American Thought Leaders - Alex Berenson: What Teens Should Know About Cannabis and THC

Episode Date: January 2, 2026

Former New York Times reporter and now independent journalist Alex Berenson is the author of “Tell Your Children: The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence.”In this episode, we dive ...into the debate around cannabis and THC and President Donald Trump’s recent executive order directing the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to reclassify marijuana from a Schedule I to a Schedule III drug.Berenson argues that it’s a bad move. Schedule I substances are defined as having high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use. Schedule III substances, in contrast, have medical uses and are regarded as having only moderate to low potential for abuse.Rescheduling marijuana sends the wrong signal, Berenson says: “Do we want to be a society that, in general, encourages drug use?”He believes the use of drugs should be stigmatized, including the use of marijuana: “In the U.S. we can’t stigmatize. And not to stigmatize in this case, as in so many cases, means we can’t be honest.”In my interview with Berenson, he provides an overview of the dangers of marijuana use and why these have increased dramatically over the last half-century.“Fifty years ago, cannabis that was in a joint that you smoked at Woodstock ... that might have been 1 or 2 percent THC, so a few milligrams of cannabis in a joint. ... When I was growing up in the ‘80s or in the ’90s, it might have been 5 percent THC. Now, if you go into a dispensary ... the bud tender will sell you a product that is 20 percent to 30 percent THC, if it’s flower cannabis,” he said.And if it’s not smoked but vaped, then “that might be 95 percent THC. This is not a plant at all. It’s just a chemical to get you high,” Berenson said. “Now you can walk around with this little device and inhale massive amounts of THC, and that really is a change that has made the product a lot more dangerous.”There is also a well-established link, Berenson says, between high-potency, frequent marijuana use, and severe mental health impacts such as psychosis and schizophrenia.There’s even research suggesting THC causes heart damage. “There is a link to myocardial infarction, heart attacks, and that link is pretty strong. You can find papers that show a 3x increase over a multi-year period,” he said.But what about its benefits as a pain reliever? Berenson said that he was surprised to discover that placebo-controlled studies showed only small and short-term pain relief effects.“What cannabis and THC are really good at is enhancing sensation ... but if you’re in pain, in the long run, enhancing sensation actually is not a good thing for you. ... And so the idea that cannabis is a substitute or a way out of our opioid problem is just not true,” Berenson said.“We as a society have to ... be honest with ourselves about what we are doing and what we are encouraging kids to do,” he said.In our wide-ranging interview, we also discuss the overprescription crisis in America, the dangers of SSRIs, psychedelics, and stimulants such as Adderall that around 10 percent of teenage boys are taking in the United States, and his thoughts on vaccine policy in America.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The reason cannabis should have remained in Schedule 1 is that it's a smoked product. And that can't be a medicine. So this argument about descheduling, to me, should have started and ended there. And unfortunately, it did not. Journalist Alex Berenson is a former New York Times reporter and author of, Tell Your Children, The Truth About Marijuana, Mental Illness, and Violence. There's a lot of scientific evidence that cannabis, especially when kids or young adults, they use it in its current high potency form,
Starting point is 00:00:32 can have really severe mental health impacts. He raises concerns about links to behavior typically associated with cannabis use. For whatever reason, in states that have legalized, they see a lot of high speed car accidents with cannabis. Berenson critiques America's over-dependence on drugs and the long-term consequences of what he calls drugs of abuse. Unfortunately, society sometimes we look for a quick fix.
Starting point is 00:00:58 We, as a society, have to be honest with ourselves about what we are doing and what we are encouraging kids to do. And when we say don't stigmatize drug use, why wouldn't we want to stigmatize drug use? Why wouldn't we want to stigmatize THHCUs? This is American Thought Leaders. And I'm Yanya Kellogg. Alex Berensen, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders. Yeah, so good to be here. So something remarkable happened the other day.
Starting point is 00:01:28 President Trump signed an executive order moving marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule 3. I don't think most people even understand the significance of this. Some people say it means nothing. Others say it's the legalizing of marijuana. It's neither of those. What's the truth? Well, the truth is that it's something that the industry really wanted, the cannabis industry, because it's going to increase their profits a lot. And you can tell this because in the days after the rumor that this was actually going to happen became public, the stocks of cannabis companies, big weed, as I sometimes call it, went way up. This will give the industry more access to the financial system and it will increase the industry's profits by enabling
Starting point is 00:02:12 to deduct some taxes. As a practical matter, that's really what it does. Okay. The President Trump said the other day, well, this will improve medical research and make it possible for more research on cannabis. That's very unlikely for a couple reasons. First of all, there has been a lot of research on the potential medical properties of cannabis and THC, which is the chemical in cannabis that gets people high, and a chemical called CBD, which does not get people high, but is also in cannabis. And unfortunately, for the most part, those studies, when they're done and done well do not show much impact for cannabis on most of the things it's supposed to help, much less things like cancer. And if you actually think about it, that that's totally reasonable because why would
Starting point is 00:02:58 we think one plant is some magic cure for everything? That's not how medicine works. It's not how our bodies work. It's not how science works. Cannabis and DHC are really good at doing one thing, getting people high. That's what they're good at. And when they're tested, you know, against other conditions, they generally don't work very well. And do you mean like treating those conditions or the pain reduction around those conditions? I mean, I mean both, actually. So this is, this was surprising even to me. Seven years ago, I wrote a book called Tell Your Children. Tell your children, when it came out was controversial, the core thesis, I'd say it's gotten
Starting point is 00:03:34 less controversial over that time, but the core thesis of it was, look, there's a lot of scientific evidence that cannabis, especially when kids or young adults use it, and especially when they use it in its current high potency form, and they use a lot of it, can have really severe mental health impacts. And specifically, heavy use can cause a condition. called psychosis. Psychosis is a break from reality. You know, literally people will wind up in the emergency room thinking, you know, that their families are going to do terrible things to them or that the cop who's driven by once
Starting point is 00:04:06 in the last hours actually had to get them, whatever it might be. And so I would say that when I wrote, Tell Your Children, that thesis was debated in the scientific community. I think in the seven years since we've gotten even more evidence that it is correct and and I think even people who would who are in the industry would acknowledge that there's a risk okay but to go back to your initial question which was about pain and pain relief I was very surprised to find that when cannabis and THC have been studied in placebo controlled studies meaning uh uh you test uh where you give one person THC uh and you give another person you know just a pill that or a you know a pill that contains nothing
Starting point is 00:04:53 or they smoke a joint that actually has no THC in it, you don't find lasting effects of pain relief from cannabis. I think the reason for that is that what cannabis is really good at, what THC is really good at is enhancing sensation. So people, you know, they want to use it when they're having a meal, when they're listening to music, maybe if they're, you know, having sex. Those things it can enhance the sensation of. But if you're in pain, in the long run, enhancing sensation actually is not a good thing for you.
