Lex Fridman Podcast - #233 – Carl Hart: Heroin, Cocaine, MDMA, Alcohol & the Role of Drugs in Society
Episode Date: October 23, 2021Carl Hart is a psychologist at Columbia University. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - Ten Tho...usand: https://www.tenthousand.cc/ and use code LEX to get 15% off - Four Sigmatic: https://foursigmatic.com/lex and use code LexPod to get up to 60% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free EPISODE LINKS: Carl's Twitter: https://twitter.com/drcarlhart Carl's Website: https://drcarlhart.com Drug Use for Grown-Ups (book): https://amzn.to/3lVpq2Y PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:33) - The experience of drugs (18:38) - Drug use for grownups (24:21) - Studies on drugs (25:31) - Negative effects of drugs (30:59) - Should all drugs be legalized (36:27) - War on drugs: positive or negative (42:19) - Proper, positive, and misuse of drugs (46:40) - Recovery (53:34) - Drug depiction in movies (57:05) - How the study of drugs changed Carl (59:28) - Formative memories (1:03:57) - Greatest hip hop artist of all time (1:07:19) - What mind altering drugs teach us (1:11:26) - Advice for young people (1:13:31) - The meaning of life
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Carl Hart,
Department Chair and Professor Psychology at Columbia University.
He's the author of several books on the topic of drugs,
including his most recent, called drug use for grownups,
that challenges us to, quote,
use empirical evidence to guide public policy
even if it makes us uncomfortable.
His research on drugs, including hard drugs,
like heroin and cocaine,
challenges much of what we think we know about drugs and their role in society. His main
thesis is that drug addiction has less to do with the drugs themselves and more to do with
co-occurring psychiatric disorders such as depression and schizophrenia and socioeconomic factors, such as unemployment, under-employment,
and resource deprivation within the community.
In addition, he believes that we should legalize all drugs so that if people choose to use
them, they could do so responsibly and openly and get help if needed in a controlled, safe
environment.
His ideas are controversial, but are fundamentally grounded
in empirical data and rigorous scientific studies. I don't know if his conclusions are
right, but they are at least worth thinking about. So I ask that you consider these ideas
with an open mind, and as always, make sure you exercise your critical thinking skills in making decisions about substances you put in your body.
You are a free thinking being the main character, if you will, the hero in a story that's being written by you.
So at the end of the day, you are responsible for the choices you make.
So choose wisely.
And now a quick few seconds summary of the sponsors.
Check them out in the description.
It's the best way to support this podcast.
First is inside tracker, a service I use to track my biological data.
Second is 10,000.
The clothes I like to wear for lifting cardio and grappling.
Third is for sigmatic maker of delicious mushroom coffee and plant-based protein.
Fourth is ExpressVPN, the VPN I've been using for many years. So the choice is health,
fashion, coffee, or digital privacy. Choose wisely, my friends. And now onto the full ad reads,
as always, no ads in the middle. I do try to make these interesting, but if you skip them, please still check out the sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff.
Maybe you will too.
This show is brought to you by InsideTracker, a service I use to track bio data.
They have a bunch of plans, most of which include a blood test that gives you a lot of
information that you can then make decisions based on.
They have algorithms, machine learning algorithms that analyze your blood data, DNA data, and
fitness tracker data to provide you with a clear picture what's going on inside you,
and to offer you science-backed recommendations for positive diet and lifestyle changes.
Andrew Huberman, the great, the powerful Andrew Huberman,
talks a lot about it.
Davidson Claire, talks a lot about it.
These guys are brilliant.
They know what they're talking about.
They know what they're doing.
So tools like inside tracker that allows you to
ground your decisions in more and more data
that comes from your actual body,
the full rich range of biological data
that comes from your blood, and so on.
I think it's obvious that the decisions you make about your body should come from that
data.
I'm a big fan of theirs, not just for the actual implementation, but for the idea itself.
For a limited time, you can get 25% off the entire inside tracker store if you go to inside
tracker.com slash Lex.
That's inside tracker dot com slash Lex, that's inside track or dot com slash Lex.
This show is also brought to you by 10,000 maker of high quality,
well fitting, comfortable training clothes. I wore their foundation shorts for lifting and cardio
and I wore their fight shorts for training, jiu jitsu and grappling and I actually had
and grappling and actually had somebody a couple of days ago stop me and recognize the shorts
and ask me if I like wearing them like because they heard about 10,000 and they saw a bunch of people wearing them and how do they feel and I said they feel amazing. I was surprised they
recognized it because one of the things I like about 10,000 is, it's very kind of minimalistic, basic,
and they have a heart to see logo, to be honest.
And the fact that this person recognized the logo
and the look of the shorts was pretty cool.
It's honestly, for both, like I said, lifting a cardio
and for grappling for jiu-jitsu, all that kind of stuff,
it's my favorite close to wear.
Anyway, go to 10,000.cc and enter code Lex to receive 15% off your purchase.
That's 10,000.cc and enter code Lex.
This shows also brought to you by ForSigmatic, the maker of delicious mushroom coffee and plant-based protein.
The coffee doesn't taste like mushrooms,
in case you were wondering.
It tastes delicious.
I really enjoy it.
Drinking, forcing me out of coffee in the morning
is one of the sort of essential rituals in my life,
is both the warmth, the aroma,
the steam coming from the cup of coffee.
That's like a Pavlovian signal to my brain
that we're
gonna get some shit done now. Part of my French. Probably the most important moment of my
day or stretch of time in my day is the few hours in the morning where there's a quiet
deep focus. I try to make that about three, four hour session if I can. Get up to 40% off and free shipping
on Russian coffee bundles.
If you go to foursigmatic.com slash Lex,
that's foursigmatic.com slash Lex.
This shows also brought to you by ExpressVPN.
I've used them to protect my privacy
and the internet for many, many years.
It used to be a bright red button. It's more subtle now, but it brought me joy.
You press the button.
That's the only thing it does is all of a sudden it makes it appear to the rest of the internet
as if you're located somewhere else.
It adds that extra layer of protection between you and the ISPs who want to collect
as much data from you as possible, even when you're using
incognita mode and Chrome.
Yes, that still does not prevent from the ISPs
collecting your data.
Obviously, there's also useful aspects
to changing your location through the VPN.
So like if you're Netflix or any kind of other media service,
you can watch shows that are only available
to certain geographical locations.
And finally, in terms of implementation,
I love great design, I love great software,
and that's what ExpressVPN is, it's fast,
it works on any device, an operating system,
including Linux, my favorite operating system.
Anyway, go to expressvpn.com slash Lex pod
to get an extra three months free, that's expressvppm.com slash Lex pod to get an extra three months free. That's expressvpm.com slash Lex pod.
