
In June 1971, Nixon officially declared a ‘War on Drugs’, telling Congress that drug abuse had become a “national emergency” and that it was “public enemy number one”. Prior to this, he signed into law the Controlled Substances Act (1970). The classic psychedelics – mescaline, psilocybin, LSD, and DMT – became Schedule I drugs. This meant they were viewed as having a high potential for abuse and no established medical value.
In the mid-60s, research on psychedelics slowed, and in the late 60s, it ground to a near halt. After the Controlled Substances Act came into force, studying psychedelics became even more difficult, due to the restrictions and hurdles involved in gaining approval to research Schedule I substances. These regulatory hurdles persist to this day, given that psychedelics remain Schedule I drugs in the US and are similarly classified in other countries.
But since the War on Drugs began in the early 70s, it may seem like drug prohibition was not a relevant factor in the slowing and halting of psychedelic research. However, before 1970, psychedelics were not just being increasingly demonised (as a result of widespread recreational use, the counterculture movement, drug casualties, and media scare stories); they were also being criminalised. For example, on 30 May 1966, the governors of Nevada and California each signed bills that outlawed the manufacture, sale, and possession of LSD. Other US states soon followed with similar bans. In 1968, psychedelics such as psilocybin and LSD were made federally illegal. This was based on the government’s belief, contrary to the evidence available at the time, that these substances were highly dangerous to society.
These policy changes, and the attitudes that influenced them, help to explain why researchers took less interest in – and received less funding for – the study of psychedelics. Some also challenge a common narrative about the primary reason behind psychedelic prohibition itself. For instance, in a 2021 paper, Conrad Sproul argues against:
the dominant theory – that American prohibition of psychedelics was the result of a “moral panic” sparked by media sensationalism … although a moral panic did occur, the primary cause of psychedelic criminalization was not the panic. Instead, it was neo-Puritan, anti-drug cultural norms, combined with a series of developments in the psychiatric community, that persuaded lawmakers to criminalize psychedelics.
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Imagine how much more advanced we would be if progress wasn’t halted…
Wow cool!