Colorado Voters Will Soon Decide Whether To Decriminalize 5 Natural Psychedelics
The ballot initiative also would authorize state-licensed "healing centers" where adults could obtain psychedelics for supervised use.

Three years ago, Denver voters passed a groundbreaking ballot initiative that made adult possession of psilocybin the city's lowest law enforcement priority and prohibited the use of public money to pursue such cases. Next month, voters statewide will consider a psychedelic measure that goes much further—further even than the initiative that Oregonians approved in 2020, which will allow adults 21 or older to use psilocybin in state-licensed "service centers" under the supervision of "facilitators." If successful, the Colorado initiative would represent the broadest liberalization of psychedelic policy ever approved in the United States.
Colorado's Proposition 122 would decriminalize noncommercial activities related to the use of "natural medicine" by adults 21 or older. It defines "natural medicine" to include psilocybin, psilocyn (another psychoactive component of "magic mushrooms"), dimethyltryptamine (DMT, the active ingredient in ayahuasca), ibogaine (a psychedelic derived from the root bark of the iboga tree), and mescaline (the active ingredient in peyote).
The covered activities, which would not be subject to criminal or civil penalties, include "growing, cultivating, or processing plants or fungi capable of producing natural medicine for personal use." Also protected: possessing, storing, using, transporting, or obtaining the listed psychedelics or distributing them to adults 21 or older "without remuneration."
All of the psychedelics covered by Proposition 122 are currently classified as Schedule I controlled substances under state law. Possession of 4 grams or less for personal use is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail, while possession of larger amounts is a felony, as is manufacture or distribution. Manufacturing or distributing 14 grams or less, for example, is a Level 3 drug felony, punishable by a fine of $2,000 to $500,000 and two to four years in prison.
Under Proposition 122, "natural medicine" would remain illegal for anyone younger than 21. But the penalty for possessing or sharing the psychedelics would be limited to "no more than four (4) hours of drug education or counseling provided at no cost to the person."
In addition to eliminating penalties for conduct related to personal use of "natural medicine," Proposition 122 would establish an Oregon-style system of supervised administration at state-licensed "healing centers." The Department of Regulatory Agencies would be required to start accepting applications for healing center licenses by September 30, 2024.
The centers' services initially would be limited to psilocybin and psilocyn. But after June 1, 2026, regulators would be authorized to add DMT, ibogaine, and/or mescaline (but not peyote itself) if the Natural Medicine Advisory Board created by the initiative recommended it. The 15-member board, which would be appointed by the governor with the state Senate's approval, would include experts on subjects such as medicine, mycology, mental health, drug policy, harm reduction, health policy, and religious use of psychedelics.
The initiative notes that "natural medicines have been used safely for millennia by cultures for healing." It adds that "an extensive and growing body of research" supports "the efficacy of natural medicines combined with psychotherapy as treatment for depression, anxiety, substance use disorders, end-of-life distress, and other conditions." But like Oregon's initiative, Proposition 122 would not require that clients of psychedelic centers have any particular medical or psychiatric diagnosis.
Oregon's 2020 initiative passed with support from 56 percent of voters. That was up nine points from the level of support indicated by a 2019 DHM Research survey.
An FM3 survey of likely Colorado voters commissioned by the Proposition 122 campaign and conducted last July, before the initiative qualified for the ballot, found that 60 percent of respondents were inclined to support it based on quoted ballot language. When the survey participants were given a "plain language" explanation of the measure, support rose to 70 percent, including 51 percent who said they would "definitely" vote yes, 15 percent who said they probably would, and 4 percent who said they were undecided but leaning toward yes.
By contrast, an Emerson College poll of "very likely voters" conducted last month put support for Proposition 122 at 36 percent, with 41 percent opposed and 23 percent undecided. The survey described the initiative as a measure that would "decriminalize and regulate distribution for psychedelic plants and fungi."
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Proposition 122 would establish an Oregon-style system of supervised administration at state-licensed "healing centers."
I'm skeptical to the point of some concern over that verbiage. Also, I'm not sure this is libertarian. This seems extremely progressive and goes more along with a theory I've had for awhile now about weed, which it isn't a libertarian victory. It happened because people began to think weed was good for you, not because people felt adults should be able to make choices about their body.
That this is all be phrased as licensed types of medicine adds to my theory. My guess is Colorado will then ban vaping or smoking.
It's not a libertarian victory, not really. It's just another thing to lure in out-of-state tourists with.