This is the Lex Friedman podcast and here is my conversation with Carl Hart. I think it is bold and powerful to admit to using in your private life the drugs that you
study in your research, including heroin and cocaine.
So let me ask, what is the experience of taking heroin like?
What happens to the body? What happens to the mind when you take it?
Well, you know, I take MDMA cannabis and all the rest of these drugs too. I've tried those drugs.
The experience in the body and the mind, I don't really know what people want to know in that
regard. It's like saying, what is the experience of having an orgasm in the body, in the mind,
or some other sort of event that you really enjoy?
So I don't really know what people say.
So what poetry is for for describing these kinds of experiences?
I mean, I guess given MDMA, given so aside, been in the full context of that, maybe it's more useful to say, what are the
differences in experiences that your mind goes through, like chemically, biologically,
so keeping it strictly to the sort of the biology of it versus the full environmental human
experience.
Yeah, see, this is a mistake that people make all the time.
They try to act as if biology is the only determinate of drug effects.
And that's just not how it works.
You need the environment.
You need the cage, as they say.
If you don't have the cage, you don't get the full extent of the effects.
And so, like, you can take MDMA and have an awful time.
You can have a time in which you get paranoid and so forth and
then you can take it that drug under the right conditions and it just be like one of the best moments you've ever had. It's certainly enhanced
a number of my relationships, but I've also had sometimes with MDMA that I haven't been so lovely when the people who you are hanging out with
You don't know them you're distrustful and all of those kind of things
So it's important to put context in it now
We can talk about drugs at a biochemical level at a biological level and we kind of do that in this country with this fascination with neuroscience and
That's an inappropriate kind of fascination the of fascination, the way we talk about it.
So we can talk about opioids, and then we can talk about endogenous opioids system in the
brain.
We can talk about dopamine and other sort of monolamine transmitters in it.
And what opioids are doing to them, and we can do the same thing with MDMA.
We won't be any closer to understanding the experience that it's induced by these
drugs.
Certainly the experience that we all seek, you know what I'm saying.
So getting a positive experience or getting a negative experience is strongly defined by
the environment.
Strongly dependent upon that vibe.
But the environment is a short word that can describe a lot of things.
So would you say the environment is important?
Are the people where you are currently in your life, or is it also dependent on the
full trajectory of your psychology, of your life experiences, of your parents, of the
people you came up with, of the trauma you've experienced, of the hopes and dreams that were a Christ or not, or the opposite
or the success levels, or all those things.
Like, what are the interesting sort of landscape of experiences that contribute to how you actually
feel when you take a drug?
Right on.
So all of those things are important.
But you know, like if someone had trauma in childhood and they did the work and they dealt with it,
that's not so important in this case.
But if they didn't deal with it and that trauma is being triggered in that event, in that
moment, then it's important.
But let's just take somebody like me.
I'm 54 years old.
I'll be 55 this month, actually. And, you know, I've
done a lot of work in terms of figuring out who I am. And I'm comfortable with myself.
And I know how to set limits for whatever it is I'm doing. And so I know I need to work
out. I know I need to eat well. I know I need to eat well, I know I need to sleep well, I
know I need to be in an environment with people within my trust.
And then if all of those things are met, it's likely to be a good time.
You know what I'm saying?
But if I haven't slept, if I haven't worked out, if I don't feel good, it won't be a good
time. But I try and be responsible and take care of my eating habits,
sleeping habits, make sure my responsibilities are taken care of.
And so when I'm in that moment, I just enjoy that moment.
I'm there.
I'm not thinking about a build that I didn't pay.
I'm not thinking about, oh, I forgot to do this for my kid. I'm not thinking about a build that I didn't pay. I'm not thinking about, oh, I forgot to do this for my kid.
I'm not thinking about that because all of those things are taking care.
If they're not taking care of, it will impact the experience.
And it may negatively impact the experience.
Well, that is the counterintuitive, even controversial finding from your recent book.
So we should kind of, I know it seems obvious to you,
but I think a lot of people here in this
will think it's quite non-obvious.
So in your new book, Drug Use for Grownups,
you write for the finding section.
I discovered that the predominant effects produced
by the drugs discussed in this book are positive.
It didn't matter whether the drug in questionless cannabis, cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine,
or psilocybin.
Overwhelmingly, consumers express feeling more altruistic, empathetic, euphoric, focused,
grateful, and tranquil.
They also experience enhanced social interactions, a great sense of purpose, meaning, and increased
sexual intimacy and performance.
This constellation of findings challenged my original beliefs
about drugs in their effects.
I had been indoctrinated to be biased
toward the negative effects of drug use.
But over the past two plus decades,
I had gained a deeper, more nuanced understanding.
These words are very counterintuitive to a lot of people.
I think like you also mentioned in the book
and elsewhere, you know, people have come around
to maybe psilocybin being once a drug,
maybe can was being once a drug,
but you also mentioned other drugs,
like cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine.
Can you just linger on this point?
How do we get the positive effects of those drugs and why in the media and the general conception
we have of these drugs is that they were going to make a bad life worse or ruin a good
life?
Well, so your first question was how do we harness the positive effects?
How do we
Increase the likelihood of getting the positive effects again? Like I said
We want to make sure that people are responsible and they've handled their responsibilities
Make sure they eat well sleep will exercise all of those sorts of things play an important role
And also if they know exactly what
they're getting and then they're not paranoid about, is something contaminated in some adult
or in my drug. So you want to make sure you know exactly what you have. Once you satisfy those
kind of things, you understand the dose and potency, you understand all of those things, to decrease
any sort of anxiety you might have
about the substance itself,
it increases the likelihood that you will have a better time.
So anxiety is the big one, you need to remove the anxiety.
Anxiety is critical, it's huge.
Many of the negative effects that we see with drugs
have to do with anxiety.
And not necessarily anxiety because the drug induced it.
It's the anxiety that the situation
induced a lot of times.
And then you ask, like, well, why does this sound counter
intuitive?
Why does the media report differently?
Well, because it's money in reporting
the negative effects almost exclusively,
think about writing a newspaper article.
It's really easy to get the population all gend up about something like an opioid crisis,
overdoses, and you don't even have to tell people how to keep people safe if you're talking
about overdose.
You don't even have to say why people are dying from overdoses.
Like overdoses in our country happen largely because people get contaminated drug because
people are combining sedatives and they don't know that this enhances the respiratory
depressing effects of drugs.
They don't know.
But when you read these newspaper articles, they don't say this.
They don't say how to keep people safe.
All they do is frighten the population.
There's money in there.
And then we think about people who write TV shows,
the people who write movies.
Most of the stuff written about drugs is just bullshit.
I think about, I love going to watch comedians.
And the comedians, when they talk about drugs.
