Can This Psychedelic Help Cure Opioid Addiction?
This Kentucky Republican won't stop until he finds a state willing to make legal room for ibogaine, a drug he calls "God's medicine."

The Psychedelic Assembly attracts a certain type of clientele. The walls of the group's Manhattan meeting space are lined with LSD blotter art and Alice in Wonderland paraphernalia. Rows of bookshelves are filled with esoteric titles on tryptamines, DMT entities, and magic-mushroom alchemy. The people who gather there converse easily on topics ranging from visits with Mother Ayahuasca in the jungles of Peru to tips for throwing a successful group MDMA experience.
Suffice to say, those who find their way there tend to check certain boxes: liberal, Northeastern, experienced with mind-altering substances. They do not tend to be politically and religiously conservative lawmen from one of the reddest states in the U.S.
But on a sunny morning in May, that's exactly who walked in: Bryan Hubbard, an attorney fresh from Lexington, Kentucky. Hubbard was on a drug-themed visit to New York City—part of a very unexpected turn of events that began in 2022 when he embarked on a yearslong journey into the heart of psychedelic-assisted healing. His stop at the Psychedelic Assembly "was just kind of the icing on the surreality cake," he says.
"If someone had told me as a 25-year-old man—a staunchly straight-laced, square, institutionalist Republican—that I would have undergone a transformation which would result in me being in New York City for the advancement of God's medicine to heal God's people, I would have told you that I had gone insane and something catastrophic must have happened in my life," he says.
By "God's medicine," Hubbard means the psychedelic drug ibogaine. Specifically, he was interested in its potential ability to rid people of addiction to opioids and other habit-forming substances.
Hubbard was in a unique position to be looking into ibogaine in 2022: He had recently been named head of Kentucky's Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission, a task force charged with divvying up half of the state's $842 million settlement from national litigation that accused opioid manufacturers and distributors of exacerbating the opioid epidemic. Hubbard and his colleagues were supposed to disperse the funds across whichever state programs would deliver the biggest bang for the buck in helping Kentuckians recover and rebuild.
Most of the grants would go to established methods of prevention and treatment. But Hubbard believed more was needed than the status quo. Methadone and buprenorphine (under the brand name Suboxone) are the gold-standard treatments for opioid dependence, but anywhere from 40 percent to 80 percent of people who take these synthetic opioids relapse. So while existing treatments do save lives, they are not a panacea. If they were, Hubbard points out, Kentucky's overdose deaths would not have risen by more than 50 percent since 2019.
On July 29, 2022, Hubbard felt he got the lead he was looking for. He was on the phone with Julia Blum, a journalist he admired, picking her brain about under-the-radar treatments for substance use disorders when she asked if he'd ever heard of ibogaine.
"I've never heard of it in my life," he replied. "Tell me more."
Blum gave him a quick crash course on the drug. Ibogaine is an alkaloid primarily produced by a Central African shrub called iboga. It's one of the most potent mind-altering substances in existence, triggering experiences that last 30 hours or more. Often it leaves the user forever changed.
In Gabon, where iboga has been used for centuries, people turn to the shrub to obtain messages from ancestors and spirits and to get clarity on their life's direction. In the West, ibogaine more recently has become known for a different application: helping to rid people of substance use disorders.
Anecdotal data and some scientific studies suggest that several psychedelic drugs, including ibogaine, may be able to help root out the sources of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental maladies. Ibogaine stands out, however, for what may be a unique ability to abruptly end addiction-related cravings while also allowing the person to bypass the agonies of withdrawal.
"It's a long, intense journey during which the medicine illuminates the roots of the addiction through dreamlike visions that often involve memories," Blum explained to Hubbard. Many people also emerge with a newfound sense of meaning and purpose.
"Where can I learn more?" asked Hubbard.
Relatively few scientific studies have been conducted on ibogaine. But the research that does exist is encouraging. At a clinic in St. Kitts, for example, the majority of 191 patients who received a single dose of ibogaine successfully detoxed from opioids or cocaine. The fact that this study was conducted in St. Kitts highlights a major problem, however: Ibogaine is a Schedule I substance in the United States, so it is illegal in this country. Americans who wish to try it have to travel to Mexico, Brazil, Costa Rica, Colombia, South Africa, or another place where it is available. This keeps ibogaine treatment "only in the realm of people who have money," says Nolan Williams, a Stanford psychiatrist and neurologist who has conducted research on the drug.
Hubbard came to regard ibogaine as a potential solution for addictions. More than that, he saw a powerful substance capable of healing the "profound spiritual affliction" that he believes is at the core of what drives most people to reach for the pill bottle or needle. "As technologically advanced and as wealthy as we are, we are living in a brutally dehumanizing era," he says. We have erected false walls around ourselves that have given rise to an epidemic of loneliness, divisiveness, and despair, he continues, and we have become complacent in the face of forces that manipulate and exploit us. We have forgotten "how fabulously special and beautiful" each of us is, he says, "simply by virtue of being a human being."
Hubbard hoped ibogaine could be the wrecking ball that smashed through all of that. And in his role directing Kentucky's commission, he saw a chance to transform the state—an epicenter of the opioid crisis—into a national leader in ibogaine research. He hatched a plan for Kentucky to host clinical trials to establish the drug's safety and efficacy so the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) would approve it as an addiction treatment.
"What gets me fired up and ready to go every morning," Hubbard says, "is perhaps thinking that there might be something within me that God finds suitable to utilize to pursue the emancipation of my fellow human beings from any subjugation that they might be suffering."
And the way Hubbard sees it, opioid abuse is about the biggest tyrant of the soul and subjugator of human beings that there is.
Destitution Everywhere
Although the lilt of Hubbard's Appalachian accent is so pronounced that it seems almost put on, he possesses the diction of a 19th century literato. He is physically formidable, capable of bench-pressing over 400 pounds, and his beard and shoulder-length hair are reminiscent of a Viking. But his blue eyes become glassy and his voice trembles with emotion when he discusses the tragedies of opioid addiction.
Hubbard grew up in Russell County, Virginia, a lush region of mountain ridges and valleys that sits atop some of the country's richest mineral wealth. Despite its vast coal reserves, nearly a quarter of the population lives below the poverty line. In Hubbard's small community, a handful of powerful families owned and controlled everything, he says, while the rest of the citizenry were "the nobodies."
Hubbard's family fell into that latter category. His home life was "chaos," he says. His earliest memories are his parents' screaming matches. Fortunately, his grandparents took an active role in his upbringing, preventing him from winding up "in a ditch someplace." His grade school–educated grandfathers both were missing fingers and suffered from silicosis from years of working the mines, but they always exuded happiness, optimism, and "immense wisdom," Hubbard recalls. The only person he idolized as much as his grandfathers was President Ronald Reagan, whom he imprinted on "just like a gosling to its mother goose." Before Hubbard had even finished elementary school, he decided that, like Reagan, he would dedicate his life to serving his fellow Americans. And what better way to do that, he thought, than to pursue the noble practice of law?
Hubbard's starry-eyed notions about his chosen career path were quickly dispelled by his legal education at the University of Kentucky. He learned that law often had "nothing to do" with objective truth or justice, that power frequently trumps truth, and that the legal system is regularly used by those with power to crush people who don't have any. "Our judicial system is a disgrace, period," he says.
But Hubbard compartmentalized his disappointment and got his degree. After graduating in 2000, he took a job at a Lexington insurance defense firm that handled all of Walmart's worker compensation claims for the state. The gig was supposed to be temporary, but a year in, his boss fell off a ladder and died. He inherited her pile of 300 cases and wound up staying for the next 17 years.
As time passed, Hubbard noticed a conspicuous pattern in the cases he was seeing: A woman between the ages of 45 and 70 from the Appalachian region of Kentucky, who had spent her entire life in a low-wage job, would come in complaining of excruciating pain from a work-related injury. The injury was minor enough that it should have taken six months or so to heal following treatment, and diagnostic tests could not pinpoint the anatomical source of her pain. Yet here she was, in agony. Inevitably, Hubbard says, she would be "loaded up" on a particular cocktail of drugs: OxyContin, Xanax, and Prozac.
