-
Pentagon chief refuses to rule out 'boots on ground' in Iran
-
Saudi military raises readiness levels after attacks
-
Iran war spreads with strikes across Middle East and beyond
-
Barca must 'make the impossible possible': coach Flick on Atletico cup challenge
-
Furry, frayed & freezing on Milan catwalks: the fashion trends
-
Amsterdam's Rijksmuseum discovers new Rembrandt
-
Olympic comeback queen Brignone ends ski season
-
Key Gulf air hubs caught up in Iran conflict
-
South Korea outclass Iran in Asian Women's Cup opener
-
Liverpool's Slot says his 'football heart' does not like set-piece trend
-
Israel aims fresh attack at Tehran: latest developments in US-Iran war
-
Energy prices soar, stock markets slide on Iran war fallout
-
'No indication' Iran nuclear installations hit: IAEA
-
Showdown looms between Tesla and German union
-
Israel vows intensified attacks: latest developments in US-Iran war
-
France arrests activists blocking ship over alleged Russia uranium links
-
Tech sovereignty and AI networks set to dominate mobile meet
-
Indian police clash with pro-Khamenei protesters in Kashmir
-
Israel targets Hezbollah, Iran: latest developments in US-Iran war
-
Canada and India strike agreements on rare earth, uranium
-
A rough guide to F1 rule changes for 2026
-
At least 25 killed at Pakistan's pro-Iran weekend protests
-
Israel kills 31 in Lebanon, vows to expand strikes after Hezbollah fire
-
Myanmar grants amnesty to over 7,000 convicted of 'terrorist group' support
-
Riyadh's King Fahd stadium to host 2027 Asian Cup final
-
'Superman Sanju' toast of India after T20 World Cup heroics
-
Travel chaos, but F1 season-opener in Australia 'ready to go'
-
Lunar New Year heartache for Chinese team at Women's Asian Cup
-
El Nino may return in 2026 and make planet even hotter
-
Somaliland's Israel deal could put Berbera port at risk
-
Texas primaries launch midterm battle with Trump agenda at stake
-
How a Syrian refugee chef met Britain's King Charles
-
Bangladesh tackle gender barriers to reach Women's Asian Cup
-
Argentina's Milei says wants US 'strategic alliance' to be state policy
-
'Sinners' wins top prize at Screen Actors Guild awards
-
New rules, same old suspects as F1 revs up for 2026 season
-
World Cup tickets: Huge demand and sky-high prices
-
List of key Actor Award winners
-
Trump hunkers down after Iran strikes
-
China's leaders gather for key strategy session as challenges grow
-
UK toughens asylum rules to discourage migration
-
Israel hits Lebanon after Hezbollah fire, expanding Iran war
-
CBS in turmoil as US media feels pressure under Trump
-
Messi bags double as Miami battle back to down Orlando
-
Greenland is 'open for business' -- kind of, says business leader
-
Canada's Carney to mend rift, boost trade as he meets India's Modi
-
Crude soars, stocks drop after US strikes on Iran
-
Iran war spreads across region as US, Israel suffer losses
-
Miriam Margolyes tackles aging in Oscar-nominated short
-
Recognition, not competition, for Oscar-nominated foreign filmmakers
Legalizing magic mushrooms under Trump? Psychedelic fans remain skeptical
Dressed in a floral shawl, Benji Dezaval carefully places hallucinogenic mushrooms on the tongues of the faithful of his Colorado "psychedelic church," as if they were communion wafers.
A fervent advocate of psychedelic therapies, Dezaval believes these fungi can help fight depression, alcoholism and post-traumatic stress.
So in theory, he might be expected to welcome the appointment of Donald Trump's new Health Secretary, Robert Kennedy Jr -- a famously contrarian figure who has expressed enthusiasm for exploring these alternative treatments.
But Dezaval instead dismisses Kennedy's supposed interest as "a lot of lip service."
"RFK's history of misinformation, I believe, will hurt our movement more than help it," he said, using a popular nickname for Kennedy.
"If misinformation was a disease, he'd be patient zero."
A nephew of the late US president John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy Jr is well-known for embracing conspiracy theories.
The former environmental lawyer has amplified discredited research linking vaccinations to autism, claimed Covid-19 was "ethnically targeted" to spare Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese people, and alleged that HIV does not cause AIDS.
None of which prevented his confirmation as health secretary last month by the Republican-controlled US Senate.
A strong critic of the pharmaceutical industry, the former Democrat also advocates the legalization of psychedelics.
"My inclination would be to make this available, at least in therapeutic settings and maybe more generally, but in ways that would discourage the corporate control and exploitation of it," he said in a late 2023 interview.
- 'Eye-opening experience' -
Long associated with hippie counter-culture, magic mushrooms remain illegal in much of the United States.
But in recent years, major US universities and the government have revived research into their active ingredient, psilocybin.
It shows promising potential for treatment of certain forms of depression and addiction. But the consequences of chronic use are still poorly understood.
Without waiting for federal law against them to change, the western states Oregon and Colorado have legalized the use of hallucinogenic mushrooms. Across the country a handful of cities that include Washington DC have decriminalized them.
Dezaval, a 38-year-old resident of Colorado Springs, leapt at the chance. He founded a "church" in the basement of his home.
Surrounded by plastic plants and wearing circular blue sunglasses, Dezaval distributes magic mushrooms during group and individual sessions that he supervises.
He says he has received well over 1,000 people in the past year.
Many of them take tiny doses -- enough to provoke fits of laughter, and a slight distortion of the senses, without dissociating their mind from their bodies.
For Luna Valentine, a depressed transgender woman, this was enough to change her life.
After a decade of ineffective antidepressants, she tried mushrooms last June. Thanks to psilocybin, which she now "micro-doses" every other day, Valentine has regained the motivation to take care of herself and get back to work.
Taking mushrooms was an "eye-opening experience," said the 28-year-old. "They've helped more than any of the pharmaceuticals."
- 'Broken clock' -
Colorado law still does not allow the free purchase of psychedelic mushrooms.
They must instead be ingested under the supervision of a licensed "facilitator," at a designated center. The first of these are scheduled to officially open this summer.
Already up-and-running in Oregon, this model involves extensive training and licensing fees. As a result, sessions can cost up to $3,000.
Dezaval rejects this system. He distributes his mushrooms for free, financing their cultivation with donations from his community. The decision to found a "church" allows him to comply with the law, which authorizes their use in "spiritual ceremonies."
"This is free because it needs to be, because people are dying every day... The acceptable number of suicides is zero. This is how we fix that," he said.
Dezaval hopes that his work will help to expel some of the sinister connotations that psychedelics retain in broader American culture.
For this reason, Kennedy's arrival in government is far from helpful, he says.
"A broken clock is still right twice a day," says Dezaval, who is saddened that Kennedy's positive position on psychedelics may be drowned out by the rest of his untruths.
"I would not expect somebody to look at what he's saying and to treat it with the actual respect that it deserves," he says.
O.M.Souza--AMWN