Again, most of the things that they say about drugs is bullshit. I mean, you can say the stupidest
things about drugs and be believed you can write a movie and you don't even have to develop your
characters if you throw drugs into the mix. You say, oh, he's a drug dealer. You don't have to
say anything about that person's background or about that person being developed as a character
because the population think they know. And writer is lazy and does not do any sort of development.
Just think about any... Oh, let's think about the sopranos, for example.
You know, they have a new program coming out,
so let's think about them for a second.
The sopranos is a show in which the lead character, Tony,
kills people for a living.
That's what he does, right?
This character actually made a sympathetic for him when he is besmirching and
denigrating his nephew Christopher for using a drug and we feel sympathy for Tony,
the character, who just killed somebody, who is a horrible person but being a
drug user is a worse person
uh... if that's what the show wants us to believe tony's a racist
uh... murderer all of these things but we feel sympathy for him but we don't feel
sympathy for anyone who uses drugs
that's some crazy shit i mean in the american public buys into it
that is that's wild to me and that we all bought into this crap.
And that's what we do in damn it, everything that's in film, on television, and it's like,
what's wrong with you people?
So why are there not more stories of grownups using drugs, the full spectrum of drugs that we're talking about.
Why isn't there?
So we talked offline about Joe Rogan.
He's somebody who started smoking weed later in life, which is an interesting story.
Like when he's already very successful, and he has a very interesting way of describing
his experience with weed that it was like enhancing their productivity.
It actually, I think he says like, it increases anxiety a little bit
in a way that was productive,
like paranoia and not anxiety.
And so that's an interesting story of an adult
talking about the use of lead for productivity purposes.
But you don't get those stories very often, why?
I think fear people are afraid that they will be belittled, dismissed all of these things.
That's a drug addict or some negative thing.
But cannabis is lightweight.
Come on.
You can emit cannabis these days.
And the fact that I don't know when Joe started.
But if he did start later in life, that's cool.
I mean, you are mature, developed. You have developed some
responsibility skills, all of these kind of things. This is a good thing. You don't want people to
engage in any kind of behaviors when they're young and immature that might put them in harm's way. And so we want people to be developed at least. I mean, whether it's
being in a relationship with a partner, or whether it's driving an automobile, all of these things
that can be potentially harmful, but extremely beneficial. If you are responsible enough to handle them,
extremely beneficial if you are responsible enough to handle them. You want people to be mature, so that's good thing.
So, how are you supposed to, like somebody like me, somebody like Joe,
how are you supposed to understand what the dangers are, what the negative effects are?
So you said automobile relationships. I think I have a reasonably, it's crappy,
but reasonable understanding of all the trouble that I can get have a reasonably, it's crappy, but reasonable understanding of all the trouble
that I can get with in relationships.
And what things to avoid, same thing with driving a car.
I have no idea.
I'm in the dark in terms of what are the things to be careful
about what to avoid, what drug use,
when we're talking about the heavy drugs.
Have you ever drank alcohol?
Yes, I'm Russian.
I know, I drink a lot.
But I understand that because culture like came up, I was taught a lot of like, this
is what you don't do, and this is what you do.
This is when you drink a lot.
I mean, you see the effects, you see that there's a lot of negative examples, there's positive examples of social stimulant, there's examples of great artists using alcohol to sort of, I don't
know, to help be the catalyst for that magic moment for, you know, all of that. I don't,
I have some examples now, especially in America, the same with weed, More and more, you're starting to get a lot of stories of psychedelics
of different kinds. There's, so, Sibin, where you have mushrooms or even MGMA used sort
of positively, there's kind of like negative stories in the past about acid, about LSD being
used. Ultimately, for productive, like, for productive ends, but it destroyed the person.
That's kind of how the story goes.
It was like a trade-off.
You take, it's like, what is it, Robert Johnson, Soul of the Soul to the devil, to learn
guitar?
It's a trade-off.
You could take the drug, you could create some good stuff, but you don't have to pay for
it.
Those are the stories.
That's some bullshit we tell children.
Come on. That's some bullshit we tell children. Come on.
That's exactly right.
You're exactly right.
These fairy tales, these cautionary tales
that we tell people, we have to grow up.
That's what the book is about.
Drug use for grownups.
You know, we tell people, Pinocchio,
if you lie, your nose grow.
Who believes that?
Who believes that there are fairy tales? but that's exactly what these stories are.
They're in the same vein as those kind of stories as Pinocchio.
You know, like you said, when you were learning about alcohol, you were told what to do,
what not to do so far.
The same can be true with MDMA, with cocaine, with heroin.
The same is true because there are sometimes when you,
there are some potential dangers that you should avoid.
And I wrote about some of them.
Certainly in my work just throughout all of my writings,
we, I talk about those kind of things
and other people talk about these things.
The problem is, is that we're getting our education from bullshit sources, from people
who believe in this kind of panochial thing.
And it just does not fit with the evidence and the evidence.
We all publish in a scientific literature.
All these things that I'm saying,
it's there in a literature.
I mean, I can place like Columbia,
we give these drugs, thousands of doses every year.
Do you think we would be doing this?
And we do this with research grants
that's funded by the public taxpayer dollars.
Do you think we would be allowed to do this if these
drugs were so dangerous? It's just nonsense. I mean, and the drugs we're talking about,
they are all approved for medical use somewhere in the world.
And the studies you conduct are basically asking what kinds of questions.
So you take the full range of drugs you're talking about from marijuana, this all-sib into
MDMA, to cocaine and heroin.
What is the study looking at?
Like what the actual experience with the positive and negative effects of the experience
on the drug are in the control conditions?
Yeah.
So, these kind of experiments would alcohol, nicotine, all these drugs, in order to have
an empirical database to tell people exactly what these drugs do and what they don't do.
The conditions under which the drugs will produce positive effects, the conditions under
which the drugs were more likely to produce negative effects.
All of this information is important for a society to know, and we do know. And that's why we're
collecting the data. We're collecting the data to help us with treatment if someone is having
problems with these data. Hopefully, we'll understand more about how to help them deal with their problems based
on some of the research that we're doing.
So what kind of negative effects that we're looking out for?
What are the properties of drugs we should be careful about?
Is it addictive properties?
How addictive it is?
How destructive or painful whatever the withdrawal processes, what kind of things are we looking
out for?
Yeah, those are certain kind of questions we certainly have asked because something like
cryocaine versus alcohol or heroin when it comes to withdrawal of physical dependence.
Cocaine has a very limited sort of withdrawal symptoms.
I mean, it's hard to see. Same is true with methamphetamine, but with heroin, you certainly can see
a withdrawal syndrome that's unpleasant, that's unpleasant. But what alcohol that withdrawal
can actually kill you. So heroin is unpleasant and not lovely, but what alcohol withdrawal,
that's the one.