Starting point is 00:05:27 And so ultimately, when cannabis has been tested this way, they find, doctors find that it doesn't have a very good lasting impact on pain. And there was a really good study a few years ago in Australia where people who used for a long period of time actually were used more opioids than people who didn't use cannabis. And so the idea that cannabis is a substitute or a way out of our opioid problem, is just not true. And I really can't emphasize that enough because it's been sold this way to people. And I, you know, I think President Trump, you know, when I, when I listened to his press conference the other day, I think there's part of him that means well about this. I mean, he doesn't use drugs. And I think he had a lot of people kind of yapping at him about this who do use cannabis and who like it and who want fewer restrictions on it. But ultimately, he made a mistake. Correct me if I'm wrong here. But practically what this says is that
Starting point is 00:06:21 marijuana is not as dangerous as something like heroin or these, you know, methamphetamine, whatever, like these, again, Schedule 1 chemicals, and that it opens up the door for a little more research potentially. That's kind of what I... That's the way it's being framed. Okay. So here's what you need to know about Schedule 1. The reason a drug gets put in Schedule 1 actually is apart from its dangers, whether it has any medical use. So, for example, fentanyl is in Schedule. 2. Well, heroin is in Schedule 1. Why is fentanyl in Schedule 2? Because fentanyl is actually used to treat severe pain. You know, if you come out of a surgery where they've just, you know, amputated your leg or whatever, you need fentanyl. Okay. So it has a medical use. The reason cannabis should have remained in Schedule 1, and they could have, for example, they could have done something that I don't know if legally could have, but a better move would have been to create something let's call it Schedule 1R to allow more research on cannabis. The
Starting point is 00:07:21 reason cannabis should have remained in schedule one is that it's a smoked product okay and that can't be a medicine tobacco not a medicine can't even though there might be compounds in tobacco that are actually you know improved brain function or whatever right you if you have to smoke it it should be a schedule one now THC maybe you could say okay schedule two schedule three so this argument about descheduling, to me, should have started and ended there. And unfortunately, it did not. Now, am I going to tell you that cannabis is as dangerous as heroin or cocaine? Of course not. It's not nearly as dangerous as those things. The question is, and I think we really, as a society have gotten, you know, particularly in the United States, have gotten lost about this.
Starting point is 00:08:08 Do we want to encourage or discourage drug use broadly? And I'm talking about, I'm talking about alcohol. I'm talking about drugs that are sold illegally. I'm talking about drugs that are medically prescribed. And I think we have made a huge blunder in encouraging the use of drugs of abuse, whether, again, whether that, and that could be something like Adderall. Okay, Adderall is a drug we give to kids, to children, and we say they have ADHD, which frankly is a condition that I think everyone in the world now has, who has a phone, and we give them Adderal. What is Adderall? It's essentially amphetamine. Amphetamine is an addictive and dangerous drug, and we should not be encouraging doctors to prescribe that to children. We should, if we, if what we believe
Starting point is 00:08:56 about cannabis is, hey, you know, it's not that dangerous. Maybe, you know, alcohol is legal, cannabis should be legal. Then let's legalize it on that basis. I don't agree. But that would be an intellectually honest way to do this. What we, what we did recently, what we did with the descheduling, say, this is medicine and we need to research it more. And to me, that's just further going down the road of confusing people about what this is. Fascinating. But I do want to talk a bit more about Adderall. It's very interesting.
Starting point is 00:09:24 But before we go there, I've had a number of people over the years on the show and discussing about how marijuana has changed over the last 30 years or so, okay? And specifically, that they've been making much more concentrated variants, and that's often what's sold. So what 30 years ago might not have caused psychosis very often, if ever, today it's like a whole different game just because of the raw concentration. Can you frame that for me a little bit? I mean, that's absolutely correct. So 50 years ago, cannabis that you, you know, that was in a joint that you smoked at Woodstock or whatever, that might have been one or two percent THC. So a few milligrams of cannabis in a, in a joint. Okay. When I was growing up, you know, in the 80s or the, or, you know,
Starting point is 00:10:11 in the 90s, it might have been 5% THC. Now, if you go into a dispensary, dispensary, there are stores, okay, the bud tender will sell you a product that is 20 to 30% THC if it's flour cannabis. So 20 times as much THC in this one joint as there was. But that isn't even the real problem. The real problem is you can also, it's not even smoking, it's inhaling from a vape that might be 95% THC. This is not a plan at all.