One day, Hubbard was driving through town, pondering how it could be that women who were taking enough opioids to knock out a horse could still be in pain, when a thought struck him: Their physical pain was a symptom of a profound emotional and spiritual pain that no amount of pharmaceuticals could alleviate. "They had reached a point in life where they recognized that they were going to be living at the dead end of welfare subsistence to their grave, without any prospect of having a life that we would perceive as being one that is lived with freedom and dignity and control over destiny," Hubbard says. "That work accident…was the straw that broke their backs."
Hubbard did not have any peer-reviewed scientific journal articles to back up his hunch. But he felt sure he was right.
Transparent, Accountable, Accessible
In 2017, Hubbard moved on to a job as Kentucky's deputy commissioner of the Department for Income Support. There, he says, he solidified his reputation as "a take-no-prisoners…get-it-done-without-compromise dude."
Hubbard rooted out substantial internal rot, for example, in Kentucky's Child Support Enforcement program, which is administered by 120 elected county attorneys. Financial controls and oversight were nonexistent. Money was disappearing, and around 40 of the administrators were housing the program on property they personally owned, allowing them to collect rent from the state. Hubbard's team uncovered dirt that led to a federal prosecution of one corrupt administrator and ongoing FBI investigations of three others.
When Democrat Andy Beshear became governor in 2019, Hubbard was promptly removed from his job on "hour one of day one," he says. "I have no question that that was a favor done to the [state-wide Kentucky] County Attorneys Association," which "had had quite enough of me." (Beshear's office declined an interview request for this story.)
Daniel Cameron, the state's new Republican attorney general, then appointed Hubbard to oversee the Office of Medicaid Fraud and Abuse Control. Hubbard's office doubled criminal indictments and convictions during the next year. Many of those convictions were for fraudulent prescriptions of Suboxone, one of the synthetic opioids used to treat opioid addiction. Rather than curtailing the crisis, the drug was being diverted and sold on the street.
By April 2022, Hubbard had developed enough expertise in opioid addiction and the many federal, state, and nonprofit entities tied to it that Cameron tapped him to lead the Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission. As he accepted the position, Hubbard pondered how to deliver the most value possible to Kentucky. The vast majority of the funds would be invested in strengthening existing infrastructure for recovery and prevention. But Hubbard was also interested in finding new approaches.
A few months later, he got in touch with Blum, and his journey into the world of ibogaine had begun.
The 'Ibogaine A-Team'
Virtually everyone who knows anything about ibogaine has heard of Juliana Mulligan. Mulligan spent most of her 20s struggling with opioid dependence. All conventional treatments failed her, and she had endured overdoses, hospitalizations, homelessness, physical assault, and incarceration. In 2008, she heard about ibogaine from a friend and sought it out as a last-ditch effort to save her life.
Mulligan very nearly died in the process. The provider she found in Guatemala gave her double the safe dose, causing Mulligan to go into cardiac arrest. Despite the intensity of the experience, her first sensation upon waking up in the hospital was a feeling of liberation.
"It felt like a thousand pounds of guilt, shame, and regret had been lifted off of me," Mulligan recalls. She had no cravings for opioids and only mild symptoms of withdrawal, and she felt a new clarity about her life's purpose. "I suddenly saw that my years of suffering were actually my training to do the work I was meant to do," she says: to advance ibogaine as an accessible treatment and to change the largely ineffective mainstream substance use disorder treatment system.
That was 13 years ago, and Mulligan has not touched an opioid or experienced a craving for one since. She lives in New York City, where she is a licensed psychotherapist who works with clients before and after ibogaine treatment. "I get emails all the time from people asking me questions," she says. So when a message landed in her inbox from "some guy from Kentucky," she didn't think much of it but agreed to take his call.
As Hubbard explained his position, she said to herself: "Holy shit, this is a huge deal." She and her colleagues had been struggling for years to come up with a realistic plan for making ibogaine an FDA-approved pharmaceutical—a process that, on average, requires half a billion dollars. Hubbard was the first person in a position of any political power who had expressed interest in ibogaine, something Mulligan "never expected from a Republican Kentucky guy with an accent like that."
So Mulligan launched into action, connecting Hubbard with "all my ibogaine A-team." He responded with enthusiasm, dedicating nights and weekends to reading all he could about the drug and connecting with dozens of researchers, philanthropists, and activists. He and his wife spent $5,000 of their own money to travel to New York City to meet Mulligan and her colleagues—a "personal investment," Hubbard says, in finding a solution for Kentuckians.
No one knows how exactly ibogaine works. In pharmacological parlance, it's a "dirty drug"—one that hits receptors across the brain's various systems. Researchers have little idea of why it would be effective for treating substance use disorders. "We understand only 1 percent of what it does," Mulligan says, "which is also why it's a little bit dangerous."
Researchers have traditionally shied away from studying ibogaine because of its cardiac risk. "The biggest concern [about ibogaine], in my opinion, is the lack of regulation in foreign countries and the risk involved in seeking this treatment in potentially unregulated environments," says Alan Davis, an associate professor of social work and director of the Center for Psychedelic Drug Research and Education at Ohio State University. "We desperately need to answer questions about safety and what is happening out there right now in these clinics."
From 1990 to 2008, at least 19 people died after taking ibogaine, and a trial participant in New Zealand also died in a study published in 2017. There is compelling evidence, however, that the drug's cardiac risk can be mitigated through intravenous magnesium. An ibogaine facility in Mexico called Ambio Life Sciences has given magnesium to around 1,000 clients since 2014, and none has experienced a serious arrhythmia.
While current evidence suggests that ibogaine is "at least as good as and potentially more effective than other treatments for opioid use disorder," Davis says, it's "very difficult to know for sure" because clinical trials have yet to be completed on the drug. He and his colleagues are trying to at least partly fill that knowledge gap by conducting an FDA-informed real-world survey of people who have used ibogaine to address addiction or other disorders. For now, a "degree of skepticism is warranted," he adds—but that will hopefully change as more data are collected about ibogaine's effectiveness.
Anecdotally, the results for many people who have taken ibogaine have been "remarkable," says Amber Capone, co-founder and CEO of Veterans Exploring Treatment Solutions (VETS), a nonprofit that helps American veterans access psychedelic therapy abroad, including at Ambio. "I've seen people with active suicidal ideation or attempts, people who are barely surviving life, completely regain their lives and futures and restore their families' hope," she says.
Capone and her husband—Marcus, a medically retired Navy SEAL—created VETS after Marcus took ibogaine and experienced profound relief from symptoms of PTSD and traumatic brain injury (TBI). VETS has footed the bill for nearly 1,000 veterans since 2019, but the need far outstrips its capacity: The organization has to turn away "the vast majority" of those seeking help, Capone says.
The only way to ensure that ibogaine is accessible to everyone in the U.S., adds Williams, the Stanford researcher, is to get FDA approval and Medicare coverage of the treatment. If that did happen, any fears about possible diversion of the mind-altering, currently prohibited drug would probably be unfounded, says Tom Feegel, CEO of Beond Ibogaine, a treatment center in Cancún, Mexico. "It's exceptionally unlikely that people would choose to use this particular psychedelic for a recreational purpose," Feegel says.
Of Beond's approximately 500 annual clients—most of whom are Americans—60 percent come to address opioid use, 13 percent alcohol use, 9 percent depression, and 7 percent cocaine use. A few also come for treatment of PTSD and TBI. Just 4 percent are there for "health and optimization," a broad category that includes people interested in self-exploration, personal growth, enhanced mental acuity, and help navigating life transitions.
Seasoned psychonauts (a term for people who have extensive experience with mind-altering drugs) also sometimes find their way to Beond, curious to try "the Mount Everest of psychedelics," Feegel says. This category of client usually comes in thinking they want "a so-called psychospiritual" journey, he notes, but most wind up getting "what they need, not what they want."
"What they need" tends to look like a 10-to-12-hour, deeply introspective dive into their entire life and lineage, conveyed to them in more detail than they ever could have imagined. They usually also emerge with new clarity on how best to spend their remaining time on Earth.