That's the most dangerous.
I mean, all of these kind of questions we want to know answers to.
And so when we think about heroin or some other drugs, and you say, like, what kind of negative
effects, negative effects, we don't talk about much in the society.
The main thing that really concerns me about heroin use really is constipation.
So if people are using heroin on a regular basis and then they have a sort of slowing up their
gut modility, they're likely to increase constipation. And that's not good. I mean for your general
health, but we never talk about that in this society.
And that's probably the most important thing
aside from the fact that people get contaminated street
drugs and that sort of stuff and increase the likelihood
of maybe dying from some contaminant or people
who are inexperienced in their mixing heroin
with other sedatives, that's not good.
But the constipation
is a huge one.
And then other sort of drugs, negative effects, like the infetimines, all of the infetimines,
they disrupt sleep, food intake, all of these things are so critical for sustaining human
life.
But we never talk about that because it's not as sexy as it is nonsense that people
write about.
Like addiction, addiction has almost nothing to do with the drugs themselves.
And I make that comment because the vast majority of users for any drug never become addicted.
And so if the vast majority of users don't become addicted, then you have to move beyond the drug
when you're talking about the phenomena
interest, in this case, addiction.
And so when we think about addiction,
it has much more to do with our psychosocial environment
than the drug itself.
But that's not sexy.
So addiction is even the property of the environment,
not a property of a result of the environment.
It certainly can be. There are people who are suffering from a co-occurring mental illness,
like depression, anxiety. I mean, that's within the person, of course, and that increases the
likelihood for addiction. So that could, that's not so much the environment, but there are people who,
for example, they have chronic, unrealistic
expectations heaped on them.
Those people are more likely to have some problems with drugs.
There are people who are just immature, not developed, haven't developed responsibility
skills.
They are likely to have some problems if they engage in some of these behaviors.
There are people who lost their jobs, COVID, factories went away, a wide range of things,
and those people used to have standing in their community.
Now they have none. Those people might be susceptible to having a drug related problem
if they indulge. All of these kind of issues are far more important
than the drug itself.
And so they could seek escape in a particular drug.
I mean, there is a biochemical thing to each of these drugs
and some pull you in harder than others
when you need to escape, right?
When you're not doing well in life.
What evidence you have for that, Bullshit?
I don't know.
Yeah, because there is none.
That is absolutely none.
I mean, people say stuff like that. And then that's the problem. That's precisely the problem.
See, I'm operating from limited personal evidence. Well, this is a problem, though, but we have
a scientific database. Yeah. We don't need personal evidence for this. We have in my book,
I try to go through some of the science so people could understand
and it's like, when you have a math problem, you don't want people saying, well, you know, I feel like this.
Fuck what you feel. What does the data say?
So one of the problems with the data, so one data is the studies that you're doing.
It's an excellent research work, but there's some of the drugs are illegal.
Yes.
And some are legal.
So you have just,
it's unfortunate that some of the drugs are illegal
or whatever you believe,
but there's not enough of a data set of public
and the open use that's like,
you have in the wild data set.
It'd be nice to do thousands of people
and see from all the different kinds of environments
and all that kind of stuff to get an understanding.
I think we have a substantial, a substantial database,
but people just ignore it, got it.
That said, let me ask you the question of legalization.
So should in your view all drugs be legalized?
The drugs that people seek certainly should be legally
regulated and available to adults.
So when I say the drugs people seek like cannabis,
MDMA, cocaine, heroin,
those drugs certainly should be available.
And some of the psychedelics that people seek.
Now, the thing about it is that some people think that,
oh, we'll be a free fall.
These drugs are available to everyone.
That's not true.
I mean, it will be, there will be age requirements
and maybe other requirements, but they should be available.
And we should also do like, well, we do it alcohol. We can put
enough alcohol in a bottle to kill you, but we don't. So we regulate it such that the amount
that's in the bottle enhances the safety, minimizes the potential harms. We can do the same thing
with these other drugs. And we can also say, okay, we won't be selling
intravenous preparations of any of these drugs.
These drugs that the routes of administration
will be oral and I don't know, let's say intranasal.
Again, routes of administration, the dose
that you have in each unit, all can minimize
harm based on how you do these things.
And we can do that.
We have the technology.
We have to know how.
So, you're actually making me think about alcohol a little bit.
So if I were, say, the drugs become legalized in the way you're describing, and me, Lex,
wanted to, as an adult, explore some of these drugs, what are some
procedures, do you think, for sort of safe, positive exploration of those drugs?
The reason I say I'm thinking about alcohol, because I don't think, besides not putting
enough alcohol in a bottle to kill you, I don't think anyone ever gave me specific instructions.
I think it's kind of water mouth and examples
of people doing the wrong thing.
You kind of get it through osmosis that way.
Yeah.
Is that basically what we would do?
This kind of free exploration of use.
No, we have to change our education about these things.
I mean, let's just take a drug like cocaine.
Cocaine's a stimulant.
You want to make sure people understand that they shouldn't be taking cocaine here
at bedtime. And you know, they need to get a certain amount of hours of sleep. And they need to
get up in the morning. Cocaine probably isn't a drug for you at night, certainly not. Certainly not
inphetamine, that night for most people. And also, if you want to make
sure that you, they need to understand that cocaine can also disrupt your food intake, not as much
as the inphetamines, but all of these kind of things people need to know so they can have proper
nutrition and they can time their drug use around these other important functions that's the saying human life.
So we have to make sure that we educate people.
We can't just throw people in a while.
That's stupid.
I got to tell you, I mean, for me, even given your book, and for people who are saying
to this, it's still tough to hear that the thing we should be concerned about
with cocaine is the same as with caffeine.
Don't take it before bed.
And the thing we should be concerned with,
heroin is constipation.
Yeah.
Okay.
But the questions that keep wanting to ask you, I should be asking the same things of alcohol.
But when you're not doing well psychologically, when the ways you describe, when the environment
is not right, there's some aspect in which saying that drugs can be used responsibly and effectively and mostly positive can give those folks a pass
to use it instead of working on themselves
and fixing their environment first.
I don't know, what do you want me to say to that?
I mean, they have access to alcohol,
they have access to do.
You know, we live in this country called the United States
where our declaration of independence says that
We are free to live like we want to live so long as we don't
disrupt other people from doing the same
But it's remarkable to me how we try to control the behaviors of other people. That's just
remarkable. Yeah, and
That's partial what your book is about. I mean, it's not just a
ball drug. It's about freedom. That's the bigger issue that we can't get to. It's like this issue
of freedom and freedom comes with a tremendous amount of responsibility. I am responsible for
my neighbors, my brothers. I mean, I can't impede their freedoms. Like some people think that their freedom supersedes
everybody else's freedoms, no.
