Duncan Trussell Family Hour - 668: Bryan Hubbard
Episode Date: February 21, 2025Bryan Hubbard, executive Director of the Texas Ibogaine Initiative, joins the DTFH! You can learn more about Bryan on his website, WBryanHubbard.com and learn more about his work with the Ibogaine I...nitiative on the REID Foundation's TII website. This episode is brought to you by: This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. Give online therapy a try at betterhelp.com/duncan and get on your way to being your best self. Visit trueclassic.com/DUNCAN to save. Shop now and elevate your wardrobe today. Go to shipsticks.com and use the code DUNCAN to get 20% off your first shipment and save yourself the hassle this golf season!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi there! It's me Duncan. This is the Duncan Trussell Family Hour Podcast.
Now, last night, I don't know what I was doing.
I, uh, I'm kind of looking for a new video game, you know?
Path of Exile 2, I love it, but I just can't, you know, having to do the axe over,
for those of you who play that game, I don't know, it's just kind of bumming me out.
So I've been looking for a new video game.
And started looking at Kingdom Come 2.
And I don't want to do a medieval life simulator.
Modern life's hard enough.
You know, I don't want to... I want dragons, I want magic.
I don't want to have to learn some new fighting system.
Even though people are saying it's like the greatest game of all time.
I know myself well enough to know that's not for me, but I did watch some YouTube clips of
gameplay and
though it is
violent, which seems fun, you seem like you have a little dog that'll bite people and run a sword through someone's face.
Uh
I began to realize that like every few minutes
um, there were ads
for the game
as I was watching the game. The game was advertising itself to me inside videos of the game
anyway, I
Just want you guys to know that if you are annoyed by the ads on my podcast
And for those of you complaining that it throws the flow off
I see what you're saying and I just want to remind you we have memberships now now. And to all of my new members, thank you.
Sign up.
You will get commercial free episodes of the DTFH.
No YouTube ads, no Dunkin' ads, just straight DTFH,
minus all the stuff that gets my children organic milk.
Not to brag. stuff that gets my children organic milk.
Not to brag.
Also, I'd like to show you something, and check this out.
My dear friends at Titmouse, which is the production company that made the Midnight
Gospel, created these awesome
Midnight Gospel t-shirts.
So if you go to Tipmouse, to their store, and you want to get some cool Midnight Gospel
official MG shirts, they're beautiful.
I wore it today, not because I wanted to sell them, but because I went to the gym early, early this morning
and I didn't have any clean shirts to wear.
And honestly, I didn't want to walk around
with a t-shirt of a show I made.
It just seems like, just embarrassing.
So I've been zipping up the old jacket like a weirdo.
Anyway, if you like this shirt, there's a bunch of other styles too, but
it's really nice quality t-shirt. Oh lord. You know, I'm gonna say it,
the podcast today, I'm just gonna say it, this is like top three favorite podcasts I've ever done.
And I don't often say that.
Every once in a while I'll say it,
and then I have to readjust my chart back at the house,
wipe some things off the grease board, do some math.
But this is the coolest job ever that you let me have.
And every once in a while, you find yourself in the presence of somebody whose energy is
so powerfully good, it like blows your mind.
Like a living psychedelic person just had the coolest conversation with me that I've had in a
long time. And I don't want to spoil it for you but you know when I was talking
to my friends about this guest who is someone who is at the forefront of
treating opioid addiction with Ibogaine, which is a relatively obscure
psychedelic.
I did not expect that person would have a deep, thick, warm southern accent.
And that just shows my own biases.
It's not just not what I expected. warm Southern accent and that just shows my own biases
It's not just not what I expected. I didn't expect that I would be sitting in the room
With essentially like look you I don't want to overdo it here friends, but you're you're about to meet him
Some Sometimes you meet people who are sort of divinely inspired.
People on a real mission.
And it's the coolest thing ever, very inspiring.
So listen, if you love psychedelics,
I know very few people who listen to my show
are into psychedelics.
I wish you'd open your minds a little bit.
If you are right now addicted to opioids, as so many people are out there,
and you're ready to, you don't know what to do, if you have someone in your family who's got the
fish hook in their mouth, as so many people do, this is the episode for you. I think you're gonna find some hope here, some actual real hope,
because today's guest,
Brian Hubbard,
is part of the Texas Ibogaine Initiative. They are actually trying to get Ibogaine
as something, as an option, as a treatment option for
opioid addiction.