Starting point is 00:10:42 It's just a chemical to get you high. And so, look, 50 years ago, if you wanted to get enough THC into your body to really get high and potentially get psychotic, you'd just smoke a lot. Okay? You had to use a bong. Otherwise, you're going to irritate your throat. You know, you kind of had to smoke all day. Now you can walk around with this little device and inhale massive amounts of THC.
Starting point is 00:11:06 And that really is a change. that has made the product a lot more dangerous. Okay, so just this is interesting because on the one hand, so now these vape products, but that you would probably say, right, that that's not really marijuana now. That's just, so that could actually be a schedule two or schedule three, right? Because it's THC mostly and not marijuana. I mean, so it could be a schedule three or two to the extent that it has a medical use.
Starting point is 00:11:34 So in other words, if we found that THC in its pure form actually, treated condition X or Y, we could approve it for that. I think it's fair to say that 99.99% of the cannabis consumed in the United, or THC consumed in the United States, is not for that condition. So this, again, is a little bit of a red herring. What I'm saying is that we as a society have to, like, be honest with ourselves about what we are doing and what we are encouraging kids to do. And when we say don't stigmatize drug use, why wouldn't we want to stigmatize drug use? Why wouldn't we want to stigmatize THC use? And by the way, alcohol too. Okay, listen, I drink, okay, but am I going to claim that alcohol can't be problematic for people?
Starting point is 00:12:19 No, of course it can be. Should we have, you know, spirits advertising on television? I don't think so. I think that was a mistake. You know, the First Amendment may require it. Maybe there's a way we can dial it back. But, but, you know, should we have higher taxes on alcohol? Sure. Like, this is about all drugs. way we think about them. Something really struck me by, it's really this discussion, right? The discussion is, should we ever encourage drug use? Because this is something that I'm seeing not just in, you know, illicit drug use. I've just started covering, for example, the mental health space quite a bit more.
Starting point is 00:12:57 And I'm shocked, for example, to discover that, you know, chemical imbalance hypothesis of mental illness is just false. There's literally no evidence for it. Like, who would have guessed? We all, like, we all kind of believe that. We've all come to believe that, right? And that, so therefore, a drug can be a solution. Now, it's sort of unclear how much of a solution these drugs are, but in many cases, these SSRIs are not even different from placebo in terms of fact, plus having side effects on top of it, right? So, SSRIs are an interesting discussion and debate. I mean, I think that SSRIs get a bad rap, uh, because, because you're right. There's not, the trials that were done on them for the most part were pretty short-term. And definitely there are people who, when they try to get off them, have problems getting off them.
Starting point is 00:13:51 I would not classify SSRIs as drugs of abuse because they don't produce a subjective high and they don't have street value. And to me, that's a pretty easy way to figure out what drugs are drugs of abuse. Nobody really wants to take Prozac. You know, they'll take it and if they're depressed and they may get some benefit from it. And you're right. They might also get benefit just from going outside, from exercising, from doing non-drug things. But I do think the SSRI debate is off, at least from my point of view, to one side of this. Okay, that's that's interesting because now you're saying there's drugs of abuse and then there's drugs that are of.
Starting point is 00:14:31 They are essentially that have medical value that people aren't taking to get high. Well, or maybe there's a third category that don't have medical value, but people aren't taking to get high. Right? I mean, unfortunately, there are many drugs for which the, you know, I think people would be stunned if they'd read the sort of number of studies that I've read, not just about SSRIs, but about medicines in general, how moderate the benefit a medicine has to provide to be. approved and that a drug company can then sell, in some cases, for a massive amount of money. Cancer drugs, for example, cancer drugs often, if you can, if you can get show that a cancer drug, you know, prolong someone's life by a month or two, you can, you can get that drug approved and sell it for hundreds of thousands of dollars for a course of treatment. And, you know,
Starting point is 00:15:21 that's what most cancer drugs are. You know, diabetes drugs, are they valuable? Yes, they are valuable. but, you know, is exercise probably just as valuable or more valuable? Yes. And SSRIs to me fit in that category. But the antidepressants and another big category of drugs called the antipsychotics brain drugs, I don't classify as drugs of abuse because, again, nobody wants to get put on Cyprexia, which is probably the best known of the antipsychotics. Nobody wants to get put on Thorazine, you know, haleparidol, halidol.
Starting point is 00:15:54 These are, these are drugs that are unpleasant. for people. And so should we use them cautiously? Should doctors use them cautiously? Yes. Are they drugs that have, you know, are they drugs that are causing a societal crisis in the same way, let's say, that opioids or amphetamines are? I don't think so. Okay. No, because here's the thing that struck me about what you said earlier, right? There's just this, do we want to be a society that in general encourages drug use? No. Nor medical drug use. Whether it's medical or whether it's medical or whether it's abuse, what do you call it, drugs of abuse, that's right, or medical drugs, or any drugs for that matter, or should be a society where drugs are, you know, used in certain
Starting point is 00:16:36 cases when absolutely necessary. That's a very different framing. Yes. And I would absolutely agree with that framing. Absolutely. We, we as Americans, and it's partly because the companies are so aggressive about advertising, they're so aggressive about marketing the doctors, they're so good at it, they can make so much money on selling people, again, drugs that have very marginal benefit. And I think, unfortunately, you know, society, sometimes we look for a quick fix. I know, Maha, right, part of that is a rebellion against that. But I think Maha's leaders need to be consistent. My joke about this is that everybody hates drugs except for the drugs that they do. And so, you know, don't tell me that, you know, that you know, that you hate SSRI.
