Science

DARPA wants benefits of psychedelics but without hallucinations

Since the Pentagon doesn’t want its soldiers tripping in their tents, DARPA wants to develop a drug that has similar benefits to those of psychedelics, just without the lizard people showing up.

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is launching a new drug program for treating with soldiers with PTSD, depression, anxiety, and drug addiction, and it is drawing inspiration from psychedelic research.

On Wednesday DARPA announced the launch of the Focused Pharma program for veterans, which “seeks to revolutionize mental healthcare by developing completely new psychotherapeutic drugs to quickly remedy prevalent neuropsychiatric conditions such as post-traumatic stress, depression, anxiety, and substance abuse.”

“The envisioned drugs would selectively target and bind to specific neurotransmitter receptors, and activate only specific neural signaling pathways that may impact the conditions of interest”

Remedies for all of the conditions DARPA lists are currently being explored by research into psychedelics such as psilocybin, DMT, LSD, MDMA, and iboga, among other entheogens.

Read More: Researching ‘shrooms’: The magic tripping dose, mystical experiences and the tech community

DARPA acknowledges that it looked into Schedule I drugs in preparation of the Focused Pharma program, but concluded that soldiers having full-blown hallucinations would not be the desired outcome.

“Because such drugs act on many neurotransmitter receptors and receptor subtypes in the brain without specificity and indiscriminately activate numerous signaling pathways, they produce significant side effects, including hallucination (emphasis mine).

“These effects, coupled with their unpredictable consequences, render the drugs unusable in a military healthcare setting.”

Johns Hopkins University is at the forefront of research into psilocybin — the active hallucinogen found in certain mushroom genera Psilocybe, Panaeolus, Pluteus, Gymnopilus, and others.

Research suggests that psilocybin can elicit mystical experiences in the user, and it is shown to drastically help with drug addiction, PTSD, and getting over the fear of death, among many other ailments.

“DARPA has scheduled a review at the mid-point of the program to validate the hypothesis that the efficacy of these drugs can be de-coupled from side effects, and will terminate the effort if research does not support that hypothesis”

“In creating Focused Pharma, DARPA examined evidence from privately funded human clinical studies demonstrating that certain Schedule 1 controlled drugs that engage serotonin receptors show promise of rapid and long-lasting therapeutic effect in treating neuropsychiatric conditions such as chronic alcohol dependence, post-traumatic stress, and treatment-resistant depression following only limited doses.”

In other words, DARPA is looking to psychopharmacology to try to come up with a drug that has the benefits of psychedelics, but one that doesn’t have its soldiers wondering why the walls are breathing.

“The envisioned drugs would selectively target and bind to specific neurotransmitter receptors, and activate only specific neural signaling pathways that may impact the conditions of interest.”

As a recovering alcoholic myself, and as someone who has taken psilocybin over 50 times and has researched the subject in-depth, I don’t believe you can take a short-cut to recovery (although some would call any drug a short-cut).

The journey, in my opinion, is what is needed in order for the healing to begin. The hallucinations are a necessary part of the experience as they show you exactly what you need, not what you want.

Hallucinations make you feel. They unearth things that were buried, and they shine an incredible light upon that which slept in darkness. Past traumas can be revisited in a safe environment, triggering the healing process.

“DARPA has scheduled a review at the mid-point of the program to validate the hypothesis that the efficacy of these drugs can be de-coupled from side effects, and will terminate the effort if research does not support that hypothesis.”

That says it right there. DARPA wants the benefits of psychedelics without having the “side effects.” What they call side effects, I call medicine, and I don’t believe you can separate the two.

However, MDMA, the active ingredient in ecstasy, can elicit very positive effects without hallucinations. It will be interesting where DARPA’s research program will lead to, and whether these drugs will become clinically or commercially available in the future.

“Focused Pharma will not include human clinical trials, but at the end of the scheduled four-year program researchers must have an Investigational New Drug application ready for submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.”

Drug addiction among veterans is not a new phenomenon. Soldiers from the American Civil War in the 1800s were addicted to morphine. Cocaine was then prescribed, and they became addicted to that as well.

Read More: Can cannabis help tackle the opioid epidemic?

Heroin was a big problem among vets in Vietnam, and today the opiate crisis is reaching fever pitch.

Psychedelics offer a way to confront these addictions head-on, but are not a universal fix-all. The user has to be an active participant in their own healing.

Taking away the hallucinogenic aspect, in my opinion, not only deprives the user of a journey that is essential to healing, but I believe if soldiers were to have so-called mystical experiences, many would choose to put down their weapons right then and there, never to take them up again.

A military cannot function if its soldiers realize they are one with the enemy.

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

  • Interesting article but you misuse the word illicit, it should be elicit! The experiences were perfectly legitimate not illicit at all!

  • What DARPA wants and what makes sense are two different things. Basically they are interested in abusing these substances for war so they would like to remove any aspects of the experience that might lead to peace. It's that old military industrial complex tune, "Make war not peace."

  • What DARPA wants is not bad because they just want to make sure that this psychedelic won't be abuse by the user. They just want to use the medical benefits of this psychedelic drugs but not the hallucinogenic effects. Nothing is wrong with that.

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