Right now there aren't many treatment options.
You got Stone Cold Sober, you got methadone, you got suboxone, and none of them are that
great.
But going back as far as I believe burrows, you hear about this mysterious bark, ibogaine,
and its ability to somehow cure addiction,
which anyone who's been addicted to anything, my God.
There was some kind of mini ibogaine for these rogue pouches
that didn't involve the risk of cardiac arrest.
You better believe I'd take it.
That would be really cool.
Ibogaine pouches would be amazing.
If Zen put out ibogaine pouches. It'd be amazing if Zen put out ibogaine pouches. Probably not gonna happen.
Can cause cardiac arrest if you have to dose it right.
You need to be around doctors.
Anyway, the point is, you're gonna love this episode.
So get ready.
Before you do that, pull up the Texas Ibogaine Initiative
on your web browser, if you're around a web browser,
and just check out what's happening here.
It's wild.
All right, everybody, welcome Brian Hubbard to the DTFH.
Brian, it's great to meet you.
I'm sorry, I underdressed for the podcast.
I'm overdressed.
I wish you told me you were wearing a suit.
I've got a suit. I wish I didn't you're wearing a suit. I've got a suit.
I wish I didn't have to wear one.
If I hadn't been in the Capitol building, I'd look more like you, which is what I prefer.
What are you doing at the Capitol building?
Well, I have the very distinct pleasure and opportunity to be down here to try and be
a servant of the Texas Ibogaine Initiative, which was announced by Governor Perry and
I back on the Joe Rogan podcast on January 2nd of this year. We're trying to
persuade the politicians over there to set aside a relatively modest 50 million
dollars out of a 20 billion dollar state budget surplus to create a public-
private partnership that will secure the FDA's approval of Ibogaine
as a breakthrough therapeutic for substance use.
What do you think is more, like if you had to put bets on it, and like you know, you
didn't know the outcome of either of these, but I said, okay, what do you want to put
money on? Moses going into Egypt and telling the Pharaoh to let the Jews go, are you getting Ibogaine to Texas?
Well, let me just say, to even be mentioned in the same sentence with
Moses makes me want to crawl under this table for fear of the lightning that might hit us.
Well, I mean, it is a weirdly similar archetype.
I mean, think about it.
It's a tough cell.
Ibogaine's a tough cell anywhere.
I mean, from what I've heard about it, it's not exactly a recreational substance.
It sounds terrifying.
Potentially, you know, if it can be very dangerous, I've heard.
But then take that.
You're talking about a relatively obscure psychedelic that
Seemingly cures opioid addiction and then bringing that to Texas
Which is a state has fairly strict laws regarding psychedelics
That is a tough sell
Well
this entire experience going back to the first time I heard about Ibogaine in July
of 2022 has been remarkable in terms of not just the substance of the opportunity around
Ibogaine's development itself, but the grand sociology experiment in which I've gotten
to participate as this discussion has
unfolded over the past three years.
Surprisingly enough, it has been my observation that the audience that one would least expect
to be open to the use of a psychedelic medication to treat addiction issues, the reception has
been surprisingly strong when it is properly explained to an
individual who is willing to be open-minded to alternative possibilities to what we have.
I think anybody in current American society can recognize, not just by statistics, but
by their own personal observation in society, that despite our best efforts and the deployment of multiple billions
of dollars over the past 29 years and then we go back to 1996 when Oxycontin
was first introduced into Appalachia we are now in the 29th year of America's
opioid epidemic. The options that we have are delivering unacceptably mediocre results. If we are going
to create a dynamic that will generationally alter the trajectory of the opioid epidemic,
we've got to look for alternatives. And Moab again certainly sounded too good to be true
to me when I first encountered it. There is no question, but this is the Manhattan Project opportunity of our age,
not just to fundamentally transform
how we deal with individual addiction,
but how we also address neurological conditions
that impact the brain for which we currently
don't have any good answers.
This, yeah, I could understand why people would be skeptical,
Yeah, I could understand why people would be skeptical, especially people who have gone through the hell of having an opioid addict in their family, in their circle of friends,
who've watched what is essentially a...
I mean, it's a demonic possession.
I don't know any better word for it.
I know you probably can't say that when you're trying to but I'm allowed to say things like that
it's it's when you look at the
Impact that these people are having not just on themselves or watching the
hedonic pursuit transform into a kind of
Hyper aggression
against people they love most.