"There are many other psychedelics that are a lot more fun and a lot less demanding," Feegel says. "Ibogaine is not a party favor."
'Akin to a Miracle'
By January 2023, Hubbard felt confident enough to introduce the ibogaine idea to Cameron. It was, he told the attorney general, a "Manhattan Project opportunity."
Hubbard showed Cameron a PowerPoint presentation explaining the drug and proposing a public-private partnership to launch an FDA-approved clinical trial within Kentucky to investigate ibogaine's ability to treat opioid use disorder. He suggested paying for this with $42 million from the opioid settlement—5 percent of the total—spread over six years, with that money matched by a drug developer. Ibogaine, Hubbard told Cameron, gave Kentucky the opportunity to pivot from a "state that has been at the back end of America for almost its entire modern history" to the leader of "a revolution" in addiction treatment.
Cameron's office declined an interview request for this story. But Hubbard says the attorney general was supportive, and Cameron made remarks at a May 2023 press conference indicating as much. Most of Hubbard's colleagues at the commission got on board too. Commission member Karen Butcher—whose son, Matthew, died from an opioid overdose in 2020—remembers seeing Hubbard's PowerPoint slides and feeling "like I was watching something that was akin to a miracle. All I could think was, if my son were alive today, we'd be headed to Mexico."
One of the strongest dissenters from ibogaine enthusiasm was Sharon Walsh, a professor of behavioral science, pharmacology, pharmaceutical sciences, and psychiatry at the University of Kentucky, where the ibogaine clinical trial would likely take place. "If the focus is on opioid withdrawal, we have medications that are already approved for opioid withdrawal," she stated at a June 2023 commission meeting. "Those are very effective drugs. I'm not sure why we need other drugs to target opiate withdrawal."
Days later, Walsh resigned from the commission. In emailed responses to questions, she said her resignation was due to increased work responsibilities. She reiterated that opioid withdrawal is "easily treatable" and that what's really needed is "medications that can prevent someone from returning to opioid use."
"I would be absolutely ecstatic to see a true 'cure' for opioid use disorder make it to market or any other treatment that fills the unmet need as this deadly disorder has devastated the United States," Walsh added. "In fact, I would encourage any company that has promising data to share their early safety and efficacy data with the Food and Drug Administration and request a fast-track approval."
Walsh was not the only skeptical voice after Hubbard raised the ibogaine idea. At a press conference in May 2023, Beshear chided the commission for proposing such a large sum for ibogaine compared to law enforcement. "If you only provide $1 million to law enforcement and $42 [million] to pharma, it doesn't seem like you're backing the blue," he told reporters. "It seems like you're backing Big Pharma."
Ordinary Kentuckians, by contrast, seemed supportive of the ibogaine proposal. "In the middle of this 60-plus percent Trump-voting, Bible Belt believing-in-hellfire-and-brimstone red state, there is a tremendous amount of organic grassroots support for [ibogaine's] advancement," Hubbard says. An independent analysis of hundreds of social media responses to the ibogaine proposal suggested that most Kentuckians viewed it favorably.
Three public hearings about the drug—all of which ran over four hours—also drew crowds. Nolan, Mulligan, and the Capones testified, as did an FDA representative who confirmed that it was possible to get approval for an ibogaine clinical trial. Dozens of others spoke as well, including veterans, parents, and former opioid users. Many of the testimonies were highly emotional, and some speakers availed themselves of a box of tissues next to the microphone.
As the weather turned cool, ibogaine seemed poised for success. Hubbard had received commitments from Stanford University and several foundations to support Kentucky as it pursued clinical trials, and he was confident of majority support from the commission. But he decided to hold off on voting until Williams' latest ibogaine findings were published.
Williams' study appeared in Nature Medicine in January. A single dose of ibogaine, he and his colleagues concluded, provided significant reductions in measures of PTSD, depression, anxiety, and TBI-associated disability in 30 VETS-supported patients who undertook the therapy at Ambio. Thirteen participants also had alcohol use disorder, and all significantly reduced their number of drinking days after treatment with ibogaine. All of the participants received intravenous magnesium, and none experienced serious side effects.
Ibogaine, in other words, seemed ready for a U.S. clinical trial.
But by the time Williams' research came out, the hope of making Kentucky the site of that trial had faded. In November 2023, Cameron lost the governor's race to Beshear—and Republican Russell Coleman, a former FBI agent and Mitch McConnell lawyer, was elected attorney general. The tides of power had shifted, and ibogaine's most influential political supporter was out of the game.

Thwarted Breakthrough
Hubbard had suspected that something was off when he heard Coleman say that longtime FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had been one of his boyhood heroes. But prior to the election, the two men had developed what Hubbard thought was a "working friendship."
Hubbard had given Coleman the same ibogaine briefing he had presented to Cameron. But unlike Cameron, Coleman had been careful to remain neutral. As the election approached, Hubbard started to wonder whether Coleman was truly the "independent, reform-minded Republican" he had seemed in private conversation, or if he was "part of the same ol' machine establishment that's run Kentucky generationally now for decades."
In December—after Coleman was elected but before he took office—he called a meeting with Hubbard. As Hubbard recounts the meeting, Coleman started by acknowledging that ibogaine "very well may have therapeutic value." But he quickly pivoted to expressing his disagreement with the project and his "great displeasure" with Hubbard's public advocacy for ibogaine.
"You have not in any way acted with any degree of objectivity," Hubbard recalls Coleman telling him. "You've not treated this with anything other than full-throated, complete 100 percent supportive advocacy."
"I've been an advocate for this because I believe in it," Hubbard says he replied.
"The decision has been made," Coleman said, according to Hubbard. "I'm going to need your resignation by December 31." (Coleman's office declined an interview request for this story.)
The day after Christmas, Hubbard issued a 10-page resignation letter addressed to "The People of Kentucky." The ibogaine plan had failed, he wrote, because it presented a "mortal threat" to the established order of power and money. "The opportunity for Kentucky to pioneer a breakthrough has been thwarted."
Butcher, the ibogaine-supporting commission member, held out hope that the proposal could still move forward in Hubbard's absence. But that was quickly dashed. Coleman appointed a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent to take Hubbard's place as head of the commission. In an address that Coleman delivered in March, he asked members of the commission to "step back" from "the unproven and incredibly expensive clinical trial for a psychedelic that is currently illegal as a Schedule I drug."
Hearing this, Butcher says, she felt "discouraged, disgusted, heartbroken, and disillusioned."
Hubbard now thinks his ibogaine plan was always doomed to fail. He points to an open source analysis of publicly available records compiled by Reveille Advisors, a private intelligence firm based in Denver. "We were really curious why there was so much instant animosity towards the ibogaine proposal from the University of Kentucky and the existing administration," says Wes Anderson, Reveille's director of operations.
Anderson and his partner, Rob, who prefers to withhold his last name because of his investigative work, also had personal interests in ibogaine. Anderson has a brother who is living homeless in Dallas, in part because of an opioid habit, and Rob is a retired Special Operations veteran with combat-related TBI. Their investigation, which they undertook pro bono, revealed financial links between those who opposed the ibogaine proposal and the opioid disorder treatment industry.
Walsh, the University of Kentucky professor, for example, earned nearly $50,000 in consulting fees from companies that make buprenorphine and Naloxone in 2016 and 2018, the years for which Reveille could find data. She has served as a scientific adviser for at least eight such companies in the last three years, and she was an investigator on a successful recent clinical trial of long-acting buprenorphine. "If opioid use disorder medicines are challenged," Anderson argues, "her life's work will no longer be relevant."
Walsh responded by email that this assessment "could not be more wrong." She confirmed that she has worked as a scientific adviser on substance use disorders to pharmaceutical companies, U.S. government agencies, and international organizations. But she added, "I am unclear why you are interested in including me in your article as I was not a part of the hearings or voting related to the issue of ibogaine. I had already left the Commission before those events occurred."
Jay Blanton, a spokesperson for the University of Kentucky, stated by email that it is normal and encouraged for university faculty to work with both the public and private sectors. "Pharmaceutical development would be a common field for industry consultation as so much drug development—including for those who advocate for ibogaine—occurs within the private sector," he said.