Starting point is 00:17:21 but you love ketamine or psychedelics. You know, those drugs are a lot more dangerous than SSRIs. Oh, interesting. Why would you say that? That's interesting. I mean, ketamine is highly addictive. But let's take psilocybin because this is, that's an example of something that a lot of people are coming to me and telling me, Jan, you can solve all sorts of mental problems
Starting point is 00:17:43 with psilocybin. It's, you know, of course, done with the right dosages, all that kind of stuff. Well, ironically, I mean, antidepressants are what are in the general. general category is what are called SSRI, selective serotonin re-uptake inhibers. Those will moderately increase your serotonin over time. What Solisapin does is deliver a massive serotonin hit in a matter of hours. So in some ways, it is just an SSRI, albeit a much stronger one, which is why it has these hallucinogenic effects. Look, I think there are going to be people out there who like these drugs. I personally think they're quite dangerous in the long run.
Starting point is 00:18:24 And I mean, and you think this because of your reading of the literature, right? Yes, exactly. And because, look, when there have been efforts to use psilocybin or LSD, and those are basically very similar compounds with very similar effects, you know, people may feel really good once or twice, but the impact tends to wear off and the side effects tend to increase. And, you know, I, I, I, I, Again, I think all these people who hate antidepressants in SSRI should be aware of how similar the psychedelics are, you know, in terms of the chemical impact on your brain. Fascinating. Okay. Going back for one more moment to marijuana, you mentioned you were shocked to discover how little of a pain relief effect it really has in the studies.
Starting point is 00:19:09 What are some other things that kind of shocked you in your research when it came to marijuana? Like, they were surprising. So I would say there are two things that, you know, beyond the sort of psychosis connection and this sort of increased link to schizophrenia, which is a terrible disease, a disease I would not wish on, you know, my worst enemy, there's increasing evidence in the last 10 years that cannabis and THC, and this is not from smoking. This apparently is from the effect of the chemical itself can cause really severe heart damage. There is a link to MIs. myocardial infarction heart attacks. And that link is, that's pretty strong now. You can find papers that show, you know, a 3x increase over a multi-year period. And these are young people, right? So they're very low baseline risk.
Starting point is 00:20:00 But the risk is very real and increased. And then the other is, you know, I think a lot of people think, oh, cannabis, you know, if you're using in your stone, you're just going to drive very slowly and cautiously. For whatever reason, in states that have legalized, they see a lot of high-speed car accidents with cannabis. And whether that's because people are getting paranoid and just driving really fast, whether it's because it's just the intoxication effects, this idea that when you get stoned, you just drive 10 miles an hour.
Starting point is 00:20:32 And if anything, your problem is that you're not moving at all, turns out not to be true. So that one was a surprise for me also. Fascinating. Okay. All right. I promised we would go back to talking a bit about Adderall. So that's a very interesting one because, you know, I don't know how many people in this country have taken Adderall, but a lot.
Starting point is 00:20:49 Yes. Do you know the numbers at all? So the around 10% of like teen boys have an Adderall prescription. I think it's gone, actually fortunately, it's gone down a little bit in the last couple years, but it's at that level. I can tell you that on a per dose basis, the U.S. uses about, or per capita basis, the U.S. uses about 30 times as much. all as France, 10 times as much as Germany. So we're just off the charts on this. And there's a very, very good book called Dobsick, which is really, it's about Oxycontinent
Starting point is 00:21:23 and the opioid crisis. But in this book, the writers named Beth Macy, she talks about, you know, the stories of a number of young people, men and women who became addicted to opioids in, you know, in Virginia, West Virginia, that's where she was covering this. And over and over again, she says, this person was. prescribed Adderall for ADHD as a kid. You know, this girl, same thing. And I thought to myself, does she say, realize what she's saying?
Starting point is 00:21:51 And she does actually realize what she's saying, because later in the book, she says it explicitly. And so, look, I think the gateway effect is real, but I think it's real culturally as much as biochemically. What I mean is when, and I think it's real on an individual level and a societal level. So again, if you give a kid a pill and say, you know, you don't. focus very well. You're not doing well in school. You're running around and not listening. And the solution for me is not to, you know, run you out like a puppy and make sure that you, uh, you know, you're tired enough to sleep and you get a good night's sleep. And for me not to let you use your phone and for me to tell you, we have rules in this house. And I understand that can be hard
Starting point is 00:22:32 for people, especially if you're a single parent, okay, but, but when I say instead, I'm going to give you a pill and it's going to help you behave, whether or not that pill gets you high. And Adderall is a stimulant that gets people high. There is no question about that, okay? It is a very cocaine-like drug. Whether or not it gets you high, the lesson I have taught you is this pill is the way to change and improve your behavior and make you feel better. So when that kid, five years later is at a party and somebody has, you know, a 10-mogram
Starting point is 00:23:05 oxy and says, hey, try this. You'll like it. His first response is not going to mean, like, this might be dangerous for me. I don't know where this is going to go. So response is going to be, hey, why not? I take Hatterol all the time. And that's where we are as individuals, and that's where we are as a society. And that is what we really need to stand up to and say no to. See, this is so interesting because, you know, there's a something people would describe as an over-prescription crisis, right? Whether it's around mental health drugs or pain drugs or whatever, right? So those are the sort of the okay drugs, the ones we accept, and then there's the drugs of abuse, the ones we don't accept.
