerful hallucinogens that induce an altered state of consciousness generally called tripping your face off but which, it turns out, scientists know very little about.
Until now.
Now we know psychedelics may be a new first-line treatment for depression. They may help people stop smoking. They may become a part of palliative care for cancer patients. And they could help cure addiction. Forget your trippy wall art and your Jefferson Airplane. Psychedelics just stepped from handshake drugs to medical legitimacy.
According to the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS), most of the early studies on LSD were conducted by the CIA as part of their super-classified, super-shady MK-Ultra Project in hopes of developing a truth serum. These didnt go well. Scientists later discovered psilocin and psilocybin from mushrooms, adding these to their therapeutic arsenal. They thought LSD mostly induced a state of psychosis or schizophrenia. Experiments tended in those directions.
And the therapies, like most attempts to cure people with severe mental illness in the 1950s and 1960s, didnt go well. They were neither particularly gentle, combining psychedelics with electroshock and insulin shock, nor particularly ethical, in some cases dosing people without consent. By then, doctors had begun to believe that psychedelics could break down the brain into a primitive state and induce a mystical experience that could allow a person to see some of their conflicts. Yeah, that sounds medical-ish and scientific-al.
In the 1960s, says Scientific American, then-Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert were expelled from said university for dosing students in the name of science, partly due to their sloppy methodology (they were also on psychedelics, for example, when they conducted the experiments. How could this seem like a good idea to anyone?!). By then, scientists had found psilocybin to be an effective treatment for substance abuse, including heroin but funding dried up when the drug became illegal in 1968.
Were a long way from a stoned Timothy Leary shoving tabs of acid under freshmens tongues. Now none other than Johns Hopkins, the flagship university for medical studies, has opened an institute dedicated to examining the therapeutic effects of psychedelics. Psychedelics have merited it: promising studies have emerged about their efficacy in treating depression, addiction, and PTSD, says Scientific American.
And they have the potential, many believe, to treat a hell of a lot more. In addition to a smoking cessation study thats already shown amazing success, Johns Hopkins is conducting, or has plans to conduct, studies on opioid addiction, PTSD, anorexia, post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome, Alzheimers disease and alcoholism in people with depression.
Its because of these studies that psilocybin has become legal in Oregon not so you and your roommate can watch the wallpaper melt. Its tightly controlled; only licensed therapists can grow the shrooms, extract the drug, dose people, or set up a center for treatment. There arent, like, magic mushroom dispensaries on the streets of Portland. Psilocybin was legalized so therapists can use it to treat patients for conditions like depression, for which its shown a lot of promise.
Heres the deal.
Weve come a long way, through neural imaging and an expanded understanding of how the brain works, from the scientificalish jibber-jabber of Timothy Leary and his dosed-up pals. When dosed with psilocybin, according to Inverse, the brain creates a feedback loop of neuron activity and neurotransmitter release (the chemical messengers that neurons use to communicate). This leads, they think, to a destabilization of individual brain networks and a whole reorganization of the way the neurons communicate in the brain. This, in turn, creates new neural pathways.
Basically, youre tearing up your crumbly old road system and building a shiny new one one without the same depressing potholes and thought traps.
This could explain why, people feel reorganized in a way they dont with other drugs, Johns Hopkins neuropharmacologist Roland Griffiths tells Scientific American. He recently delivered synthetic psilocybin to a group of people with major depressive disorder. 71% had a clinically significant response (an improvement that lasted at least four weeks after treatment). 54% reported a complete remission.
In 2016, Griffiths, along with others, found that psilocybin, when used with psychotherapy, caused a significant decrease in depressed mood and anxiety in terminal cancer patients. And doctors at Imperial College London reported marked and sustained improvements in 12 patients with treatment-resistant depression after psilocybin therapy; there was, however, no control group.
First of all, Scientific American says that, In 2019 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration grantedbreakthrough status to a company called Compass Pathways to study the use of psilocybinin conjunction with psychotherapyfor treatment-resistant depression. This means they expedited the process. So it looks like soon, people with treatment-resistant depression may be the first to have access to psilocybin treatment, at least as a general guideline.