This mixes in with a kind of black hole level selfishness,
mixes in with just losing all trust, burning all bridges,
destroying not just their life,
but generally everyone's life around them,
usually bringing babies into the equation
during the downward spiral.
And so to hear after having someone you love go through
halfway houses, 12-step programs, all the promises,
wondering how is the legal system not equipped to deal with this?
Getting to the dark point where you think
it would be better that they are in jail.
Why do they keep letting them out?
Every time they get out, they just hurt more people.
And then it gets even darker than that.
So to hear that there is some tree bark that you could give someone and it would heal them completely, it does sound like a big promise for an unsolvable problem.
Yes. And this gets into the necessity of coherent and credible explanation of its attributes
in a way that reinforces its credible reality.
So as I started my process of examining whether or not this was too good to be true, I engaged
in what was at least a six-month, second off-the-books part-time, full-time job in which I examined academic research, spoke to
individuals who had received, provided, or had sent loved ones for hypogaine
treatment. And at the time in which I learned about it, I had established
myself as a fairly effective public servant in the state of Kentucky, had a
significant amount of credibility and capital to deploy and at the conclusion
of what was a very extensive due diligence and a critical examination
exercise I came to the conclusion that without doubt Ibogaine presented the
very best possibility for us to change the future of addiction treatment and
and the generational trajectory of the opioid epidemic in America. I came to
that conclusion because of Ibogaine's chief three attributes that I would describe
as the following.
Number one, you have just given a beautiful description of the behavior that we can observe
out of individuals who are in particular dependent on opioids.
And for the longest time, I think a lot of folks have concluded that opioid dependent
individuals who engage in all of the destructive behaviors that come with that have in some
way fallen into a self-perpetuating cycle of moral failure.
And that if we could just get it through their thick heads about the erroneous nature of
their ways and administer the proper punishments that they will snap
out of it. Well as we've watched this play out over what's now three decades
and we've come to understand the science of the brain, what we can now recognize
and understand is that the behavior of an opioid dependent individual which by
all objective measures appears to be that of completely morally depraved criminality, is in fact behavior that is driven by a
profound neurochemical brain injury. An opioid dependent individual, their brain
cannot produce dopamine and serotonin absent the ingestion of ever escalating
dosages of opioids, which is why when someone becomes dependent,
they have to continually over time increase
the amount that they take in order to get the same effect.
The effect is the high.
The high is the tremendous spike in dopamine response
that the opioid triggers in the brain.
When the person stops taking the opioid,
the dopamine production stops.
And I'm referencing dopamine because dopamine is the most baseline,
instinctual, neurochemical driver of all basic human behavior.
Eating, drinking, procreating, fighting and flighting.
Those are all baseline survival instincts driven by dopamine.
When a person is deprived of opioid source,
who is dependent on it for the delivery of dopamine,
they will do anything that it takes
to be able to satiate the brain's dopamine starvation,
which is what leads to all of this destructive behavior.
The reason why we have such modest results
from our existing treatment,
and I'll quantify what those results are,
abstinence-based treatment where a person
just quits cold turkey and tries to resolve
their own addiction has about a 7% success rate.
Wow, that's pretty low.
Very best model that we have is methadone,
and it has about a 25% success rate at six months.
Wait, I'm sorry, methadone I've never really understood.
What is methadone and how does that treatment
get someone to stop using an opioid?
Methadone and its companion,
which is known by the generic name buprenorphine,
which has the brand names
of Suboxone, Sublicade, Subutext, and others.
You know, and aside, I was on the road in my wilder days.
I don't know why someone gave me a Suboxone patch, but they did.
I don't know why I put it on my arm, but I did.
It was the worst two days of my life.
I was puking, went mildly deaf.
Are you suggesting that suboxone could be obtained in a black market?
Are you suggesting that suboxone diversion is a real thing?
Some asshole gave me a suboxone patch. I thought this will give me some nice mild high.
Again, these were the wilder days. Thank you God for keeping me alive and I I
Didn't look why would you Google?
What's the box zone is or I wouldn't have taken I didn't know the half-life is like 48 hours
But it was a nightmare. So like I really don't understand how suboxone if I am
Taking an opioid, ascending to the great heights that it offers,
and then someone smacks a suboxone patch on my arm,
I don't see how that's going to sober me up.