Starting point is 00:23:46 And in general, there's a lot of, I don't know how what you should... Except we do accept them. That's what I mean... Yeah, yeah. Right, except that we're on, we seem to be on the path to accept. again, you can go to a doctor and get an Adderall prescription, no problem. There's been an amazing thing that's happened in this country in the last five years where the DEA has sort of tried to limit the amount of amphetamine that's legally produced. And so you get these spot shortage of amphetamine where, you know, adults are driving around between pharmacies trying to get their prescription fill. I mean, what better proof is there that this is an addictive drug?
Starting point is 00:24:25 but so yeah i mean we are we are all over the map on this and you know again what we did recently with cannabis what the president did just makes it worse i am calling for sort of like a a broad rethinking of this and i understand what you're saying that that you can think about this even more broadly and say you know we have become too addicted to medicines as a crutch instead of trying to live our lives in healthier ways this is the kind of thing I'm thinking as we're speaking here. Are there safe, any safe drugs that you came across? Look, I think the statins are pretty safe. I know there are actually some people would disagree with that. Oh, there's some people that vehemently disagree with you. I know, I know,
Starting point is 00:25:09 but when you look at really, and these are studies that contain thousands and thousands of people followed for years, you see a significant decrease in death in, you know, oftentimes these are people who've had a heart attack already, so you know they're at risk. But if you can reduce cardiovascular mortality significantly in that population, you're going to, they're going to live longer. So that's a good thing. It looks to me like the GLPs are pretty safe. I haven't read the data on those to the extent that I'm really comfortable saying that, but it looks to me like the GLPs are pretty safe. And look, some of the stuff that we've done with cancer medicines in the last few years, you know, some of these drugs really do improve life expectancy and do so
Starting point is 00:25:52 with relatively, like, few side effects. If you're really sick, sometimes you need medicine. You know, I'm not going to, I'm not a Christian scientist. Right. I understand that blindness is a side effect of the, of the GLP's at a higher rate than a lot of people are let to believe. So, so, look, again, this is something where I'm not, like, I just don't have the data. It's more just, it's more like when I hear about, I hear all sorts of prescribing stories
Starting point is 00:26:18 and all sorts of areas where the person wasn't. given the disclosure that, yes, you know, it's rare, but you could be blind if you take this. And if you, if I knew that there's a one in 10,000 chance or whatever it is, right, I might, you know, okay, I'll stick with being fat. Right. You know, maybe you would make that decision if you really knew that, right? Now, listen, if it's one in a million, you know, I mean, we all, we all get on planes, right? You cannot, you cannot say, I mean, vaccines are a good example of this. Okay. So, so the mRNAs, the COVID vaccines,
Starting point is 00:26:54 I was vehemently against giving those to children, young adults. I remember. You were, you were not, uh, you became very popular and unpopular at the same time. Yes. I mean, and, but, but that was because I was very, very
Starting point is 00:27:10 aware that we didn't know and didn't have any way to know what the side effects might be. And the benefits were so limited. And the benefits were so limited. Does that mean, uh, You and I were talking briefly before the start of this about your family's experience with the rabies vaccine, helping invent the rabies vaccine. Does that mean that I don't think people should get the rabies vaccine if they're bitten by a potentially rabid raccoon? No, of course not.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Rabies is a fatal illness. It's fatal to almost everyone who contracts it. And even if the vaccine comes with risk, that's a risk you have to take. Smallpox, same thing. So the key is that public health has. has sacrificed an enormous amount of credibility on this because they haven't been willing to say honest things like that. And they've become so deeply in love with vaccines and with their own interventions and won't
Starting point is 00:28:01 acknowledge side effects. So that means that, you know, people get suspicious, even of stuff that might have very reasonable side effects for the benefit it provides because you don't feel like you can trust the people you should trust the most. Your doctors, because I think the people in this sort of public help, establishment tend to, they tend to, A, they want to prescribe as much as possible, and B, they want to not be honest about who is actually at risk. So a classic example of this very recently was the monkeypox epidemic and the monkeypox vaccine. Who was at risk for monkey pox? You know,
Starting point is 00:28:41 basically if you weren't out there in some bathhouse having anonymous gay sex, you were at very, very, very low risk for monkeypox. And that's what they should have said, and that's who they should have tried to the public health tried to be honest, you know, and get vaccinated if they wanted to get anyone vaccinated. Really, this was, you know, an issue that behavioral changes, modest behavioral changes could solve. But you saw that for a period of time in 2022, the public health establishment wasn't being honest until actually what happened, and this to some extent happened with HIV, too, was the gay community said, listen, you need to, you need to like put the focus where it needs to be on this. and like not because the people who need to change their behavior are not hearing the message clearly because you're pretending that everyone's at risk here.
Starting point is 00:29:29 And so, you know, public health has done that too many times recently. And well, and a case in point, I think is the Hep B vaccine at birth. Yes. Like, I mean, it's a, it's an sexually transmitted disease vaccine. Most of these children, like, why should someone get it at birth? And if your, if your parent has been tested is responsive, if your mother's been responsible enough to get herself tested and been negative, which she's almost certain to be unless, you know, again,
Starting point is 00:29:54 she's having sex with a drug user or is using drugs herself. She's very unlikely to be positive. She gets herself tested, does the right thing, isn't at risk. Why are we subjecting a child, an infant, to this vaccine, even if the risk is very, very low? And I do think the Hep v vaccine risk is very, very low. when they're at zero risk, essentially, of getting hepby. And the public health people don't really have a good answer for that, right?