Hubbard rejects these arguments. During the last 25 years, he claims, his alma mater has betrayed its land grant institution mission of democratizing higher education and has become the equivalent of "a Fortune 100 corporation" with a multibillion-dollar economic footprint.
"Every move the University of Kentucky makes is animated by a money lust," Hubbard says. "Any suggestion that their academic positions are in no way influenced by their embedded financial relationships is a slap in the face to the recent history of academia's prostitution to Big Pharma, and to common sense."
Reveille's findings also extended to the politicians involved in ibogaine decisions. Beshear, it found, received about $225,000 in campaign donations from pharma companies and their lobbyists and from opioid use disorder benefactors such as recovery centers, while Coleman received nearly $200,000 from such donors. Beshear's law firm represented Purdue Pharma against the state of Kentucky in the OxyContin case, and Coleman's law firm is the lobbyist for DisposeRx, a medical disposal kit that is distributed with opioid prescriptions. Coleman's firm—like Beshear's—has also represented Purdue Pharma, Abbott Laboratories, and Merck in lawsuits in Kentucky. And although the two politicians are from opposite political parties, Coleman's firm donated over $35,000 to Beshear's 2023 reelection campaign—almost matching the $37,000 donation from Beshear's firm to Beshear's campaign.
Thickening the plot, in August, Coleman also recused himself from an FBI investigation into potential health care fraud by Addiction Recovery Care (ARC), a high-profile addiction treatment provider in Kentucky. According to Reveille's findings, affiliates of ARC and its chief executive officer gave $21,000 in cash donations to Coleman's election campaign.*
Anderson emphasizes that all of these findings are "just observations" and "we're not saying there was active wrongdoing." Hubbard, however, is convinced that his ibogaine proposal had been cut down by a "nexus of intertwined political and financial interests."
A Divine Conviction
On a Saturday morning last May, Hubbard walked across a stage in New York City in cowboy boots to address hundreds of attendees at Horizons, the world's longest-running psychedelics conference. "I'd also ask your conversational forbearance as I get ready to move forward, because English is my second language," he deadpanned, eliciting laughter from the audience.
The jokes ended there. His eyes wide and burning, Hubbard spent the next 10 minutes delivering a CliffsNotes version of the previous year's travails in the impassioned cadence of a Southern preacher. Several times, the auditorium broke into cheers, forcing Hubbard to pause. In the back row, Rick Doblin, the founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, took a rare break from responding to emails on his phone and placed a hand on his face as he thoughtfully listened. As Hubbard continued, Kevin Balktick, the conference's founder, whispered to me: "Bryan is hands-down my favorite speaker—he's just incredible."
Hubbard concluded with a rallying cry that channeled his favorite verse from the Book of Isaiah: "I am convinced that if we of common mind, heart, and soul, regardless of political persuasion…make a commitment that we are going to deliver good tidings unto the meek, bind up the brokenhearted, proclaim liberty to the captives and the opening of the prison to them that are bound—We! Shall! Win!"
The crowd burst into a standing ovation.
Hubbard has become a hero in the psychedelics community. He has attended dinners held in his honor where he was likely the only Republican in the room, and he has been a key guest at exclusive meetings with wealthy figures funding the movement to legitimize mind-altering drugs.
Hubbard's efforts to find another taker for the thwarted Kentucky trial have also picked up speed. He is talking to officials in Ohio, Washington state, Nevada, Missouri, New Mexico, and Arizona—plus a "dark horse" state that he has sworn not to reveal—about leveraging their resources to foster ibogaine research. In July, an individual connected to Georgia's opioid settlement fund contacted him to inquire about ibogaine. "There's a lot of interest that ranges from introductory exploration all the way to deliberative consideration of 'if' and 'how,'" Hubbard says.
Of the potentially interested states, he says, Ohio, New Mexico, and the dark horse are the furthest along, and he is hopeful that one or more of these states will soon "break the dam open." He has met with Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine and "top officials" in the mystery state. In New Mexico, he has had meetings with state Rep. Andrea Romero (D–Santa Fe), who has facilitated gatherings with officials from Picuris Pueblo, a Native American community in Taos County.
"They want ibogaine access as quickly as it can be negotiated," Hubbard says of the Picuris Pueblo officials. If that happens, data collected in Picuris Pueblo could be compiled into a safety and efficacy study that paves the way for a formal FDA trial conducted by researchers at the University of New Mexico.
Mulligan is working on a plan for these states to form a coalition to develop a generic ibogaine using their pooled opioid settlement funds. Although the Kentucky effort failed, Mulligan says, "it wasn't for nothing" given all these developments.
Hubbard is more cynical today than he was before he heard the word ibogaine, but he is also more committed than ever to shepherding the drug across the FDA finish line. "My first and only objective that I have in life right now," he says, "is to try to do everything that I can in whatever way I can to advance [ibogaine's] availability as quickly as we can."
*UPDATE: This article has been updated to reflect news that happened after the October 2024 issue went to print.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "The Psychedelic Emancipator of Kentucky."
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Go, Bryan Hubbard, go!!! Help SMASH the stuck-in-the-mud ineffective drug-addiction-treatment cartel! May the drug-addiction-treatment cartel rot in hell, for milking and abusing the least of us! For MORE MONEY AND POWER ass usual, assholes!!!
Except for the mRNA injections, right? Big pharma were doing the Lord’s work then, with motives pure as the driven snow.
Strawman's Lament.
Whatever, Strawcastic.
Oh for fuck's sake, you fuck it up on purpose, don't you, retard.
I suspect Sarc has a special kind of retardation, where every other word has a meaning unique to him.
This is like when you call him the drunk. Lol. Fucking hilarious your projections.
Izzat psychotic still schaißposting here? Where does the GOP find so many human skunks to stench up non-nazi comment pages? Youtube is crawling with them: no ID, no content, nothing produced other than odor and ordure. It's like the sole power source moving the bowels of God's Own Prohibitionist party.
Sqrlsy, your grandpa's drunk again.
I'm GLAD that You PervFectly (FINALLY!) see that saving lives with vaccines is a VIRTUE and snot a VICE!!!
Ken Kesey lives!
I'm starting to think that all these psychedelic advocates are on drugs or something.
Ba dum tss!
I mean...because what we have been doing for decades clearly works right?
Take more antidepressants. Enjoy the weight gain and sexual disfunction.
Ibogaine stands out, however, for what may be a unique ability to abruptly end addiction-related cravings while also allowing the person to bypass the agonies of withdrawal.
There is no such thing as a miracle cure.
And it's entirely unsurprising that psychedelic advocates might think that it is.
During the last 25 years, he claims, his alma mater has betrayed its land grant institution mission of democratizing higher education and has become the equivalent of "a Fortune 100 corporation" with a multibillion-dollar economic footprint.
Institutional money always seems to preserve itself. Never trust them.
There's no such thing as a miracle anything. Still, this isn't some new flash in the pan thing and what evidence there is seems positive enough that some controlled studies should be tried.
Wow, man. Trippy.
“What’s the cure for drug addiction? More drugs, obviously!"
I can’t with you people.
You don’t want to do drugs then don’t do them.
It is none of your business(or the government’s) what myself or others put in our bodies.
You seem to have no problem with alcohol. Prohibition of that didn’t work just like the current prohibition doesn’t.
Alcohol doesn't come with the litany of problems that drug abuse does.
Don't compare apples to zebras. I know it's like the go-to losertarian argument, but it's a bogus one no matter how many times it's repeated.
Yeah, like apples and oranges until you prohibit it.
Alcohol doesn’t come with the litany of problems that drug abuse does.
Nonsense. Except for some opioid junkies, serious alcoholics are the most pathetic and fucked up addicts I've encountered. Maybe meth heads are worse too, I haven't spent a lot of time with them. But alcohol absolutely has enormous problems of addiction, unhealthy lifestyle and stupid/criminal behavior around it as much as pretty much any illegal drug.
Yea? Do they gather under an overpass or conquer a local park in order to set up a shantytown where they shake and shuffle each day jonesing for their next fix?