Obviously, those in Oregon will have access first, and probably for several indications, much like medical marijuana. I welcome the broadening of the indications, because I think psilocybin is likely to be effective in a range of disorders, David Nutt, author of the initial 2016 study on psilocybin and depression, and director of the neuropsychopharmacology unit in the division of brain sciences at Imperial College London, tells Scientific American. But both he and another scientist urged caution: psilocybin cant cure everyone, and its crucial that people be screened for psychotic predispositions.
The reality is that they are NOT for everyone, Rachel Aiden, a professional therapist and CEO of Synthesis Group, a Netherlands psilocybin retreat center, told Scientific American.
I hear you, Rachel. But as someone with depression, Im willing to find out if theyre for me.
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Psychedelic And Cannabis Industry Insiders Offer A 2020 Retrospective – Forbes
Posted: at 9:42 pm
We survived 2020.
What lessons have the cannabis, hemp, and psychedelic plant medicine industries gleamed from this chaotic lap around the sun? Against the odds, the progress made has been undeniable.
In 2020, we secured the bag.
Cannabis was deemed essential, a hard-fought turning point for the nascent industry from which there is no turning back. Legalization came as close on the federal level as it ever has with the passage of the MORE Act through Congress (even though it has not been brought to the Senate floor). Colorado also surpassed the $1 billion mark for cannabis tax revenue since legalization in 2014. Five states progressed their laws, voting for medical or adult-use cannabis legalization in some form, in the 2020 election.
Whether we feel nostalgia for this years trials or not, it was monumental. I spoke with 8 industry heavyweights who look back on their year and offer advice to other entrepreneurs in the space about pivots made and optimism for the future.
Tech had its moment, according to Vic Patil, Chief Technology Officer at Backbone. Weve been seeing savvy operators in the cannabis and hemp space increasingly using technology to scale out their processes, automate their data collection and regulatory compliance, and enable market segmentation strategies for building brand awareness, says Patil, CTO of the software company focused on supply chain management for the cannabis and hemp industries. Cloud-based solutions are giving our customers the insight into their process to quickly expand new operations, coordinate with upstream or downstream partners, and deploy embedded systems to drive their large-scale extraction.
For me, 2020 will always stand out as the year that cannabis businesses were declared essential businesses in Colorado and most other states in which cannabis is legal, says Danny Murr-Sloat, Founder of AlpinStash, a family-owned craft cannabis and hemp grower based in Lafayette, Colorado. Murr-Sloat says the essential designation has, made the juxtaposition of legal regulated cannabis states and those who are still experiencing prohibition so much starker.
The way that my wife and I support our family would land us in prison in three out of the four states that border Colorado. Yet here we are, being allowed and encouraged to operate during the pandemic. Our state, and the public, have officially recognized the benefits cannabis has to offer, not just in general, but especially in a time of such widespread and intense social and existential stress, says Murr-Sloat, who has operated his mountain grow facility with his partner Kristin Murr-Sloat since its 2014 founding. I know many people who have relied on cannabis to help them cope with what is turning out to be the most stressful time most of us have been through. I think that we will look back and see 2020 as the year in which cannabis really gained the recognition and acceptance that it deserves.
Danny Murr-Sloat, co-founder of AlphinStash, looks back on the roller-coaster ride that was 2020 for ... [+] the cannabis industry.
This past year I learned a lot about resilience, says Marie Montmarquet, Co-Founder of MD Numbers, Inc. Founded in 2015, MD Numbers is a rare vertically-integrated cannabis company born in Redwood City, California. Montmarquet began the company first with the customer supply chain link, as a delivery service. Unexpectedly, many cannabis companies have been revived by the current COVID economic strife. Seeing different industries crash, while cannabis has been able to become an essential business category was such a necessary blessing for our industry and customers during this trying time. We have the chance to thrive.