And that's what I'm trying to remind people in this book.
I am responsible to you as a citizen.
And we're in this together.
And I tried to make that point in the book.
And people have conveniently ignored things like that.
Do you think the war on drugs has done more positive or negative for the world?
It depends on which world you live in. The war on drugs has been hugely beneficial
to law enforcement, to the media, to people who make bullshit TV shows, the sopranos, the wire, all of those shows,
they benefit from this kind of nonsense.
Who else have benefited?
People who provide treatment, many of them benefit
from the one drugs, the folks who do urine testing for drugs, they've all benefited them, making
mad money, people who run prisons, the phone companies who
charge to prisoners, the people who run the hotels that are
around the prisons, where people's family have to come and
stay to restaurants, they're making out like bandits.
But many of us are getting screwed
as a society in general, we're getting screwed.
But there are people who are just benefiting handsomely.
That's why it continues.
Politicians benefit.
I mean, whether you're Democrat or Republican,
you have the same stance on drugs anyway.
So they all benefit from this.
So many questions I want to ask you, because you're challenging a lot of beliefs that people
have about drugs, about society in general.
So it's difficult for me to ask the right questions here.
If you could, if you were with a sort of a snap of a finger, changed the world. What from a policy perspective,
would you, and from just the, I don't know, human to human perspective, what would you like
to see in the United States of America in terms of that fixes some of the problems we're
discussing here?
First of all, we wouldn't be arresting anybody for drugs anymore. That will go away.
The folks who are in prison for drugs, that will go away. Their records would be
as sponge, that would just go away. And then we work on a system to make sure that
responsible adults can legally obtain these substances. and we will have a corresponding educational system to teach people how to do this
That's where I would start initially
Yeah, the the arresting for drug use or anything drug related is absurd
Especially in the context of how the structure of alcohol is and tobacco
Alcohol can be destructive to some people, but alcohol also is a usually beneficial drug
to be honest, which I couldn't have gotten through.
Many of the sort of receptions and functions I had to go through as the chair of the department
without alcohol.
You have a line I really liked.
The vast amount of predictably favorable drug effects and treat me so much
so that I expanded my own drug use to take advantage of the wide array of beneficial
outcome specific drugs can offer.
The part that entertained me was this to put this in personal terms.
My position as department chairman from 2016 to 2019 was far more detrimental to my health
than my drug use ever was. I mean, there is a
standard of treating drugs, certain kinds of drugs that's completely different in a
standard of treating everything else in our lives. Yeah, I mean, it's almost difficult
to snap out of it, as I'm listening to you and reading your work. It's difficult because it's like, why is everybody living this idea that certain drugs are so
horribly destructive and others are not?
And we just kind of fix that idea.
And then there's this narrative.
I hate to be so cynical to think that there's just like a system that just propagates narratives.
I always kind of think that truth wins out.
And the truth is the best narrative.
I believe that too.
Obviously, that's why I'm out here and putting my subjecting myself to this sort of criticism
and so forth, but because I believe that truth ultimately wins out, but I might be wrong.
But I have to live my life like it's true.
Otherwise, then I have no hope.
And then why be here?
Well, kind of if you can steal man
or at least show respect to criticism,
you've, I'm sure received quite a bit of criticism
for your work.
I've heard quite a bit of BS criticism,
sort of ignorance, stuff that don't actually pay attention to your work. I've heard quite a bit of BS criticism sort of ignorance stuff that don't actually pay attention to your work.
But is there some Syria like is there some pushback that makes you think twice?
People say like I'm presenting a too rosy picture of drugs, you know like I don't want to do that
or I don't want people to think that I'm not aware
of the potential negative effects of any activity,
including drug use.
And so I do acknowledge that there are potential harms
associated with drugs.
I acknowledge that in the book.
But the fact remains, the beneficial effects
far outweigh the potential harmful effects.
And we have technology information to help people to minimize the likelihood of negative
effects, but this sort of approach that we have where we say we're only exclusively
presenting the harmful effects.
And that should make people keep people safe.
I just have a problem with
that. But I certainly, I take the point that people say there are negative effects. Absolutely,
I absolutely agree.
What do you, if I can just talk about specific drugs, what's the difference in opioids and benzoes, for example, specifically, I mean, these are drugs
that you often read about being misused at scale. I mean, the misuse is the problem, right?
No matter what the drug is. And that's actually what you're pushing for is education, and
it should be legal, and should be good. So people should know what's the difference in proper use, positive use and misuse.
I mean, one public figure who's been going through this is Jordan Peterson.
He's been public about his struggle of getting off Benzl's, the withdrawal he's going through.
I mean, what are your thoughts about the misuse of benzoyles or opioids
and so on? The epidemic that people talk about?
Yeah, I don't know Jordan's specific case, but certainly with benzodiazepines in general,
we talked about withdrawal earlier. When I said that alcohol withdrawal, you can die.
So benzos and alcohol, they're closely related. So, binzo withdrawal, too, can kill
you, just like alcohol. So, when we think about the effects that the binodazapines produce, think
about the effects that alcohol produce. They're comparable or similar. And so, I know that it's a
difficult one to wean yourself off if you develop the dependence, but we have protocols for that.
And I hope he's okay.
Since you see we have protocols for that,
but for my understanding was that
like the protocols aren't standardized,
it feels like a lot of doctors aren't as helpful
as they could be in this process.
Like it's a bit of a mess.
Certainly we withdraw.
They're more standardized than anything.
So like if someone is going through alcohol withdrawal, there is a standard
protocol that most physicians in this business, they follow the same is true
with binzo withdrawal. But the thing where we get murky is when they're
treating addiction itself. So when you're thinking about the substance use disorder in the DSM, not just withdrawal,
but the entire addiction, that's where you have this sort of divergence or diversity,
diversity in terms of approaches.
And many of those approaches are rubbish.
What can you just elaborate, like technically what the term addiction means that you're
referring to?
When I use the term addiction, I'm referring to the diagnostics statistical manual of the
American Psychiatric Association number five now, the DSM five.
That's never been wrong, right?
Oh, I'm just kidding. I'm just kidding. Absolutely. That's never been wrong, right? I'm just kidding.
Absolutely. That's a definitely as well taken. And your point is that their definition of substance use
disorder, that's addiction, that's what I'm talking about. But that definition continues to evolve.
And so you're right. They still are working it out. We get new information from scientific studies and so forth.
And so it's supposed to be incorporated into the DSM.
But there are some problems with the DSM.
Like for example, they also have this sort of once
an addict, always an addict thing.
And there's no evidence to support that.