Do firefighters (in forests) not fight fire with fire? Firebreaks, ya ever heard of 'em? Do cops and soldiers fight violence with violence, or twat? Why NOT fight drugs with drugs, in a SMARTER way than with what "fake smack" (Methadone etc.) twat they are using now? Ya got a BETTER fix? Let's HEAR shit then! Snarking (in a Superior Manure, ass covered by Superior Manure) from the sidelines does SNOT help!
YOU are clearly trying to "fight the stupid politicians with stupid cumments", ye HYPOCRITE ye, so SHUT THE FUCK UP when the non-hypocrites and grownups are talking!!!! Pretty please?
Language.
Why NOT fight drugs with drugs, in a SMARTER way than with what “fake smack” (Methadone etc.) twat they are using now?
We shouldn't be doing that either. Look, it's not rocket science. You lock them in a sanitarium, force them to go cold turkey, do a stint of rehab - and then, when we're ready to let them back out into normal society, we make sure that the black market drug availability has been diminished by having secured the border and cracked the skulls of every gang, dealer, and trafficker we could find and incinerated all their contraband.
Speaking iv psychotic schaißposters... God's Own Prohibitionists would ban insulin if someone, somewhere, could be shown to derive pleasure from it.
See, and you’re exactly the problem with the legalized drug argument. You don’t think of them for what they are. Your mind immediately goes to ways to abuse them for recreational purposes instead of medicinal ones.
It’s all just Soma to you. All of it. You look at something to help regulate blood sugar and you ask yourself, “How can I abuse this to depart from reality.”
And that’s the problem with you drug addicts. You just want no part of reality. Well there’s a much simpler solution for that, but for someone reason you’re all weirdly adverse to it. And so you dump your problems on everyone else - socially, culturally, financially - as if we should be responsible for anything more than dumping you into a ditch.
Clearly, the cure for drug addiction is moral scolding.
And involuntary commitment.
He definitely sounds high ...
Yeah, sure, we hope for a moon shot drug, and the only way we will find one is through research. But I think a lot of us are very wary at this point of "medical" drug high enthusiasms.
Grace Slick warned us against pharma products. If pharma companies, brewers, distillers and tobacco pushers were to quit lying under oath in efforts to sic rabid politicians on potential competitors, their poisons might evolve into something beneficial through improvements achievable where there is uncoerced competition. Sandoz came up with a beneficent product, but only after Harry Anslinger, Bert Hoover and the League of Nations narcotic cartel had sullied the company's reputation and harried German companies into funding the NSDAP. Civilization was lynched in subsequent witchhunts.
Libertarians do themselves a big favor when they realize that they don't have to think something is 'good' in order to argue for its legality.
They don't have to, but for the argument to persuade non-libertarians (which it must to be effective, because not enough radical libertarians), it helps to persuade them that it's good.
Thirty hour super-trip with a chance of arrhythmia. Does not sound like a good time.
NOT a good-time party drugs works in its favor! Also note that IV infusion of magnesium looks like a solid (heart) "fix" while you're getting your "fix" here...
"There is compelling evidence, however, that the drug's cardiac risk can be mitigated through intravenous magnesium. An ibogaine facility in Mexico called Ambio Life Sciences has given magnesium to around 1,000 clients since 2014, and none has experienced a serious arrhythmia."
"serious"
Not reassuring.
Were there any dead people? Now THAT would count ass “serious”!
Meanwhile, who knows HOW many junkies (of various kinds) are DYING, for lack of this treatment?
The way Torquemadista inquisitions work is they claim A or B is Satan. So anyone who has ever tried A or B is demonically possessed and cannot testify--unless their testimony repeats the heresy taint and adds colorful embellishment, hearsay, apocryphal lies, shrieking and shuddering fits. Burning at the stake used to insure against recanting, but huge prisons and service pistols now do the job at taxpayer expense. Experimental demonstrations before an audience are, of course anathema. This precludes all objective verification.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13851345/Ohio-wildlife-geese-dead-Trump-Haiti-migrant-eating-pets.html
Ohio wildlife officials reveal details behind SHOCK photo of man dragging dead geese through streets
Wildlife officials in Ohio have revealed that a viral picture of a man walking down the street while holding two geese was actually taken after the birds were hit by a car.
…
The outlet was informed by authorities that there is no evidence to suggest the man is either an immigrant, Haitian or had plans to eat the birds.
Ohio authorities are now in on the conspiracy to paint Trump a liar for his totally truthful claims about Haitians eating housepets. I bet they were in on the election fraud as well.
The original photographer of the man holding the animals told NBC4: ‘I was just driving down the street, saw a guy walking down the street with a goose.
‘Thought it was kind of crazy, you know, not something you see every day. I was gonna talk to him.
‘He did not speak English as much as I can tell. He was not Haitian, I’ve heard Haitian people before.’
Even the photographer is in on it. I bet he voted three times for Biden.
And? Here's some video of some (also) non-Haitian 'newcomers', with an actual cat on the grill. Are we going to argue about their specific place of origin now? (It's also not in Springfield, OH, it's down the road in Dayton.)
https://x.com/realchrisrufo/status/1834926318883852543
Does it matter which town or which group of migrants? Do you think that the people who filmed and posted this video are racist?
To be more on-topic to this article, are the everyday citizens witnessing these things TRIPPING?
A shaky video on Twitter, claiming to be a year old, and in another city, of non-Haitians, supposedly cooking cats, is proof that Trump was telling the truth when he said Haitians in Springfield are stealing people’s pets and eating them. You’ve convinced me.
*facepalm*
I don’t understand why you can’t just say he fell for a stupid rumor.
A shaky video?
It's clearly false because the cinematography is sub-par?
Do you think that what people are experiencing in their own communities is some sort of mass delusion event? People are just building their own narratives based on rumors and assumptions?
Sidney Powell can help YOU straighten shit ALL out!!! (If'm ye have enough $$$$MONEY to pay for Her Lies!!!)
https://reason.com/2023/10/20/how-sidney-powells-plea-deal-could-hurt-trump-in-the-georgia-racketeering-case/
https://reason.com/2022/02/11/sidney-powell-disowns-her-kraken-saying-she-is-not-responsible-for-her-phony-story-of-a-stolen-election/ (Yet another Powell article)
https://reason.com/2021/03/23/sidney-powell-says-shes-not-guilty-of-defamation-because-no-reasonable-person-would-have-believed-her-outlandish-election-conspiracy-theory/
Sidney Powell Says She’s Not Guilty of Defamation Because ‘No Reasonable Person’ Would Have Believed Her ‘Outlandish’ Election Conspiracy Theory
Which particular lies are you wanting to hear and believe today, hyper-partisan Wonder Child?
WHY do you evil people love it SOOOOO much when lawyers LIE in court? Is it the lawyers that You love, the lies, or both?
Conspiracy theories or cunt-spermacy theories; which appeal to ye the MOISTEST?!?!? And twat does Spermy Daniels say about tit all? Are Ye Perfectly titillated yet?
Spermy Daniels for Der TrumpfenFarter-Fuhrer’s new VEEP!!! Shit is TWAT too late to CHANGE the VEEP! Government Almighty already KNOWS that The TrumptatorShit will need MANY-MANY (affordable) criminal defense lawyers, and Spermy Daniels can attract MANY “Pro Boner” lawyers!!!
Looks to me like Trump said a bald-faced lie, without any evidence at all, doubled-down on it, and his true believers are now rushing to find anything at all that might possibly be stretched and massaged into something they can point to and claim as evidence to prove what he said was actually true.
Again.
Living Colour needs to update their hit song.
I'm not a true believer of Trump and have never voted for him.
I'm just tired of years and years of the legacy press declaring something 'false' or 'debunked' without any critical investigation or research, only to later find out that it's actually true.
In this case, you have a WHOLE BUNCH of local citizens claiming one thing, and one city manager saying that they didn't bother to investigate it, along with a compliant press that didn't want the story to be true in the first place, and didn't dig at all.
Your Occam's razor might fall on the other side of the story from mine.
Why does there need to be any digging?
I thought the person making a bold accusation like that was supposed to be the one providing evidence to back it up.
As opposed to reversing the burden of proof while accusing those who don’t believe claims without evidence of having ill intent.