I guess it's incrementally more freedom, but in a narrow interest that the vast majority of people are never going to have anything to do with.
Which is fine, I'm not against it, but at the same time they're going to treat you like a child if they're calling these 'healing centers' when in reality it's nothing of the sort.
I've done the majority of drugs they're talking about here, and I can tell you it didn't 'heal' jack or shit. The reason why it's helpful for some, in my opinion, is that it free's the mind from it's every day bullshit and leaves room for addled introspection that most people never actually bother with.
Otherwise, after you've done it once or twice and had all the introspection you're likely to get from it, it's just tripping balls for the sake of tripping balls. Nothing wrong with that, but pretending it's 'medicine' remains to be seen and the native tribes in the area that believe that stuff aren't under US jurisdiction anyway, so, yeah.
The term "state licensed healing center" has a freakishly Orwellian feel to it.
May just be me. But you're right. It's not a libertarian victory, at least not a complete one.
It really does.
Sounds like a place you go to get euthanized.
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wow… now that was pursuasive! You really nailed that comment. I’m convinced by your thoughtful and well articulated argument… and now I have to agree with you ..that , ah,… hmmm i guess that you’re an asshat. Was that what you were going for?
Why should anyone here take you seriously? Really - Why, when you shit on the comments like this?
Wow. You're living proof that it's possible to gain no insight at all from these substances, Hank "where're my meds" Phillips.
"Meds," of course, being his heroin stash.
It’s not a libertarian victory, not really. It’s just another thing to lure in out-of-state tourists with.
I think they're basically acknowledging that Colorado, and the Front Range specifically, have become a magnet for drug addicts and Cluster B cases, and this is just them starting to throw in the towel on some of that. The tourist part of it is certainly at play here, but we all saw what happened after the state legalized weed. The Denver metro is mostly a piss-filled sinkhole now with archipelagos of decent areas where the residents happen to have a shit-ton of money.
Most victories of all kinds, for anyone (libertarian or what-have-you), are incremental. This is as much a libertarian victory as a reduction in a tax is. It's as much a libertarian victory as raising the speed limit is. It's as much of a libertarian victory as increasing the number of charter schools is. It"s as much a libertarian victory as FDA"S newly licensing a hitherto unlicensed drug or device or food additive is. It's as much a libertarian victory as privatizing a government property is. Nobody gets all they want, all at once.
It happened because people began to think weed was good for you, not because people felt adults should be able to make choices about their body.
That, and states started to figure out there was money to be made off taxing it.
Well, they THOUGHT there was money to be made off of taxing it.
In truth, they don't seem to reap nearly the revenue they thought they would. Make something too expensive and convoluted to deal with above ground and the underground market thrives. Who would have guessed it?
Who would have guessed it?
Anyone who doesn't work for the government.
I think people who work for government often know. They don't care. They're on the receiving end of the largesse when they have to do something like, say, increase enforcement for cultivation and trafficking AFTER weed is "legalized".
More problems just mean more work for the government employees.
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Colorado has actually made quite a bit--$423 million in 2021 alone, and it's taken in about $2 billion since it was legalized.
The revenue isn't really the issue, it's the fact that none of the claims of the "legalize it" crowd--and I admit I was one of those at the time--has actually come to pass.
The cartels have not had their backs broken.
The black market is even more robust than it was before.
It's had no effect on overall crime levels and has simply exacerbated addictions.
Colorado is really just admitting that life there is so fucked up and hopeless that it needs to encourage people to self-medicate with psychoactives, like some kind of Huxleyite dystopia, just so its residents can cope with the alienation that comes with living in a Calhoun rat experiment.
But none of the claims of the doom-and-gloom mongers about legalizing drugs came to pass either.
Considering the homeless trashfire that Denver turned into, I wouldn't be so quick to claim that. That issue specifically kicked off after legalization happened.
I’m skeptical to the point of some concern over that verbiage. Also, I’m not sure this is libertarian.
It ain't. It's sidling up next to progressives, making eyes at them and hoping they buy you a drink.
It's working together to get something we both wanted, without giving up anything either of us wanted not done. Both libertarians and progressives gained, and neither lost. Sometimes our interests are the same.
Most of the arguments about drugs from "libertarians" alone to "the way in drugs has failed and is expensive". Considerations of liberty don't seem to enter into it for most "libertarians", and if they do, they are of the form "I wanna be able to do what I want and I don't give a f.ck about your liberties".