Starting point is 00:30:23 That Europe, these other countries, they are more honest. And the reason in the U.S. is, well, we can't stigmatize. And stigmatize in this case, as in so many cases, means we can't be honest. Okay, develop that a little more for me. That is a very thoughtful construction. Explain that to me. So I'm very pro-stigma. We stigmatized drinking and driving.
Starting point is 00:30:48 And guess what? There's less drinking and driving. We stigmatized domestic violence. You know, 70 years ago, if the cop showed up at your door and you'd slapped your wife and you didn't get arrested, okay? And sometimes worse than that. Okay, that is not okay anymore. It should never have been okay, but it's not okay anymore.
Starting point is 00:31:08 And that's good. There's, I think, less domestic violence. and there's certainly there's certainly you know less acceptance of this as a behavior okay we stigmatized cigarette smoking the greatest public health victory of the last 50 years was you know we're going to get people to realize that cigarettes are addictive that the marlboro man in the end winds up you know uh dying of lung cancer yes or having a heart attack you don't want to be the marlbrough man and uh and uh cigarette use went way down um Now, actually, because of nicotine vapes and nicotine gum and all this stuff, it's starting to creep up again, or at least overall nicotine use is creeping up. But why aren't we stigmatizing drug use? Why aren't we stigmatizing to some extent? Risky sexual behavior is a little more complicated because, I mean, people are definitely going to have sex.
Starting point is 00:32:05 And so you do want them if they're going to have sex to have it in a better way. And so, you know, I think there's a legitimate argument about, like, abstinence-based education versus, you know, using condoms and being healthier. But with drug use, drug use is very culturally determined, okay? And here's yet another example I think people don't think enough about it. In the late 1800s, early 1900s, China had such a problem with opioids, with opium, that its society essentially collapsed. Well, there is no, essentially no opioid use in China now.
Starting point is 00:32:40 and that tells me that there wasn't something inherent to the Chinese character or Chinese genetics that caused opium use to be a terrible problem. It was a cultural issue and the culture is corrected. In the U.S., we've gone exactly the opposite way. So we can stigmatize and discourage behavior. That doesn't mean we're ever going to eliminate it. There's always going to be people who want to try drugs. But there's a large group of people in the middle who are persuadable. we should be trying to persuade them.
Starting point is 00:33:11 Totally. And I mean, I mean, this, what you're saying seems like such an obvious thing. But it really, it's like, in a way, our society is a little bit upside down about a whole range of issues in this vein. Like if you're, you know, on the streets in San Francisco on drugs, there's people all around you basically saying we can't interfere with this person's decision making. That's their right. Right. It's your right. Hey, it's your, it's your right ultimately to.
Starting point is 00:33:40 kill yourself on the street? I mean, I guess in some theoretical way, it is your right. The problem is that as a society, we're not really willing to look that in the face and say, okay, you know what, you want to kill yourself? We're not going to try to help you. So the libertarian argument breaks down because we are, A, well, breaks down for two sort of core reasons. A, we are a compassionate society. So these people, ultimately, their problems become our problems. And B, These folks, addicts, create problems because they cannot function. They are nothing more essentially than machines for consuming drugs. They can't work.
Starting point is 00:34:20 They can't parent. And so they're very, very destructive. And so even if we don't want to be compassion, even if I say, you know what, you created this problem, I still have to deal with the fact that you're on the street urinating and defecating and potentially trying to, you know, hurt me or hurt my kids, that you're breaking into cars, that you may be violent, that your behavior is completely. completely antisocial. And so, yeah, it's all well good to say, you know what?
Starting point is 00:34:44 If I want to, you know, smoke heroin once, why should anybody get in the way? But the problem is a significant number of people who smoke heroin once will go on to become these addicts who have problems that become all our problems. And so I think as a society, and it's very, very hard to fix addiction once it gets deep. Okay, and really the only person who can fix it is the addict himself or herself, which is something else we have forgotten. So the solution is to stop it on the way in and to discourage drug use, penalized drug use, and if nothing, and occasionally, you know, to criminalize drug use. So one last sort of big thought about this. We do this exactly backwards. We do everything possible at the back end to save people, but nothing or not enough at the front end to discourage them from using.
Starting point is 00:35:39 We should be discouraging them at the beginning strongly while acknowledging this hard fact that when they become addicted, in the end, there is not much that we can do and they must decide to stop. See, it's fascinating. I didn't expect this interview was going to go in this direction. But, for example, you know, one example of legalizing drugs, which is touted often is Portugal. okay and the way I what I understand they did there right they legalize the drugs but the other thing that they did is they put serious requirements on people right to basically have social support you had like it was not an option to not have it and in fact you know the inference from that that again I've read and I've talked a number of people about is that it's that social support which is the the most
Starting point is 00:36:33 powerful tool to have people not fall into addiction or stay out of past addiction and so forth, right? And that's because we didn't have that component here. People are saying, well, legalize and let people do what they want, but they don't have the one thing that they actually need. Well, I would say it's even more complicated than that. And I think Portugal has begun to reconsider its decriminalization. I think Portugal has begun to reconsider decriminalization because, look, you need a society that is. is pretty conservative, which Portugal actually used to be, I mean, even more conservative than it is now, that will, that will sort of societally stigmatized use. And then you can say to these people, we will support you, but you have to go, as you said, you have to go into treatment. Unfortunately, a lot of people, as we've seen, as we saw in Oregon with measure 110, which was the decriminalization and did supposedly try to offer support in a society where there's not a lot of pressure to get,
Starting point is 00:37:33 treatment, simply won't go into treatment. I mean, amazingly, they will just, they will just walk away. And, and so, again, I think, I think that libertarians don't want to acknowledge the reality of what drug use does to users a lot. And so they've come up with a sort of convenient, we're going to medicalize the back end of this. We're going to give people support. And unfortunately, Unfortunately, it just does not work a lot of the time. Let's talk a little bit about COVID time, okay? Where do you stand on the COVID vaccines now? I recently had Robert Redfield, former CDC director on the show.