Again.
This has gone beyond coincidence and has become a pattern.
"Why does there need to be any digging?"
They used to call that "journalism", you shitty little shill. You know, hear a rumor or a claim, investigate its veracity, publish the findings.
But what you're saying is don't bother looking into it or listening to the little people until Top Men tell you it's true.
You've become like Tom Parsons in 1984.
And here's another thing.
Every single thing... and I mean every single fucking thing, that you've dismissed as a lie or conspiracy theory here because CNN told you so, has turned out to be true.
On the 865th time being burned one would think you would have learned to be a little more skeptical of party propaganda... but no. Not you.
But what you’re saying is don’t bother looking into shit about the EVIL Demon-Craps torturing, and then drinking the blood of the PervFected Christian new-born blond-eyed and blue-haired babies, right, You PervFected Christian GODDESS? YE have accused, so shit MUST be True!!! All Hail Marxist Moose-Mammary-Bahn-Farter-Fuhrer!!!
Why does there need to be digging? So what is the proof you’re treating as fact? Wildlife people asked the immigrant if he killed geese which would lead to a felony and they denied it.
God damn. You gov trusting moron. Lol.
I agree that it's become a pattern, at least.
I'm not sure that devotees of double negatives will EVER see that if shit han't neccessarily been dispoven or redundantly been PROVEN true beyond treasonable doubt, that shit might not neccessarily be true or untrue, depending on whether or twat the shit has been CLEARLY (in an approved-data manure) demonstrated to be accpetable by OUR tribe!
In the meantime... I do NOT necessessarily disagree! And you can take THAT to the bunk, and deposit shit!
Lol. You’re not a democrats. You’re taking as truth government officials who were no where at the scene of the geese. Where did they get their information sarc? Did you try to even think for a second before you started pushing gov narratives?
Does this story make sense to you in any way?
How many geese have you seen hit by a car let alone TWO at the same time.
You’ll believe anything the government tells you. Lol.
Ask yourself how deep the wildlife investigation was.
Government: did you kill geese in the park.
Immigrant: no I saw both hit by a car.
Government and sarc: story checks out.
Lol
People are just building their own narratives based on rumors and assumptions?
That's about it, yeah. Oh sure there are real problems in Springfield, such as the rapid migration leading to a spike in rents and applications for public assistance. But the fact that these complaints went from "the rent is too damn high" all the way to "OMG THEY'RE EATING THE CATS" is because of rumors and gossip fueled by bigoted xenophobia.
Ask yourself this: what if it had been 15,000 white trash Canadians from ML's neighborhood who migrated to Springfield and drove the rents up? Do you think we would have heard anything about "the migrants are eating cats"? Do you think those types of rumors would have gained any traction whatsoever? What if it had been some white guy dragging dead geese down the street? Would the knee-jerk reaction have been OMG HE'S STEALING GEESE FROM THE PARK or would it have been, maybe, something else? Maybe it would have been a crime, maybe not, but do you think it would have become a national scandal?
Thems kitty-killing, cat-crunching, Canadian-Canucks are invading our neighborhoods!
Look at that there video on Tiktok!
Ah, so it’s just a conspiracy from the side opposite the governments (and your) preferred immigration policies.
Not a conspiracy. It's rumors and gossip. Made believable by bigoted xenophobia.
It would be disloyal of Our First Treasonous President to NOT fall for a rumor his own party concocted. After all, they fell for HIS delusions about vote counts! In fact, the Republican Senate and Congress fell for the rumor that dry fanatic Rutherford Hayes had beaten Samuel Tilden after Tilden won by 19 electoral votes and 252,666 popular votes. THAT's loyalty born of blind faith, itchy palms and the integrity needed to sweep aside inconvenient factual information without a second thought.
Trump issues bold accusation without proof and marshals his defenders to find evidence.
When no evidence is found that’s declared to be proof of a coordinated effort to suppress evidence by Democrats.
What am I talking about?
I was pretty vocal about not believing that Haitian immigrants were eating pets in Sprinfield.
Now here’s a video that appears to show skinned cats on a grill. It looks like the grill is not burning or attended. There’s just some skinned cats on an open grill?
OK I won’t nitpick. Minadin came through where no other commenter did with actual video evidence of cat eating.
Chris Rufo writes of a lot of investigating to get to the bottom of this video. The goal of the investigation was to confirm Trump’s statement that Haitian immigrants are eating pets in Springfield OH. We can assume they came up empty since they are trying to make hay out of an African immigrant grilling a cat in Dayton OH. The amount of work involved in getting this story turned up nothing in Sprinfield. Rufo inadvertently verifies David Muir’s fact check. Can there be another interpretation?
That video is of African migrants apparently.
Was the grill in Venezuela? In Brazil, morsels of beef roasted on a spit are generically referred to in the vernacular as "churrasco de gato," literally, BBQ cat. Moronic rap songs, staged and altered photos and lamentable humor have been endemic for decades. The country is heavily socialistic and bans anything the US Congress orders or pays politicians to ban. Hoovervilles are therefore everywhere--and just as during the Hoover Administration--the pitiful victims of prohibition Crashes and Depressions sometimes eat possums and other pets.
“Can there be another interpretation?”
Sure. There’s a coordinated conspiracy to suppress evidence. The state officials saying this isn’t happening are all Democrats who voted for Biden several times, and everyone has been instructed to hide evidence.
You know, just like the election, no proof is proof of a coverup.
HERE is your proof! There's a Cat in the Kettle at the Peking Moon...
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2t1s1r
Lol. Thanks for that SQRLSY.
Aye
Your assumptions are hilarious. You demand evidence from citizens but none from government.
Citation. This thread.
Just like when you bought every word regarding covid, vaccines, they weren't censoring, nordstream...
Why do you dismiss multiple, yes multiple, witnesses to something so handedly then buy every state in government narrative without question?
So you are going with “fake but accurate” now?
Oh, and the migrants are there legally.
https://www.daytondailynews.com/local/haitian-immigrants-in-springfield-legally-under-temporary-protected-status-heres-how-that-works/UUG36RNJAVHBJCTMGCVL6FP25Q/
Again. You ignore all the testimony including police reports to push state denials. Lol.
The fact you believe a car took out two geese at the same time says wonders.
Note. It is the government telling you this happened. Not anyone witness to the scene. And you push it as fact. Lol.
The fact you believe a car took out two geese at the same time says wonders.
Do you not have Canada Geese in AZ? Here on the east coast they are very common, especially during migration seasons. They travel in groups even on the ground. It is not at all uncommon to see roadkill geese in urban/suburban areas, sometimes multiple. If you saw geese cross the street you’d understand why.
https://youtu.be/cJ9EgbC4n4c?si=DFw4RLLq4ZUEvykp
We have 3 large parks with a ton of geese in them. They are surrounded by very busy streets in a city everyone drives. Never even see them near roadways. Drive by 2 of them twice a day.
But taking 2 of them out is just ridiculous even if they are walking. Birds tend to fly when they hear engines coming.
The roadkill geese ive seen have been ones near retention ponds and grassy areas near malls, industrial areas and highways.
Seeing as this was game department calling, Occams Razor is the department (having no video or other evidence) asked the guy if he illegally killed geese (felony) and then just accepted the answer as no. The ducks in the picture don't appear to be damaged like you would expect from being hit by a car hard enough to die.
Jesse hasn’t seen road killed geese.
But he knows that that’s not what they look like.
Mmmm hmmm. Suuuure.
Are you retarded sarc. Pull up thr picture and show us where the blunt force is on the geese.
Retarded statist.
Now I understand your argument.
If I can’t prove without a doubt that the geese were hit by cars, then that means Trump was right when he said Springfield cats are on Haitian immigrants’ menu.
Is ‘switching the burden of proof‘ a competition in the Olympics?
Or maybe I got the fallacy wrong. I'm sure that if I did one of your girls will come along and call me stupid for doing so.
Side question: Is he holding 2 geese? I see one; 2 wings, 1,body, 1 head.
Or am I looking at the wrong image?
Dude, it’s proof that Haitians in Springfield are stealing and eating pets. Stop asking so many questions.