Well, that's why suboxone treatment has about an 18% success rate.
Opioid maintenance treatment encompasses methadone and suboxone.
And the rationale is this, and I understand when it was created maintenance treatment encompasses methadone and suboxone.
And the rationale is this, and I understand when it was created on the front end of the
opioid epidemic, why well-intentioned researchers believe that this was the best way to go.
What you're trying to do is to restore the dependent human being to a degree of functionality
that will allow them to live a normal life, defined
by their choices of normalcy within the bounds of the law, whatever that is.
And because of the brain's inability to produce dopamine and serotonin, you have to figure
out a way to remove opioid use that has such consumption as to empower functionality
while preventing the withdrawal
that comes from dopamine starvation.
So the answer to that was,
we are going to develop an opioid
with which to treat opioid dependence,
except this opioid is not gonna be quite as potent,
but it will be potent enough to not trigger withdrawal.
So you essentially provide methadone and suboxone to maintain someone with the consumption of
opioids in order to prevent withdrawal.
But you never bring them to the point of complete abstinence and you never restore the brain
to its natural pre-opioid stasis where it is producing its own dopamine and serotonin.
The person is still physiologically dependent on the opioid, though their functionality
may be restored.
So that means that... This episode of the DTFH has been supported by BetterHelp.
How often do we talk about the relationship red flags?
You know what I mean.
You're on a first date with somebody, they reach into their purse, and they pull out
a rat carcass. That's a red flag.
Probably a sign that you should not keep going out with them
unless you're into it.
That being said, maybe if you'd listened,
you'd realize they're a taxidermist
and they didn't have time to take the rat carcass
that they got from someone who loved that rat so much
back to their studio to get to work,
and so they just shoved it in their purse. But then you notice their purse is made of human flesh.
Red flag. So what about the green flags? Don't you wish you knew what they were? Maybe if you did,
you wouldn't always be getting divorced. If you're not sure what they were. Maybe if you did, you wouldn't always be getting divorced.
If you're not sure what they look like,
therapy can help you identify green flags,
actively practice them in your relationship
and embody the green flag energy yourself.
You know, I gotta admit it.
You know, anytime I've gone on a date with somebody
before I was married and they're just like, no
Something I did freaked him out. No
You're you seem nice or whatever, but I'm not doing that. I always it hurts my feelings, but I always respect it
that's powerful that is powerful and
Most of the time those people had been in therapy.
That's how they figured out how to do that.
I've benefited from therapy too.
Helped me a lot.
And yeah, I know it's not like the most popular thing to say out loud because for whatever
reason in our weird society, everyone's supposed to have some kind of perfect operating system
and like, yeah, you could
break your leg, you can blow your hand off holding a Roman candle on the 4th of July.
You can be covered with stitches because you were attacked by a wild coyote.
You could say, yeah, I went to the doctor for these things.
And everyone's like, yeah, you should have.
But what, therapy?
Suddenly that's weird.
BetterHelp is fully online,
making therapy affordable and convenient,
serving over 5 million people worldwide.
Access a diverse network of more than 30,000
credentialed therapists with a wide range of specialties.
Easily switch therapists anytime at no extra cost.
Discover your relationship green flags with BetterHelp.
Visit betterhelp.com slash Duncan Discover your relationship green flags with BetterHelp.
Visit betterhelp.com slash Duncan to get 10% off your first month.
That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash Duncan.
Thank you, BetterHelp. They have to take methadone for the rest of their lives?
In many cases, yes.
And I will observe when it comes to buprenorphine or what we call suboxone.
When it was first rolled out, the idea was you give an individual suboxone and over time through downward titration you bring
them off abstinence. That is no longer the prime objective, at least from those
researchers I've been around who support its promulgation. The objective now is
to make sure that the person is compliant with their medication regimen
for the rest of their life. As compliance,, not abstinence that is the objective.
If I'm running a pharmaceutical company, that is good news.
That's correct.
That is incredible.
So essentially, the big pharma replaces the drug dealer of the opioid addict by giving
them this low level legal opioid that doesn't get
them quite as high but makes it so they don't get sick.
You've got it.
And the people who make the treatment are the people who made the problem.
Ooh.
It's a very nice self-reinforcing circle of self-interest.
That is amazing.
Yes, sir.