Starting point is 00:38:17 He wants them removed from the market. Yeah, I mean, I think at this point there's no need for them. You know, Omicron and all the sorts of sequins variants are clearly quite mild. we don't have any idea what the what the use of MRI over a long period of time repeated dosing for people whether it's harmful and you know everyone's been exposed so I mean these appear to be less effective
Starting point is 00:38:45 and potentially more dangerous flu vaccines and flu vaccines are essentially useless so I would say the which is which is an unfortunate fact that people again in the public health establishment just don't want to be honest about but you can look at the data and it's very compelling. So, yeah, I think there's no more point to have these vaccines. Now, will they ever be pulled?
Starting point is 00:39:07 I doubt it because that would be an astonishing admission. You know, even, first of all, you know, President Trump, Warp Speed was his and he views it as an achievement. And I think it would raise very, very serious questions about the approval process and whether or not these, you know, whether we should have encouraged boosted, whether we should have encouraged, mandated, you know, people in the late, in late 2021. So I don't see that as a practical thing ever happening. But just because too many people will get thrown under the bus?
Starting point is 00:39:41 Yeah, I think so. I mean, I will not thrown under the bus. Too many people will face accountability. Well, which I think would raise too many questions. Most Americans got the MRNAs. And most teenagers, you know, most parents got their teen kids, the MRNAs, not necessarily younger kids. I think the numbers were, you know, certainly under like eight.
Starting point is 00:40:02 They were much lower. And so I think if you pulled these, people would say to themselves, what just happened here? You know, five years ago, you told me I had to get this. Now you're telling me it's too dangerous to be on the market. So what has happened instead, essentially, is that they've just died on the vine. The sales are just beyond weak. You know, I was wondering whether I was going to go here, but I think I am just for fun.
Starting point is 00:40:26 So I've talked to a lot of COVID, let's call it COVID-era doctors, people who treated, you know, probably collectively hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people for COVID. One of the drugs that I know that you weren't a fan of, they've been a fan of. And I've read the literature, you know, enough of the literature to be convinced that it's good, decent, that it's been helpful. It's Ivermectin I'm talking about here. And I just know so many doctors. doctors that treated so many people successfully. So have you changed your thinking around ivermectin at all?
Starting point is 00:41:02 I have not. I mean, and I'll say this, it's funny. You were the ones arguing to me a few minutes ago. Hey, we over-prescribe stuff. Most medicines don't really work very well. I mean, I think ivermectin is essentially in that category. Listen, I think it's a great antiparacitic. I mean, it largely eliminated river blindness in Africa.
Starting point is 00:41:22 That's a fantastic achievement. why people suddenly seized on it as the cure for COVID. I do not know the observational data you just, it's just meaningless, essentially. The randomized controls trials that were done and there were a couple done did not show it worked. And once you get to that point, I think, and you don't have a great mechanism of action or, you know, thesis as to why I would work. I think that's kind of the end of it. Like, there's just not a good reason to believe that Ivermectin was ever, that beneficiary or ever that beneficial for COVID and now what I hear is the same people who
Starting point is 00:41:59 were doing that maybe including some of the same doctors you've had on your show are talking about ivermectin as a cure for cancer now this is just this is just insanity okay there there's no randomized control data on this at all there are people out there who are pushing it who will prescribe it to people who may have a few weeks or months where for some reason their cancer seems to be recovering because cancer, you know, can wax and wane, even in the late stages. And then they get, then they get sick and they die, okay? And, by the way, they don't tell you about the people who had a negative effect from taking their Ivermectin for their cancers. They just tell you these, like, anonymous case studies that they, that no one is checking.
Starting point is 00:42:42 So, no, I do not believe in Ivermectin as a drug for COVID or cancer. I believe in it is a great drug for river blindness. Right. Well, that's interesting that you mention it. It was just because I worked in, you know, I worked in Madagascar, worked in a number of places where Ivermectin was used for this purpose, right? I knew it was a very unusually safe drug. It's been demonstrated to be wildly safe compared to almost any other drug, right?
Starting point is 00:43:08 So there's so there's, yeah, no, no, no, no, no. They can have headaches. They can have eye problems. They can have bowel movements. Yeah, yeah, sure, sure. I'm not saying completely. I'm just saying compared to almost anything else out there, very safe. So, anyway, I knew it was weird that they were touting it as being sort of, you know, a problem, like damaging, harming people.
Starting point is 00:43:29 Yeah, I mean, again, that became the public health establishment sort of having a fit, right? And I believe, by the way, in 2020, when there was no other treatments, you know, there were no other drug treatments that, hey, if people want to try it, that's fine. You know, now that, again, that COVID is so manageable. I don't know why anyone would take it. I don't think people are taking it for COVID anymore. And that's why I think this sort of group of people who fell in love with it and not just fell in love with it, but financially fell in love with it, are promoting it for something else.