The hemp industry has faced immense challenges in 2020, says Morris Beegle, Co-Founder & President of WAFBA (We Are For Better Alternatives), a brand umbrella that houses the largest hemp-centric conferences and expositions in the world, including NoCo Hemp Expo, as well as digital media platform Let's Talk Hemp. From the pandemic turning the world upside down to the oversupply of hemp-derived CBD biomass, crude oil, isolate and distillate, and the ongoing uncertainty in FDA and USDA regulations pertaining to the industry. And...the DEA still refuses to get out of hemp industry business when it no longer falls under their jurisdiction. That said, the industry has a strong and positive future ahead of it because hemp is resilient and so are those driving the bus.
Allen Hackett, left, and Marie Montmarquet, right, are the co-founders of MD Numbers.
When I think of this industry and all that has been placed upon us in 2020, I see resilience and promise for better days! Angela White, Equity for Industry Program Manager at Success Centers, is optimistic as she muses on the massive strides the cannabis industry has made regarding equity in 2020, finally opening its eyes to include social justice at the forefront of the legalization movement. The cannabis community has been so supportive of the work I'm doing at Success Centers with the equity community in this space during these uncertain times, she says.
White says the cannabis community reaching out to help has been one of the brighter moments of the year. Those that have stepped up to the plate to work with Success Centers in its equity mission include Aster Farms, MD Numbers, The Apothecarium SF, Meadow, Caliva, Eaze, and Cookies California, says White. Ive received an outpour of requests asking how can we help? from companies reaching out. Success Centers has also seen a handful of its equity participants launch their businesses amid the 2020 chaos: Reese Benton of Posh Green Retail, the first Black female sole proprietor in the state, to Cindy De La Vega of Stiiizy Union Square, the first Latina cannabis dispensary owner in San Francisco, Authentic 415 CEO Karim Mayfield will be launching this month, and Damien Posey of High Purpose in 2021. Equity brands, including SF Roots, Gift of Dosia, Cannabis on Fire and others, are now on the shelves of many dispensaries. Calexo and Simply Extracts are taking off, as well, says White.
Co-founders of equity initiative Success Centers: Liz Jackson-Simpson, left, and Angela White, ... [+] right.
This little plant... She's my greatest guide, says Brooke Burgstahler, comedian and cannabis reporter and Founder of Budding Mind, a content platform for creators in the space. Cannabis has held me down this year. While many of my friends experienced job loss in 2020, I was fortunate enough to land the job of my weed dreams just one month before the lockdown.
My work kept me focused, sane, informed, and hopeful, says Burgstahler. All day I read, write, and talk about cannabis an industry and a plant that has been somewhat immune to the woes of the times, if not stronger from them. When cannabis was deemed essential by our state governments, it meant our industry would survive this storm, and when a wave of new canna-curious consumers went looking for ways to stay sane at home, our industry was able to thrive throughout this storm."
Brooke Burgstahler, founder of Budding Mind and cannabis industry creative, looks back on the ... [+] lessons of 2020.
"As I look back on this eventful and enlightening 2020, a main point that comes to mind is the show must go on, says Cait Curley, an entrepreneur, artist, and cannabis activist. The circumstances of this year have taught us invaluable lessons about human nature, persistence and rapid adjusting. It was a great period to reflect on ourselves individually and a species as a whole. I think a lot of people took the opportunity to use tools like cannabis and psychedelics to expand their consciousness and reduce anxiety. Involvement and experiences like that are helping these heightened tools move forward in acceptance and understanding."
2020 has been a wild ride for Lady Jays and the cannabis industry. Coming from a space that was once illegaland is still illegal in many statesto becoming an essential business during the COVID 19 shut down, we were lucky to have a business that was able to stay open and continue producing, says Jade Daniels, Founder of cannabis clothing line Ladies of Paradise and the chic CBD hemp preroll brand Lady Jays.
There were losses, Daniels says, of the community and in-person connections made in years past. We did miss trade shows and events and other forms of ways to stay connected with our customers, says Daniels. We looked to social media and Zoom calls to stay connected (like the rest of the world!) and are really hoping for 2021 to be a big breath of fresh air for us all.
Jade Daniels, co-founder of Ladies of Paradise and Lady Jays, speaks to the changes seen in her ... [+] industries in 2020.