But it's evolving and it's the
definition that people in science and medicine use. And so we all know we're talking about
the same language when we call someone, let's substance use this ordered patient or someone
who meets criteria for addiction. We all are speaking the same language. We're not saying
that simply because this person
used heroin, they are an addict.
That's not what we're saying.
You have to meet these criteria
where you have disruptions in your psychosocial functioning.
That's one and two, you the person are distressed
by these disruptions.
So people have to meet those two basic criteria before we say they are addicted.
So once an addict, always an addict, this idea. So I've, I mean, some of it is always mapped to
the person, all right, but just the people I've interacted with who have struggled with alcohol
addiction, I don't know what the proper term is. who have struggled with alcohol addiction, I don't
know what the proper term is, it seems like with alcohol anonymous, the process of putting
that addiction behind you is a very, very long process. It's surprisingly long to me.
That almost seems like a whole life. Like, it's not always in addict, but it takes decades. It seems like,
what is that? What can you maybe just, from your understanding as a scientist, from your
understanding as a human who studies human nature, why does it take so long to treat,
to deal with that addiction? Well, you cited alcohol anonymous, right?
And so I don't think of alcohol anonymous
as like a treatment that I was in any relative to,
you know, like for a drug-related problem.
You know, I think alcohol anonymous AA is really good
for social interactions,
making sure people have a social group
and they have peers.
I mean, that's a good thing.
We all need that social interaction.
But I don't think they know much about drugs.
That's not, it's like saying,
well, you know, my uncle broke his knee
and he has his support group and they said this.
And then we follow that.
That doesn't make any sense.
But in our society, judges, even since it's people to go to AA, are you kidding me?
But that's the kind of thing that has been allowed to happen in this society
because we think of drugs as this moral failing,
or drug addiction as this moral failing.
And any idiot can provide treatment
and no disrespect to AA,
because I think what they do is a lot more
than what some people do,
because at least they have the social interactions,
you have a social group. That's better than what a lot of these other idiots out here do.
Well, in that social support group, unrelated to the drug, it helps cure some of the
environment issues you might be in. That's the whole point. So we kind of couple the drug to the environment
but the reality is, as you argue,
most of the problems come from the environment.
Certainly with people who are experiencing
drug related problems with most of the people,
not all but most.
There are differences like that psychedelics
and like psilocybin has versus alcohol.
I personally think, I've enjoyed both experiences
in different ways.
Is it possible, or is this,
are we getting into the realm of poetry?
To describe the benefits, like how it alters the,
how the different drugs alter the mind
and the places it can take you that produce a positive
experience. Yeah, no, it's very real, you know, like some drugs take people in places that other
drugs can. And that's that's very real. I have friends, some of them you know, they,
they, for example, say that they've never had an experience like the one
they had with ayahuasca and they've done a number of sort of things.
But they did the ayahuasca in a setting with a shaman and this group and they felt like they actually began to heal or solve some problems that they
were trying to solve for some years. And that's great. That's great for them. And nothing else
does it for them like that. And that's absolutely fantastic. All I argue is that
All I argue is that if that kind of thing happens for you with Ayahuasca, with Silasayb and with some other psychedelic, why isn't it possible that heroin does that for someone
or cocaine does that for someone else or MDMA does it for someone?
That's it. That's interesting to imagine like a shaman for heroin like why not and
Or cocaine use like creating an environment for yourself for you so these different substances and that environment has a
there's a very
Strong impact on the actual experience that you have but I mean so
cocaine is an upper and then, the way we defend drugs like uppers and downers, that's a really kind of inappropriate
way, but it's a quick way. But so we certainly say cocaine is an upper or stimulant. But
you know, it depends on the activity of the person before they
take the drug. Say like if you're like really active before taking a drug like, okay,
it might actually calm you. So it all depends on the activity of the person before they
take the drug.
I remember, I don't know if you know Matthew Johnson is, of course, he did all these studies
on, or I remember just reading a paper paper I didn't get a chance to talk
with him much about it but it was about condom use and cocaine and then you know what like the
doses and whether people are more or less likely like the unsafe thing there is the using or not
using or not using I guess condoms during sexual intercourse.
I don't know, I just, I love that these drugs that have connotation probably because of Hollywood,
negative connotations are actually being studied by science, and the actual impact they have,
and what are the negative effects?
Again, in those studies often, the positive effects are difficult to quantify, I think, maybe I guess you can
from self-report and so on.
But other effects are not difficult to quantify.
You ask people about their euphoria, you can see how well people are getting along, like
in our studies that we have people sometimes in groups and you see how well they get along
on the various drug conditions or placebo conditions.
It's really, it's not that difficult.
And then you can see these amazing studies
with like Rick Doblin, like looking at MDMA
and combined with therapy,
like how you can overcome certain PTSD things or depression, so on. Yeah, it's
really interesting. It's really interesting. I gotta ask you because you mentioned the wire.
Do you think the wire, you think movies like transporting, do you think they're ultimately
distra- because okay. Yes, they celebrate murder, right? The godfather a little bit.
Yes, they celebrate murder, right? The Godfather a little bit.
Yeah, but
Another one. I mean, it's like these races as motherfuckers and
They also are killing people, but yet they say we don't do drugs. What kind of shit is that? I mean people who are doing drugs
Siliciting or whatever
The thing is we're trying to be better people
and trying to make our society better
and you're killing people and you are denigrating people
for using drug, are you fucking kidding me?
And we let them get away with that as a society.
Do you see those movies, I apologize if I'm not
sufficiently informed, you see them as denigrating drugs?
Of course, I mean, Godfather.
Yes, that's right.
That's a good example.
And the Godfather, the sopranos, is all about that.
I mean, Christopher is using heroin in the sopranos
and they have an intervention in one season
and they are denigrating him.
Are you kidding me?
You just cut somebody head off.
Yeah, but they're, to be fair,
they were denigrating, I think, all drugs.
And then they're drinking alcohol in the butter bean.
Yeah, yeah.
Come on.
I mean, first of all, they're killing people.
Yeah.
They don't have any space, none,
to denigrate somebody who's just trying to alter their consciousness.
Are you kidding me? And not bothering anyone else.
But you know there's a lot of other mob movies that you know Scarface
celebrates the murder and the drugs equally. So I mean it doesn't it celebrates
all of the just not just drugs or so on.
All those movies you know I loved all those movies I'm from Miami. it celebrates all of the just not just drugs or so on.
It's all those movies.
You know, I loved all those movies.
I'm from Miami.
I love Scarface.
I even like the sopranos that I started looking at that shit
with a critical eye and see what is doing.
But Scarface is dependent upon the American viewer.
Having a certain view
of people who deal in drugs.
And that view is that these people are animals, basically.
And in the end, the animal kills himself
with too much cocaine and he was hide.