Starting point is 00:43:59 There's, yeah, I mean, I think in the end there are probably about 20, like just by my rough count, there's about 20 different ways to treat COVID that didn't involve vaccination, all of which were kind of discounted, you know. Yes, I mean, you know, steroids. steroids. Yeah. Well, steroids is for the later stage in the disease. I'm talking about like when you're first getting it, you know, hydroxy. I don't know what your, what your thoughts are on. That I'm more, that I am more negative on, actually, because I think it can cause heart problems. Again, it has more, it has more potential side effects and so forth. So you also think hydroxy didn't have. No, again, from what I saw. And that wasn't, what about Fembenzol? That was another one that was like a comment. And now, I mean, like that, like, maybe I'll, why is that suddenly a treatment for cancer when three. years ago as a treatment for COVID. I just, I just don't understand this. Okay. So, I mean, you're sort of proving my point that everybody hates drugs, except the drugs that they like. I see. I see what you're saying. Yeah. I mean, I think early on in the pandemic, people were just
Starting point is 00:45:04 looking at things that would help people overcome the disease in the early stage, right? And that's many of the doctors that I, that I've talked to, just figured out, hey, there's a high percentage of people observationally that are suddenly, you know, getting their lung capacity back or just simply not getting sick once they get this or whatever. And there were, I guess it's probably about 20 different treatments ultimately that I saw had an antidepression that they tried that had good early results and then failed. Yeah, there was a whole bunch of stuff. So what would be the process in your mind, given what we saw with COVID and the various failures of health policy? Another some sort of pandemic arrives, whether it's from a lab or elsewhere, right?
Starting point is 00:45:51 We can both agree. I think we both agree. COVID came out of a lab. Yeah. What's the approach? Like, it seems to me the approach of looking for, you know, drugs or approaches that have, you know, some sort of plausible method of action and seeing if they're helpful for whatever reason is probably a good idea. Yeah, of course. I mean, and we should try to do that quickly. I mean, the British, actually were good at that with COVID. You know, they, I think the National Health Service actually got people into sort of
Starting point is 00:46:25 randomized trials in a way that the U.S. system, which is more fragmented and more profit-driven, didn't do as good a job of. In part because, you know, people, they were willing to try repurposed, you know, off-label drugs. And, you know, the Ivermectin backers are certainly correct that, you know, drug companies are not interested in helping find cheap drugs and get them to market. That I can't dispute.
Starting point is 00:46:55 So, I mean, look, I think there's a bigger question about COVID, which is for 20 years before COVID, we had a plan. And the plan was if this is a respiratory virus with a let's say 1%, which COVID did not have, by the way, we're going to treat it as a medical problem. Okay. And yes, that could be a lot of deaths. It could be scary for people. But we are not going to shut society down because ultimately we are not going to be able to stop a virus anyway. And the disruption to society, the second order disruption, is going to be worse than the virus itself. And when COVID happened for whatever reason, the public health authorities threw all of that out the window, even as it became clear that COVID was only dangerous to. you know, to very old or very sick people, okay? And, hey, listen, is that a slight exaggeration? It's a slight exaggeration. But most reasonably healthy people under 65 were at very low risk from COVID. You shouldn't, as an approach, destroy the global economy to deal with a medical issue of this nature. That's correct. And we knew that. And we shouldn't destroy children's educations.
Starting point is 00:48:14 or scare them all, you know, scare them and make them more anxious and put them on screens even more than they are. COVID was not good for the mental health of, you know, particularly of teenagers, and they are still suffering from that. And so, so that's the first thing we have to remember. And why the public health establishment went that way, I believe, although, you know, there's, you know, I don't know that anyone's ever going to find the paper, the email saying this, that because Tony Foucher, was concerned very early on that this had come out of a lab, he wanted control over the response and he wanted a very aggressive response. And he hoped for a vaccine that would sort of solve this and he hoped to be the hero and distract people from what had happened and where it had come from. Can I prove that? I cannot. I just believe it is consistent with some public evidence that we have
Starting point is 00:49:12 and with the way they behave because otherwise I don't know why they cracked the way they did and I do think it will be you know listen if the Chinese stop playing with these viruses
Starting point is 00:49:25 hopefully we won't have another one of these for another hundred years but if it does happen again it will be very interesting to see if people panic again or if they are more skeptical of a shutdown I mean I think that
Starting point is 00:49:41 People in general are way more skeptical. That's my observation in general, or large talking to people across a broad swath of society, but I'm not convinced that a lot of the public health bureaucracy is sufficiently skeptical. They love to be in charge. They love lockdowns. They mean, they love bird flu.
Starting point is 00:50:02 They are very aggressive, and they don't seem to have learned very much. What they've learned is that, oh, you know, we can't let Republicans be in the government because they're not going to let us do what we want. Listen, this has been an absolutely fascinating conversation. Do you have a final thought as we finish? I mean, I am still sort of trying to articulate my views about drugs in a bigger way. I think it's a very culturally important moment. I think the libertarian case is easy, right?
Starting point is 00:50:32 Like, it should all be like alcohol. It should all be legal. That has been a disastrous failure in practice. And so I think, like, what I'm trying to do and what I may do in a book, what I hope to do in a book, is articulate in a sort of consistent philosophical way why it is that we need to be firm about drug use, even though we're never going to, you know, we're never going to prohibit alcohol again. And that's why stigma is a good thing. Why drug use is not a societal neutral, and we need to tell people that. And that's what I'm hoping to do in the next few months, year or two. Well, Alex Berenson, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Starting point is 00:51:11 Yeah, thanks for having me. Thank you all for joining Alex Berenstin and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders. I'm your host, Janja Kellick.

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