Investors set their sights on an exciting new frontier in 2020: psychedelic medicine. Amid the great pause of 2020, it seems the psychedelics industry is moving faster than ever, says Shelby Hartman, Editor-in-Chief and Co-founder of DoubleBlind Magazine, a publication that covers psychedelics and plant medicine and the effect of drug decriminalization on worldwide health. Hundreds of millions of dollars in capital have poured into psychedelic drug development, and every day, at DoubleBlind, it feels we're contacted by an investor interested in getting into the space.
Alongside this movement, we've also seen promising progress of the grassroots initiatives to decriminalize natural psychedelics, from mushrooms to ayahuasca, says Hartman. Ann Arbor recently became the third city to decriminalize psychedelics through city council, and there are three initiatives pertaining to psychedelic reform on the ballot this November. All of the momentum is exciting, but it's also a good time for those of us who care deeply about psychedelics to take a step back and reflect on what we want the psychedelic industry to look like. How can we ensure that it reflects the values of unity and compassion that have long been central to the psychedelic community?
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Healing Our Communities With Psychedelic Solutions – Benzinga
Posted: at 9:42 pm
This article was originally published on Reality Sandwich, and appears here with permission.
In this moment, we humans are further dividing ourselves along lines of color, gender, political ideology, and countless other identity characteristics. Likewise, we are witnessing a growing division among the counterculture, mainstream, and various other factions within the psychedelic community. Dividing ourselves is likely an expression of some deeply embedded survival trait. However, improving the collective human condition requires us to yield to our higher selves. Our condition will only improve when we work as one human tribe toward healing our communities. We are all one.
We must elevate our thoughts and actions to a level that is truly unity-based in order to elevate the human condition. We must maintain the conviction that self-love and love for others is the only path forward.
AsRam Dassreminds us:
We are all just walking each other home.
However, the trek is more challenging for some members of our human tribe than it is for others. Therefore, empathy and compassion ask us to offer our hand to those struggling, in order to enable all of us, mankind, to walk this earthly path alongside one anotherunited.
It follows that the psychedelic community must lead by example. The various factions must cast aside divisions, adopt an inclusive attitude, and truly listen to one another. Additionally, we must be willing to embrace different perspectives to create a healing path toward a stronger, united human species.
As psychedelic practitioners, our plant medicine journeys have likely shown us the path toward an elevated condition, and possibly even visions for a better world. Access to these experiences is a privilege, and with this privilege comes responsibility. We can all play a role in advancing psychedelic science and healing practices. In addition, we can enable wider psychedelic healing access to all members of our human family, with the aim of communal and societal healing. Yet, psychedelic healing practices still involve an activity that can result in criminal charges, particularly in less privileged communities.
Taking action at the community and society level requires big thinking. The following are a few examples of organizations and individuals that are working to ensure equity, justice, and inclusion in the psychedelic realm.Consider supporting or drawing inspiration from these efforts, with the aim of expanding access for psychedelic healing.
Decriminalize Natureis leading the effort to decriminalize psychedelics and increase access at the community level. Their vision is happier, healthier individuals and communities reconnected to nature and entheogenic plant and fungi traditions and practices. Decriminalize Natures open-source format makes it easy tovolunteerand bring this movement into our own communities.
TheDrug Policy Allianceis an organization that aims to end the War on Drugs. They advocate for responsible drug policy and believe in the individuals sovereignty over their own mind and body. In particular, they work to ensure that drug policies no longer target those whom the war on drugs disproportionately affectsi.e. young people and people of color. The Drug Policy Alliance provides opportunities totake actionand support the much-needed shift in drug policy.
In her talk titledPsychedelic Justice: Intersection of Psychedelics and Collective Societal Healing, Dr. Jae Sevelius highlights the need for Community Engaged Research and Collaborative Ideation to ensure inclusivity and diversity in psychedelic research and intended outcomes. Dr. Sevelius posits that psychedelic science should be a movement for justice, humanity, and the planet.
