The Mushrooms Are Slowly Taking Effect
Very exciting news happening in the world of medicinal psychotropics, when Denver for a vote that, in a nationwide first, will decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms in favor of it’s many psychological benefits previously known to the medical sciences. The Atlantic reports:
Today the city is expected to officially decriminalize possession of the mind-altering fungus. Based on a ballot measure decided last week, citizens of Denver can more confidently grow and eat mushrooms that contain psilocybin, the perception-altering compound found in some 200 species.
Though only 11 people have been prosecuted in Denver for psilocybin possession in the past three years, local advocates such as the Denver Psilocybin Initiative believe that decriminalization could open the door to more widespread use for various medicinal reasons.
It could also be a bellwether for the nation, and the world, as people begin to reflect on why psychedelic mushrooms are among the most tightly regulated ingestible substances on the planet, even though researchers at Johns Hopkins University recently found that they pose no risk of creating physical dependence and a low risk of abuse and harm.
It’s still not legal to possess psilocybin mushrooms in Denver, or certainly to sell them. Much less to claim that you are “the lizard king” in a public park while eating pomegranate seeds out of a human head. No, certainly not. The measure says only that punishing people for having some mushrooms for personal use falls among the “lowest law-enforcement priority.”
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This is great news for drug policy progression in the U.S. considering this fungus has also been recently noted to aid in brain plasticity, the ability for your brain to essentially heal itself.