And that's what they show.
And so it's like, what the fuck?
So it's leveraging his playing into
not the better angels of our nature.
The question, don't take away these great movies for me.
But it's true, you have to think about them
critically in the cotton.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
I like these movies, it's not in a matter of taking them away.
It's a matter of making the writers be more honest
to the reality.
That's it.
That's true.
That's really true.
And the writers, the people, the culture, all of it.
I mean, they write these things.
I just think about some hip hop artists
they say, this is real.
This is my experience and so forth.
And that's how these movie writers
they write this bullshit and then say, well, this is
real.
Anyway, I get so upset talking about it because I know the harm it's doing.
And I know those kind of movies are the reason that we have this war on drugs.
And all of these people are going to jail because of those kind of movies.
In the epilogue of your book, you quote James Baldwin, you cannot know, you will discover on the journey,
what you will do with, what you find,
or what you find will do to you.
So let me ask, how has drug use
or the study of drugs changed you as a human being?
It just helped me think about other people's experience, right?
So how other, how we're all connected, like going to Northern
Ireland, I don't know if you know much about the situation
with the troubles and what those people went through.
And so I see people there, Northern Ireland, by the way,
is all white.
And you see those people there, suffering for the same reasons that people
in Appalachian are suffering for.
Neglected by politicians who told them
they lies about drugs and not dealing with the real problems,
like West Virginia, for example,
their waters polluted, the factories have gone away,
people are desperate,
and they're blaming drugs.
Are you kidding me?
So the politicians don't have to bring back the job.
So we don't have to really make sure
that you have clean drinking water,
things of that nature.
And so those people are connected to the people
in Northern Ireland.
They're connected to the people in Brown'sville.
They're connected to the people in other places in They're connected to the people in Brown'sville. They're connected to the people in other places
in the United States for the same reason.
They're connected to the people in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Same thing, people are catching hell for the same reason
in the Philippines for the same reason.
And that's why I feel so strongly about this thing,
because I know there are people getting paid,
and their paycheck is predicated on
subjugating and the suffering of those other people.
So when we hear about the destructive effects of drugs,
it's essentially a scapegoat for the failures of leaders and politicians to help alleviate
the suffering of people in those communities.
Absolutely.
It's so easy to say, I'm going to rid your community of drugs.
I'm going to put more cops on the street.
If you want a problem, not to be solved, just give it to the military or the cops.
You had a tough childhood growing up in Miami, like you said.
What memory stands out in particular that was formative and helping make you the man you are?
That's so hard to say, you know, my grandmother was really important.
So maybe just her trying to make sure that I think critically.
I guess that's the biggest one.
So you moved in with her, your parents split?
Six, seven, yeah.
What have you learned about life from her?
Be self-sufficient, be critical and keep your eyes open
and watch out for the oaky-dok.
You know, and that's what this whole drug thing is about.
It's the oaky-dok people.
It really boils down to just simple thing.
We're all similar and that we're all just trying to live our life,
trying to take care of our kids.
We want the best for our kids, all of us.
But yet, somehow, we've been made
to believe that we are different in that way.
But fundamentally, we're all the same.
So when people are seeking to feel pleasure,
to feel better, to feel better.
Why don't we celebrate that?
Instead, we denigrate people for that.
I mean, if I feel better,
I'm more likely to treat you well.
I gotta say, still though,
you're going against the grain and you're a Columbia.
It takes a lot of guts to sort of speak out about these ideas so boldly.
I don't know how to ask this question.
Where do you find the guts?
What?
Because it's also perhaps inspirational to others in different disciplines
that are sort of taken on the conventional wisdom of the day and
Challenging it. What does it take to do that? What advice would you give to others?
Like you kind of a little bit afraid to do so once you know you cannot not know as they say and so I have to look in a mirror and
Then looking in a mirror, I have to face myself. I have, I lived honestly.
And if I can't face myself, then what am I doing here?
You know, that's how I see it.
One of the things that people don't really talk about
with drugs and people who die from some drug related death.
And I've been thinking about this a whole lot
over the past couple of years.
It's like some of these drugs can take you
to a place where you feel so optimistic
and positive about humans, I fell all humans.
And you want to do your best to contribute.
And because you know the possibilities
of what we can be as a society.
And then you come up with resistance
and you like you say, there's a lot of resistance
and people just have a hard time.
And so if you know humans can be better
and they refuse to be better, why be here as someone who knows that we can do this better?
I certainly don't want to do it the way we're doing it.
So you kind of see drugs as mechanisms for potentially elevating the human spirit, sort
of making people feel better. So you want to communicate that message. So it's that plus
The fact that drugs are used escape go to
To not alleviate the suffering of certain communities. So those two things
Coppians want to read one of the sort of main points of the book too was to try and get people to understand
We wanted to sort of main points of the book too, was to try and get people to understand the possibilities that we could have if we embraced certain drug use.
If we allowed adults to do this sort of thing, relationships can be better. Why range of beneficial effects people would be or can learn to be more
magnanimous. All of these prosocial things that we say we value.
In your previous book, High Price, you talk about rap and DJing, chapter five. There's a
nice picture of you DJing from 1983. So let me ask who in your
view, this is the toughest question of this interview, is the greatest hip hop artist
of all time, maybe give some candidates?
Oh, wow. Who is the greatest hip hop artist? You know, I don't know if I'm qualified to
make that back because you know, I have to go back to like Gil Scott Heron, you know,
like people think of him as one of the fathers of hip hop.
That's my all time favorite, you know, and people like Chuck D from Public Enemy, some
of the things that they were doing, I was really digging, but even though I was digging like public enemy,
but even they got it wrong on drugs. Even Gil Scott Haring got it wrong on drugs, but
they were doing so much other good stuff. It helped me to develop as a person. And so I think like my son is a hip-hop artist now.
I think those folks who are in the game now, they might be, they are a lot more qualified
to talk about who's the greatest hip-hop artist.
I'm not qualified.
The evolution, I mean, have you tracked the evolution from sort of the 90s with Wu Tang
and Tupac and Biggie and then to
What we have today, so there's just been a crazy amount of progress. It's like almost difficult to track
Yeah, I mean, I really love what they're doing. I like what they accept the part where
They get over 40 and they become fucking cops on TV. I mean other than that. I dig what's that about?
Yeah, I don't understand that, you know,
but that's what they do.
Again, those, this sort of glorification of cops,
that's dangerous for a society.
And those cats who do that kind of thing,
you know, I have a problem with that.
Is it all sort of to push back a little bit
because I come from the Soviet Union where there's a huge amount of corruption and when I see what's going on with cops
in this country, there's a lot of proper criticism you can apply but like relative to other places,
this is well, and on so many ways this country is incredible. Is your criticism towards cops or towards what cops are asked to do?