Dr. Monnica Williamsis a Clinical Psychologist and Professor of Psychology at the University of Ottawa. She is well-known for her work in broadening access topsychedelic therapyfor minority communities and healing racial trauma. In addition, she is a strong advocate for diversity and inclusion in the field of psychedelic research. In a recent interview with Reality Sandwich, Dr. Williams succinctly helps us understand theracial disparities in psychedelic culture.
TheChacruna Institute of Plant Medicinesis a research- and education-based organization that serves as a bridge between indigenous plant medicine traditions and modern psychedelic science. Accordingly, one of Chacrunas major programs aims to broaden access to psychedelic healing therapies for people of color, women, and sexual minorities. Chacruna welcomes support throughmembershipandvolunteer opportunities.
Organizations such asThe Equity Organization, are diligently working to right the wrongs of the drug war. Along with theLast Prisoner Project, they seek to free those incarcerated over cannabis charges.
In her fascinating article titledCan Psychedelics Play a Role in Making Peace and Healing Cycles of Trauma?,Natalie Lyla Ginsberg details her interviews with Israelis and Palestinians who have used psychedelics together, with the aim of reconciliation and community healing.
She observes that one of the most commonly reported experiences among both Palestinians and Israelis was a strong sense of togetherness, oneness, and connectedness, and that people commonly reported shifting their frameworks from hatred and fear and anger to love and compassion.She reports the remarkable experience of a Palestinian woman who described moments of love and open-heartedness there is no you are Jewish, Arab, Muslim, Christian. Everything was stripped, all this nonsense was out, and only acceptance and love were present.
This might be the most potent example of people wielding the power of psychedelics and their own consciousness to solve the impossible. Now, envision a scenario where Israelis and Palestinians first heal their relationship. Then, a new geographic/political solution emerges, built to reflect, support, and sustain this healed relationship. This is possible!
If psychedelics are demonstrating the capacity to alleviate the most intense identity conflict of the last several millennia, imagine the possibilities for the rest of humankind.
We all want to see an end to suffering for all beings. It is imperative that we act beyond the divisive nature of our survival instincts and start walking home together.
We all have the power to participate in advancing psychedelic healing practices for our communities. We need a mindset shift from fighting against the other to healing with one another. If we need a mantra to keep us on this path, consider this bit of wisdom from the late Buckminster Fuller: You never change things by fighting against the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the old model obsolete.
Our plant medicine experiences have revealed the new model; it is time to build the path toward healing our communities.
*Image credit:Aina Giro de Pedro
Read the original Article on Reality Sandwich.
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Healing Our Communities With Psychedelic Solutions - Benzinga
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Red Light Holland To Make Groundbreaking Investment in St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ Plant-Based Wellness and Psychedelics Industry – Investing News…
Posted: at 9:42 pm
Red Light Hollands investment through the expected acquisition of Mera Life Sciences would enable global expansion and create a major scientific research and development division to explore plant-based remedies and treatment clinics in the Caribbean
Red Light Holland Corp. (CSE: TRIP) (FSE: 4YX) (OTC: TRUFF) (Red Light Holland or the Company), is pleased to announce it has entered into a non-binding letter of intent to acquire 100% of Mera Life Sciences LLC (Mera), a company focused on developing a modern medicinal industry in St Vincent and the Grenadines, with their issued Psychedelic Licenses, which includes the following plants and compounds (the Compounds): (i) MushroomsTruffles Psilocybin; (ii) Ketamine; (iii) Ayahuasca; (iv) 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA); (v) 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MEO-DMT); (vi) Dimethyltryptamine (DMT); (vii) Sassafras; (viii) Ibogaine; (ix) Peyote (x) Papaya; (xi) Aloe Vera; (xii) Arrowroot; (xiii) Soursop; (xiv) Ginger; (xv) Moringa; and (xvi) Coconut Oil.
The acquisition of Mera and its coveted licenses would allow Red Light Holland to perform high quality psychedelic product research and development, cultivate, extract and process, and export not just Psilocybin, but with compounds such as Ayahuasca, MDMA, DMT, Peyote, Ketamine and many other natural based plants as well. We are The Peoples Company and we want to work closely with countries wishing to develop plant and fungus-based remedies including treatment clinics, and we now understand that St. Vincent and the Grenadines shares our vision. said Todd Shapiro, CEO and Director of Red Light Holland.