You’ve already proven the only proof you demand is the ever trustworthy word of a government official lol.
Yet you believe every god damn lie told about Trump. It remains amazing you deny you’re a democrat.
I'm choking on laughter here.
You believe every lie told by Trump, and say I believe every lie told about him?
That's just too funny.
I may have to break down and actually bookmark one of your comments.
This is too much.
LOL you have never seen geese travel in packs before?
In other news:
Spotted outside a migrant-owned restaurant in Springfield:
https://firstdateworstdateever.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/chinesecat.jpg?w=706
The people who gather there converse easily on topics ranging from visits with Mother Ayahuasca in the jungles of Peru to tips for throwing a successful group MDMA experience.
Suffice to say, those who find their way there tend to check certain boxes: liberal, Northeastern, experienced with mind-altering substances.
So insufferable Burning Man attendees.
Drug prohibition should be ended. Our body, our choice.
Good Kid Productions drops their latest.
Corporate DEI is Now a Recipe for Lawsuits (mini-doc)
If they think DEI is coming to an end over a few lawsuits, they are sorely mistaken.
At best it will be watered down a little until Democratic lawmakers change the laws in various states to protect companies enforcing DEI punishments.
h_=t_=t_p_s_:_/=/=o=u=rworldindata.org/grapher/united-states-rates-of-covid-19-deaths-by-vaccination-status?country=~All+ages . . . TWAT does shit takle to defeat Treason.cum’s auto-censors?
SHIT finally got through!!! Meant ass a response to Mother's Lament (with a Head Full of Cement) and Her PervFected Worshit of COVID deaths, and non-data-driven hatred of vaccines).
Words to the wise, do NOT repeat the same link twice, in the same post, or Treason.cum's brainlessauto-censor will GET ye!
Reason.com is a darned fine web site! I say again, Reason.com is a darned fine web site!
https://reason.com/2024/09/15/the-psychedelic-emancipator-of-kentucky/?comments=true#comment-10724091 is a darned fine web page! I say again, https://reason.com/2024/09/15/the-psychedelic-emancipator-of-kentucky/?comments=true#comment-10724091 is a darned fine web page!
OK, the rules here beat the living shit out of me!!!!
I think Reason.com's best feature is the ability to link directly to any comment.
That way I can humiliate you whenever I want by reminding everyone that you already totally discredited that dumb gimmick you've spent years crafting. You know, where you're constantly on red alert that stolen election whining could inspire violence ......... yet you forgot about the liberal who opened fire on Congresspeople after Democrats told him RUSSIA HACKED THE ELECTION for the billionth time:
I don’t recall any “HillaryPanzees gone apeshit” and saying “kill him with his own gun”? Got any cites on that?
I don’t recall any “HillaryPanzees gone apeshit” and saying “kill him with his own gun”? Got any cites on that?
One of my goals is to show that power-lusting Trumptards slobber over the prospect of getting MOAH POWAH for themselves, at ANY costs! Ethics, principles, people, law and order, a decent future for most people… ALL can and WILL be sacrificed for MOAH POWAH for Trumpturds!
READ the below and hang your tiny brainless, power-lusting shit-head in SHAME for always taking the side of Trumpanzees, power-luster-pig!
https://www.jpost.com/international/kill-him-with-his-own-gun-dc-cop-talks-about-the-riot-655709 also https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/04/28/michael-fanone-trump-gop-riots/
‘Kill him with his own gun’ – DC cop talks about Capitol riot
DC Police officer Michael Fanone: I had a choice to make: Use deadly force, which would likely result with the mob ending his life, or trying something else.
“Pro-law-and-order” Trumpturds take the side of trumpanzees going apeshit, making cops beg for their lives! For trying to defend democracy against mobocracy! Can you slime-wads sink ANY lower?!?!
Beyond that, whatabout that them thar whatabouts? Whatabout Hillary? Whatabout OJ Simpson?
How many brain cells does it take to run a socio-political simulation on the following:
Judge and Jury: “Murderer, we find you guilty of murder! 20 years in the hoosegow for YOU! Now OFF with ye!”
Murderer: “But OJ Simpson got off for murder, why not me? We’re all equal, and need to be treated likewise!”
Judge and Jury: “Oh, yes, sure, we forgot about that! You’re free to go! Have a good life, and try not to murder too many people, please! Goodbye!”
Now WHERE does this line of thinking and acting lead to? Think REALLY-REALLY HARD now, please! What ABOUT OJ Simpson, now? Can we make progress towards peace & justice in this fashion?
Here's some Sqrlsy fun for everyone.
Sqrlsy endorses cannibalism:
SQRLSY One 29 mins ago
Flag Comment Mute User
GMO and-or cultured HUMAN meat, with the PRECISELY needed (already-built-in-by genetics) balance of amino acids! Even with NO killing of anything truly living or “human”, how many customers would go for it?
(I read of it in sci-fi in high school.)
On a related note, WHERE, evolution-wise, does it turn into cannibalism? If I eat a chimp? A Neanderthal? A Trumpanzee gone apeshit?"
Sqrlsy loves the Nazis:
"SQRLSY One
September.30.2020 at 12:53 pm
Yes! This FURTHER proves that Hitler was NOT a racist!
Since even Hitler wasn’t a racist, we can pretty firmly conclude that racism isn’t a “thing” at all!
SQRLSY One
November.1.2020 at 8:51 am
Here, this is a pretty good match! Every asshole is a good, right, and TRUE, benevolent asshole!
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/hitler
“My spirit will rise from the grave and the world will see I was right.”
― Adolf Hitler
SQRLSY One
November.15.2020 at 3:00 pm
Flute Police are authorized to use everything up to and including field artillery, and nuclear weapons, to enforce The LAW, dammit, citizen, so OBEY!
Unauthorized civilians are NOT allowed to play the WRONG kinds of flutes!!! Capisce?
https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/34787-germans-who-wish-to-use-firearms-should-join-the-ss
“Germans who wish to use cheap plastic lung flutes should join the SS or the SA — ordinary citizens don’t need these deadly lung flutes, as their having cheap plastic lung flutes doesn’t serve the State.”
― Heinrich Himmler
SQRLSY One
April.4.2022 at 8:14 pm
All Hail the book-burners! Sieg Heil!
SQRLSY One
November.9.2020 at 4:26 pm
Bimsday, 39 Bemberbember 2020 at 6:66 PM
I love to LIE my ass off, and suck Satan’s dick! Because I hate humanity! The Evil One is the Father of Lies, just as Der Fuhrer is the Stable Genius! So, as the apple falls not far from the tree, I INSIST on telling obvious lies, all day, every day! Butt… Surprise, surprise! Other Evil Ones Junior will fall for my lies… Because they want to!
SQRLSY One
December.2.2020 at 7:09 pm
Bimbosday, 43 Bimbobember 2020 at 6:66 PM
I lust after being abused by power-mad politicians, because I am power-mad myself! And I suffer under the utterly stupid illusion that power-mad politicians will feed me, like a doggy under the table, a wee few, tiny scraps of their vast powers. Biden came up here to Canoodlestanistanistanistanistan to noodle me and my poodle, and give me nookie, with my Wookie and my bookie, but all that Biden would do, is smell my hair! So I lust after Der Fuhrer to come up here and grab my pussy good and hard!
How's this front page article? https://libertariantranslator.wordpress.com/2016/11/16/worlds-greatest-persuader/
True Facts.
The vision quest or something like it has been a part of human culture for millennia. There is and has always been a lot more going on in the universe in which we find ourselves than we may want to acknowledge. Everybody at some point needs to shake off their demons or risk slipping into darkness. Of course if you take it too far you end up like Hank.
https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/constitution-transcript is a copy of the USA constitution… I say again, https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/constitution-transcript is a copy of the USA constitution…
OK, now I give up... Twat ARE the rules, anyway?
Trump was shot at again in Florida.
Even CNN begrudgingly admits it after media tried to claim the shooting was between two Randoms at the golf course.
Brian Stelter
@brianstelter
Breaking from
@KristenhCNN
and
@JohnMillerCNN
: "Officials believe the shots fired at Trump International Golf Club were intended for former President Donald Trump, according to sources familiar on the matter."