Yeah, towards what cops are asked to do.
Cops provide the shield for politician and those in power.
Absolutely, because I was in the military.
I spent four years in the military and I did what I was told to do and I was ignorant
and thought I was doing the right thing.
And I, what I was told to do, and so just like these guys are doing what they're told to do,
but no, my real beef is with the power structure, the folks who are telling them what to do.
And also, the folks who go play cops on television,
those the folks who go play cops on television, that imagery, that sort of glorifying cops, that's a problem in a democracy.
Yeah, all sides of the glorification of the drug war is a problem.
Yeah.
If I can just linger on a little longer in terms of the effects of drugs on the positive,
like mind-expanding components of it.
What have mind-altering drugs teach you about the human mind, sort of from a neuroscience,
not even like a biochemical, but just like the human mind is amazing, right?
The places it can go.
Like are there some insights you've learned
from studying drugs about the mind?
Yeah, can I start from a neurochemical perspective first
and then we'll go larger?
Just from a neurochemical perspective.
I mean, everything I know about the brain,
I learn through drugs, you know,
because of my interest in
drugs. So I learned a lot about dopamine neurons and certain regions of the brain, about neuropecinephrine
neurons, and a wide range of other sort of how our neural transmission happened because of drugs.
And so that's a really valuable tool, lessons for me. But then when we think that we
move out a bit and we think more globally,
what have I learned in terms of the my, drugs, I have really learned how to be more forgiving
of people and myself and tolerant, more tolerant of people and certainly learned a lot more about empathy as a result of
drug use
And like I said earlier
I'm learning what we can be as a species and it's quite incredible
But because of drugs.
Yeah, there's a certain property of drugs in different ways. They take you out of your body like
they help you evaluate yourself from like a third person perspective. It's almost like you have a consciousness in here and you get the step outside of it a little bit. I mean, that's kind of
what meditation does to all of these processes, sort of a hell of a good work
I'll just do. It makes you evaluate yourself and that somehow
that allows you to be forgiving to yourself and forgiving to
others. So empathize. It trains that part of your brain, so
stepping outside of yourself, not taking yourself too seriously
that that process and different drugs do that in different ways
Obviously, I don't know from personal experience on some of them, but I
Mean I'm now curious, you know, it it it it's unfortunate that the
Hollywood and different stories we have
Demonized certain drugs and sort of basically I I don't know, make it difficult for people
like me to explore those ideas, but then I'm really thankful for people like you who are
pushing the size forward and are unafraid to talk about this kind of stuff.
Because I'm really fascinated with consciousness, on the engineering side, I really want to
build robots that have elements of intelligence, emotion, even consciousness.
For that, we need to understand it in ourselves.
Drugs are all the different kinds of drugs if you safely
seem like an incredible tool to understand ourselves.
If we're limiting ourselves from certain drugs because of certain political games that
are being played, it's sad.
People know this. A lot of middle to upper And people know this.
A lot of middle to upper class people know this.
The illicit drug trade business is a multi-million dollar industry,
multi-billion dollar industry.
That could not be supported by people who are poor.
And so, and that has to be supported by a lot of customers.
And a lot of people around the world know this.
They're in the closet.
And in the book, I call for them to get out of the closet.
So we can start being more honest, and we can take the pressure off of those people who
are not as privileged.
Like I said, your brave, your bold, I got to ask you for some advice. What advice would you give to a young person today? High school?
Maybe undergrad and college
thinking about their career
Thinking about how to live a life that can be proud of. Yeah, whatever career they choose
Just make sure that they dedicate themselves to and be the best at what they do. First,
that's what you have to do first. Like people see me advocating for this position.
30 years of science is in these opinions, this view. And trust me, I would be dismissed if I didn't
know my shit, if I was not. Yeah, you did the work, you proved yourself, you're legit and by the people in the eyes of the
people who know. Absolutely. So that's the main thing that I would encourage people to do,
really know your craft. If you know your craft, and then maybe you will be a service to your fellow citizens.
There are so many people out here faking the phone
and they don't know their craft
and they're not a service to the people
that they claim to serve.
And that's a problem.
And when you have a fairer number of people
like that in positions of power,
your society is going to crumble.
What about the scientific path?
You recommend people get a PhD?
Not necessarily.
You know, like my own children,
I don't recommend that.
So science can,
certainly my science can be a bit very petty
sort of space to be in.
But it was the only sort of path that I had. And so I had to do it.
But I would really encourage people to just do something that they enjoy and something that makes them
happy because the greater number of happy people in our society, the better off we all are.
All right, since you mentioned happiness, got to ask you about the pursuit of happiness and
the ridiculous question about meaning. Do you think this life has meaning? What do you think is the
meaning of life? I'm sorry. I certainly hope it has meaning.
I mean, I'm certainly trying to live my life.
Like it has meaning.
You know, I really love my life now.
I just got back from Geneva.
I spent the summer abroad and in Europe
and trying to be in a more civilized place
where you can enjoy yourself as an responsible adult, and then it allowed me
to decompress and then come back here.
The thing about coming back here is that
you have to be ready to fight,
and I don't wanna fight anymore.
I just wanna be able to help a society and people.
And so I'll have to keep a place in Europe
to go and decompress and then come back
to be able to tolerate this situation.
So life for me has a lot of meaning.
I'm enjoying life.
This is like the greatest, the best part of my life ever right now at this moment.
It's just a joy, but you also enjoy the fight a little bit or?
No. I don't really talk to that.
You know, it's like, why?
You're trying to, I'm trying to help people to see
how they can be happy.
And then people are fighting me on that.
I don't wanna be happy.
I wanna be ignorant.
Leave me alone.
That's what people are saying.
Well, so what is the source of joy for you when you decompress?
MDMA is a source.
You know, in a place where you don't have to worry
about laws, that's like Europe.
You can feel really free.
Yeah.
Heroine can even be a nice space if I'm in my own head,
but with others in DMA is great. So good friends,
good food. Usually. Yeah, that family love. Yeah, that's right.
Carl, you're an incredible human being. You really make me think everyone listens to
this. I mean, I'm really glad you exist.
I know you say you don't like the fight,
but I'm really glad you're fighting the fight,
because it's going to help a lot of people.
It's going to help at the very least,
help a lot of people think and challenge the conventions of the day.
And maybe challenge them to find joy.
I really appreciate you spending your valuable time with me.
This was an awesome conversation.
Thank you so much for talking to me.
Thank you for having me, man.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Carl Hart.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors
in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Frank Zappa.
A drug is not bad.
A drug is a chemical compound.
The problem comes in when people who take drugs
treat them like a license to behave like an asshole. Thank you for listening and hope
to see you next time. Thank you.