As well, the terms of the agreement will permit Red Light Holland to collaborate with Vincentian entities to import any of the above Compounds.
The opportunity to explore the inner molecular worlds of multiple plant species,including a variety of psychedelics, is an exciting one. This could put Red Light Hollandin the position to discover novel clinical applications for a variety of natural psychedelics. By utilizing a lab built for this purpose on the (main) island, alongwith cutting edge artificial intelligence, something Im very familiar with, Red LightHolland would be approaching the frontier of natural plant based drug discovery, saidDr. Joseph Geraci, Scientific Advisor of Red Light Holland and CEO of NetraMark Corp.
Red Light Holland is focused on establishing itself as a multi country operator with natural plants and natural fungi, from growing to distribution of legal sales to potential clinics. We look forward to the careful due diligence process and hopefully adding Mera and their ground-breaking licenses in SVG, which would instantly strengthen our Scientific and Innovation Division, Scarlette Lillie by expanding our vision for research and development and for providing access to natural psychedelics on all fronts, added Shapiro.
The emerging modern plant-based medicinal research industry in the Caribbean is the future, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines is leading on this path The islands Minister of Agriculture, Hon. Saboto Caesar pointed out. St. Vincent and the Grenadines has been able to attract experts interested in exploring the medicinal value of indigenous plants, cannabis and other plants that may thrive in tropical conditions and possess medicinal properties. re-expressed from News 784.
Further details will be announced once made available.
About Mera Life Sciences LLC
Mera Life Sciences LLC is focused on the research and development, cultivation, extraction, processing and completion, exportation and clinics using natural medicines. Mera holds the ability to work with a number of psychedelic substances as part of the previously announced medicinal feasibility study.
About Red Light Holland Corp.
The Company is an Ontario-based corporation positioning itself to engage in the production, growth and sale (through existing Smart Shops operators and an advanced e-commerce platform) of a premium brand of magic truffles to the legal market within the Netherlands, in accordance with the highest standards, in compliance with all applicable laws.
For additional information on the Company:
Todd ShapiroChief Executive Officer & DirectorTel: 647-204-7129Email: todd@redlighttruffles.comWebsite: https://redlighttruffles.com/
Forward-Looking Statements
Neither the Canadian Securities Exchange (the CSE) nor its Market Regulator (as that term is defined in the policies of the CSE) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.
This press release contains certain forward-looking information within the meaning of applicable Canadian securities legislation. Such forward-looking information and forward-looking statements are not representative of historical facts or information or current condition, but instead represent only the Companys beliefs regarding future events, plans or objectives, many of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain and outside of the Companys control.
Generally, such forward-looking information or forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as plans, expects or does not expect, is expected, budget, scheduled, estimates, forecasts, intends, anticipates or does not anticipate, or believes, or variations of such words and phrases or may contain statements that certain actions, events or results may, could, would, might or will be taken, will continue, will occur or will be achieved. The forward-looking information and forward- looking statements contained herein include, but are not limited to, information about the timing and other aspects of the non-binding letter of intent to acquire Mera Life Sciences and invest in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Although the Company believes that the assumptions and factors used in preparing, and the expectations contained in, the forward-looking information and statements are reasonable, undue reliance should not be placed on such information and statements, and no assurance or guarantee can be given that such forward- looking information and statements will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such information and statements. In particular, there is no guarantee that the acquisition of Mera Life Sciences or the groundbreaking investment in St. Vincent and the Grenadines will proceed, or if it does proceed it will reflect the understanding of the parties as of the date of this release. The forward-looking information and forward-looking statements contained in this press release are made as of the date of this press release, and the Company does not undertake to update any forward-looking information and/or forward-looking statements that are contained or referenced herein, except in accordance with applicable securities laws.
Not for distribution to United States newswire services or for dissemination in the United States.
To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/71162
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