But aren't those considerations of liberty? To name one facet, isn't taxpayer expense such a consideration? And isn't being able to do what you want libertarian? Why should you have to give a fuck about someone else's, just to increase your own?
It doesn't matter what the motive is. If a libertarian can't use this as a way to explain libertarian ideas and/or not get stuck on stupid with perfect/good, then they ain't much of a libertarian.
And it's not progressive as much as it is NewAgey alternative medicine and Native American religious stuff. Those are the folks who will be appointed to the regulatory board by the gov
So I wonder what kind of flag the druggies will get? Will there be a color for each drug of choice? Or will they just piggyback on the LGBTXYZ++ flag? Presumably the anti-discrimination laws are all queued up and ready to go?
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The language on the ballot was eye-roll-worthy (as it usually is). I felt more comfortable voting for the liquor measures than I did the "natural medicine" measure. Reason should be happy cause Polis is gonna be re-elected, same with Bennett sadly.
Wanna bet?
As long as no one's making dirty, filthy money from it it's fine then?
So, how are these state licensed "healing centers" supposed to function as businesses if they're not allowed to sell the "natural medicine?" I suppose they could sell other things, but still seems a little strange. Or at least it would if this was still a capitalist country. As is, it's pretty much par for the course.
"it's legal as long as you don't make any money from it" - basically the mantra of communists
They'll sell their healing services. Like the way doctors or dentists sell you theirs while giving you free samples of drugs.
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The ballot initiative also would authorize state-licensed "healing centers" where adults could obtain psychedelics for supervised use.
Ah, so there's an expansion of government power in this deregulatory pathway. Who could have ever guessed? No, we can't just legalize anything, nope, we have to have a tightly regulated system of school marms with clipboards staring over your shoulder while you do this previously illegal thing.
None of the dozens of people I knew/know (who did psychedelics) would want to spend a day or night tripping in a government licensed "healing center" under the supervision of a government licensed "healer".
Rather, the vast majority of folks who have previously tripped would prefer (if they decide to trip again) to do so along with one, two or several close friends, listening to Pink Floyd, Grateful Dead or other psychedelic music, or while camping/hiking or hanging out in the woods, at a beach, lake, river or stream.
I cannot think of a less desirable place to trip than at a government licensed facility under the supervision of government licensed staff.
How about jail? Because that's what it was otherwise. And you still have that choice if you want to do it illegally.
The decriminalizing part is a libertarian victory. Everything else though, state-licensed "healing centers" and "four hours of drug education or counseling" is at best a lesser evil. I still voted for it, but I get why this isn't even the small "l" libertarian ideal.
Is it an expansion of government power when they start licensing an action that was previously entirely illegal? Since when is making it possible to get permission an increase in government power, over not being able to get permission? Like was it an increase in government power when liquor prohibition was replaced by liquor licensing?
sweet there would be world peace if everyone would sample the fungus and maybe some mdma
A gramme is better than a damn.
I still prefer a dram in the morning and 50ml for lunch.
get along, Kid Charlemagne
Ironic that 65 years later, Galt's Gulch, Colorado is replacing San Francisco and Austin by spearheading the consciousness-expanding rejection of naked, superstitious, simian coercion and ignorance.
Dude, you really demonstrate to everyone that psychedelics use isn't inherently good and can effectively just leave you an arrogant, mumbling, geriatric mess with pretentious-superior-consciousness-syndrome. You come across about as insightful as Diogenes Laertius.
Odd - when I write Ib0gaine with an "o" my post doesn't go through.
It's great for helping with conditions like PTSD, and should have been legalised long since, as it is in Canada.
Interesting. Were you of the impression to be on a libertarian website or something?
Ibogaine
Seems to be fine now.
It is an alternative to expensive medical treatments, so the US medical lobby will never let that happen.
Psychologists don't get in the way of your talking to bartenders and barbers, do they? The medical lobby allows many OTC drugs and devices too. No lobby is so powerful as to preclude all alternatives.
This is stupid. Without commercial distribution and commercial liability protections, you get fly by night products with unknown potency and possibly even the wrong species.
Either legalize it commercially or don't bother.
Is ham radio fly-by-night?
Children's sports are coached mostly by unpaid persons, and yet we improve participants' safety.
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It is an important issue for libertarians to support. Aldous Huxley wrote a novel about psychedelics which in contrast to a previous one spoke highly of its use. Paul McCartney used it, Karl Hess and the founder of AA, Bill W. endorsed psychedelics as a way to get off alcohol. Name a more important issue that we are winning on