Anonymous ID: 18f5e4 Jan. 9, 2019, 5:58 p.m. No.4687763   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Denver could become first US city to decriminalize magic mushrooms

 

The Mile High City might be getting a whole lot higher.

 

An advocacy group has collected nearly 9,500 signatures to get a measure on the ballot in May that would decriminalize psychedelic mushrooms in Denver.

 

On Monday, petitions were submitted to the city and county of Denver's Elections Division for the measure to appear on the upcoming ballot, and the division has 25 days to review.

 

While the Denver Elections Division has yet to verify the signatures, the issue is sure to sprout some debate.

 

"We want people kept out of prison, families kept together," said Kevin Matthews, the campaign director of Decriminalize Denver. "That was the main motivation for this."

 

It's important to note that the measure would not legalize the use or sale of magic mushrooms in Colorado's capital but instead would treat possession of the drug as the lowest law enforcement priority.

 

Under federal law, psychedelic mushrooms are classified as a Schedule I drug, the same as heroin or LSD. This means they have no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.

 

The Denver Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

 

Matthews says he wants to educate people on the effects of magic mushrooms and remove misunderstanding around their use and purpose.

 

The group claims psilocybin, a naturally occurring fungi, can reduce psychological stress, reduce opioid use and remain non-addictive.

 

The Denver Chamber of Commerce has not yet taken a position on the issue.

 

A similar effort to decriminalize psychedelic mushrooms is underway in Oregon, where advocates are trying to get the issue on the ballot for the 2020 election.

 

"As the amount of research with psilocybin increases across the world, and more people hear of its significant therapeutic potential, it is only natural that more people are growing curious about it," Amanda Feilding, founder and director of the Beckley Foundation, a drug research think tank based in the United Kingdom, said in an email on Wednesday.

 

There has been a growing body of research to evaluate psilocybin's possible role in medicine – and that research is complex, said Dr. George Greer, president the Heffter Research Institute in Santa Fe, New Mexico, a nonprofit that promotes the study of hallucinogens and related compounds in science.

 

So far, published research has shown that psilocybin can help reduce cancer patients' depression and anxiety, and help benefit alcohol and smoking addictions and obsessive-compulsive disorder.

 

https://www.krdo.com/health/denver-could-become-first-us-city-to-decriminalize-magic-mushrooms/971801166

Anonymous ID: 18f5e4 Jan. 9, 2019, 6:23 p.m. No.4688141   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Russian to Conclusions? NYT Misreports Manafort’s Ukraine Ties as Russian

 

The New York Times is so eager to find proof that Paul Manafort was the definitive go-between for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign and Russian actors that it tweeted out a claim a court filing unsealed Tuesday proved the connection, when the connections named were Ukrainians, not Russians.

 

The Times article on Tuesday is based on information from a court filing unsealed that day showing that Paul Manafort, Trump's former campaign manager, asked his associate in Ukraine, Konstantin V. Kilimnik, to pass information about Trump's polling numbers to Serhiy Lyovochkin and Rinat Akhmetov, two Ukrainians connected to the Ukrainian Party of Regions, the party of deposed Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.

 

However, when one of the story authors, Kenneth P. Vogel, tweeted about the story Tuesday, he accidentally said that Manafort asked Kilimnik to pass that information not to Lyovochkin and Akhmetov, their Ukrainian business associates, but to Oleg Deripaska, a Russian billionaire sanctioned by the US government following his rejection of FBI attempts to "flip" him into an agent of theirs, as Sputnik has reported.

 

If that were true, it would indeed be quite the story. It still wouldn't vindicate the Russiagate narrative, since Deripaska is a man who despises Russian President Vladimir Putin and Manafort, both of whom have caused him no shortage of bad business, but in entirely different ways. The corrected Times article only says that Manafort might have hoped to curry personal favor with Deripaska, who he owed millions at the time, by offering him "private briefings," but never polling data.

 

https://sputniknews.com/us/201901101071349316-NYT-Misreports-Manaforts-Ukraine-Ties-as-Russian/