Brian Stelter
@brianstelter
·
43m
Miller: "The Secret Service identified the direction" of the shots "and returned fire at that gunman, who fled. Witnesses were able to provide a description of an individual and a vehicle. We are told that a vehicle that is close to that description has been stopped" by police.
https://x.com/brianstelter/status/1835396176344182896
We live in the "Never Trump Again" timeline.
Civil war 2 is imminent.
https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/trump-harris-election-09-15-24/index.html
Trump safe after gunfire at his Florida golf course
Was this Mike Pence ("Hang Mike Pence" they chanted, and Trump chimed in, agreeing) looking for revenge, pehaps? "Twat cums around, goes around", they say, and Karma happens, whether we like shit, or snot. For the record, I do NOT like, or approve of, political violence! Unlike Trump!
One FBI agent yelled “Hang Mike Pence”. Two of you have tried to shoot Trump.
Not same/same.
The entire WORLD lies to YOU, PervFectly Paranoid Wonder Child!
“Hang Mike Pence”!!! Dear Leader agrees!!!
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-defends-jan-6-rioters-hang-mike-pence-chant-newly-n1283798
Trump defends Jan. 6 rioters’ ‘hang Mike Pence’ chant in new audio
The audio captured part of an interview ABC News’ Jonathan Karl conducted with Trump at Mar-a-Lago in March for Karl’s upcoming book.
There's one video, with one guy chanting and the rest of the crowd ignoring him or telling him to fuck off. And funnily enough the FBI has never bothered to identify him. Imagine that?
Ray Epps all over again.
I have a feeling you Magats are all talk and you’ll puss out after the election when you realize how quickly and easy it will be for real Americans like me to annihilate you.
You sociopaths are out of control.
He’s the one threatening Civil War. I’m simply pointing out what will happen if his side does that.
We won’t make the same mistake we made with the Confederates.
He said “Civil war 2 is imminent”. It’s a warning, not a threat, you hysterical gimp.
Stop shooting at the opposition and trying to jail them and the threat level will go down. It’s that easy.
Your team is literally shooting at your enemies as you cry the other team is trying for civil war. What the actual fuck.
Yes you and Jesse are out of control. Apoplectic.
Sarc the crybully. Always the victim, never the perp.
Sarc's pals are shooting Trump and his supporters, but the real victim is Sarc.
Look at the angry Canadian, drunk on maple whine.
Boo! Ha ha.
You're projecting again buddy.
Boo!
Lol.
How drunk are you?
If I put an NRA sticker on my car I risk it being vandalized by some progressive fuckhead. If I don’t, because of the make, I risk being murdered by some deranged Trump supporter when the shooting starts.
*grudgingly digs out sticker*
“If I don’t, because of the make, I risk being murdered by some deranged Trump supporter when the shooting starts.”
MAGA shooting the town drunk for not having an NRA sticker on his Kia… In Maine.
Lol.
If anyone is going to bother shooting your worthless ass, it’ll be your daughter or your ex-wife’s boyfriend.
Someone shoots at Trump… again. “Help, I’m going to be bullied for hating Trump” cries Sarcasmic.
What’s the word for when a bully pretends he’s the victim?
He is a leftist piece of shit so fucking drunk all the time reality is his enemy.
Says this in a response to Trump being shot at… again.
You have real live TDS sarc.
Even in 2020 we had leftists shooting conservatives and running them down with cars. Yet you push the lefts narrative if Trump follower violence.
Better believe this is a bookmark.
That was a stanza in the Charlie Daniels song "Uneasy Rider!" He accused the Redneck with Green Teeth of pulling Wallace Stickers off of cars to gain time to make it back to his own car and git the hell outta Alabammy. The updated version featured Reagan stickers. It's on Youtube, ages well and describes Trumpanzee sockpuppets to a tee.
Thanks I’d never heard that before. You’re right, sounds just like the resident Trump defending idiots.
Poor sarc. Your team is 0-2. Go use your sorrows as an excuse right get wasted.
This is comically stupid.
Civil war 2 is imminent.
Hopefully it'll be better and more entertaining than the first movie.
Must be fake news. I tried to work through the logic:
1. Somebody shot at Trump.
2. People shoot at other people they hate.
3. The shooter hates Trump.
4. People who hate Trump are good people.
5. Good people are Democrats.
6. The shooter is a Democrat.
But then I think that Democrats don't support gun ownership and use (or so they told me), and I get confused.
It's amazing all the things you're allowed to do when you're one of the "good guys".
The only thing I saw that looked fake was a statement from Trump asking people not to go crazy with rumors before all the facts are in.
That’s the opposite of his typical MO.
What did Jen Psaki tell you?
I’ll let you know soon as your tired wife texts me and says you stopped beating her every night.
She's really tired of you spending all your time online without any friends, and then taking it out on her.
She wants you to find some real friends. But no one will tolerate you.
The story is starting to get legs. Looks like another actual assassination attempt. Trump must be stopped. By whatever means necessary.
No big deal. Shots fired near Trump, who had to cancel the rest of his golf outing as an unfortunate result.
Details are sketchy but as of now local cops reporting the arrest of a guy with a long gun aimed through a chain link fence a few hundred yards of Trump on the golf course.
Definitely just a lost hunter.
ABC News Whistleblower Affidavit alleging that Kamala Harris was given an unfair advantage in her debate with Donald Trump has been released
Pages 3 and 4
Don't worry. ABC denied it therefore it is a fact it didn't happen. Well if you're sarc. Just don't mention they denied it with Brazille/Hillary as well.
I learned from Sarcasmic today that there's no point in doing investigative journalism unless the government confirms the story first.
Dr Lawrence Kolb, authority on opiate addiction, published "Pleasure and Deterioration from Narcotic Addiction" revealed that normal people do not derive pleasure from opium or morphine. Pleasure is derived from opiates only by psychopaths: ... the intensity of pleasure produced by opiates is in direct proportion to the degree of psychopathy of the person who becomes an addict... Kolb's observations were experimentally confirmed by Dr Louis Lasagna at the Harvard Medical School in double-blind tests. Heroin and morphine were deemed unpleasant by 8 and 7 of 11 test subjects in two runs. (DeRopp, Drugs and The Mind 145-6) The addiction mechanism is that the body's dopamine-producing system atrophies as poppy alkaloids supplant it--hence the withdrawal sickness when that subsidy is discontinued.
Kolb's papers survive him online. Even without them, being dosed with medical opiates is basically a drag according to tests on U.S. subjects. Psychotics, however, often find narcotics and the Republican party seriously attractive--with Rush Limbaugh the poster child for those stuck on both. This second one does seem to have more sense than Limbaugh, and may someday recover from girl-bullying and racial collectivism.
Ya know Hank a lot of us like ate some acid back in the 70s and other shit that I’m pretty sure was LSD but with like organic labels like Mescaline. A lot of us woke up on Sunday and went like oh shit I gotta pay the rent and I should like probably go to work in the morning. And we like took a shower and drank like lots of coffee and shit. The exemptions to that universal law of survival were the trust fund babies who magically never had to worry about the rent. I can only assume that you are a member of that rarified group and had the resources to just circle down the drain into the madness where you now find yourself. A 21st century Raskalnikov surrounded by prohibitionists and girlbulliers and the Comstock Act. A wise man like maybe a poet or some shit once wrote time waits for no man. Honestly man I have a feeling that if we met and had a few beers together I’d walk away with a smile on my face. But I fear your time has run out. And I’m not far behind. Get some sun. Smell the sea and feel the sky. Right now you're just screaming at clouds.
Hanks tome ha NOT run out! He's super positive and has a bright future. He's certain 1975 is going to be the best year, ever. You just wait and see.
Why has the news media suddenly become interested in like a four moth old assassination attempt against Hitler?
Former Reason contributor Brendan O'Neill:
Because idiots like Jeff and sarc exist.
Hahaha. I saw a preview on YouTube for it. I might have to actually check it out now.
I can only imagine the varying layers of competing levels of cognitive dissonance that was going on in DiAngelo's head at that moment.
Which, of course, is what Walsh was trying to trigger.