That is just really
crazy. That is like dropping bombs on people. Then coming in with ambulances
and getting them to pay for the medical care. That is wild! Very similar. I would
also use an analogy that would come straight and natural from somebody who's coming
from Kentucky.
It's analogous to taking someone who's drinking a bottle of wild turkey every day and instead
giving them a six pack of beer and saying, here, drink this six pack instead of that
bottle of whiskey.
You're still going to need the alcohol, but it's just not going to mess you up as bad
as what you've been doing.
Oh my God. That is hopeless and horrible. Just my experience with Suboxone alone,
you know, I've only had one intravenous injection of synthetic opioids when I got my ball cut off,
and I knew it's the only time I'm gonna be able to safely get synthetic heroin.
I'm not a big fan of opioids. They make me sick. But I'm in a hospital, I'm curious about states
of consciousness, so they ask me,
are you in a lot of pain?
And I said, oh, it is terrible.
I felt fine.
They injected me with Dilaudid.
Now, I just got my testicle chopped off
because of testicular cancer.
Not exactly what you'd call the best day in your life.
The moment that stuff hit my veins,
it was the damnedest thing, not what I expected either.
Like, you know, you watch the,
any movie where they romanticize heroin.
It seemed, it wasn't what I expected
because it was like instantly,
I was having the best day of my life.
It wasn't like a highlight. I can't even explain it. It was just suddenly. I was having the best day of my life. It wasn't like a highlight.
I can't even explain it.
It was just suddenly I'm like,
oh my God, everything's great.
You were in dopamine bliss.
And give your audience some perspective if you don't mind.
I don't mind.
And this was taught to me by a better teacher than I am.
Dopamine production is measured in a metric unit
that is called a nanogram.
And a nanogram is part of a deciliter.
So the human body on its own has a maximum dopamine production
potential of 125 nanograms per deciliter.
That's the most that we can produce on our own.
The ingestion of an opioid produces a dopamine response of 925 nanograms per deciliter, almost
ten times what the human body can produce on its own.
So you got to experience the 925 nanogram per deciliter dopamine response.
I was having nine great days.
That's nine people's maximum great day
compressed into one day.
Yes.
And when that wore off, it was just a nightmare.
A nightmare.
And though I, you know, I mean, luckily I'm making light of it.
I don't mean to be a complete like,
going to dad mode here, anyone listening, don't do it.
You know, I've heard this explained to me
that it's sort of a role that dies.
Like, whereas, like, I just crashed
and just dealt with being a one-testicle human
in the beginning phases of grief for my ball.
Where is it? Is it in a dumpster?
You know, you gotta wonder.
We get to know each other real well here here right off the bat, ain't we?
I didn't really, like, I wasn't like, oh my god, I want to shoot up again, but I've heard that,
and correct me if I'm wrong here, I've heard that for some people, they get that injection,
and there's some kind of immediate change in brain topography or something, and that's it.
Opioid dependency is determined in large part by our individual genetics.
Some people have hard wiring to where if they receive an opioid it makes them sick,
they hate it and they get no benefit out of it, and it's never a problem. Other individuals can receive an opioid and they almost immediately
require its continual delivery in order to function. Now I had a similar
experience to what you described though not quite as personally invasive.
Forgive me for explaining. I'm so sorry, I guess I didn't need to reveal.
No listen, I appreciate authenticity and you've delivered it in full.
I had a septoplasty.
I had a deviated septum that was obscure in an hour passageway back in 2021.
So they fixed my septum and I was given a 10-day supply of Norco to kind of manage the
pain symptoms.
And I waited until nighttime because they advised that this thing would make me drowsy. Well, there was no question after I took that first
NORCO that I am absolutely hardwired to be opioid dependent. The
sensation that you describe of just tremendous physiological satisfaction with that Norco was unmistakable.
And I was very careful about my consumption because of what I immediately recognized as
the potential to obliterate myself with it.
Yep.
And so yeah, and that, you know, because this, it's not like, it's not like this is unknown.
So anytime someone at a hospital is like, how are you feeling?
And you're like, I just broke my leg, I didn't think.
And like, okay, we're gonna make your pain go away.
They know that there is some probability that this person, after their leg heals, is gonna
remember that day for the rest of their lives, they wanna have that day again.
And this is where you get this infernal connection
to big pharma, which is that this is known data.
And then what ends up happening is you put someone
in this dark pipeline where they become either addicted
to Norco, Vicodin, whatever it is,
or as you just taught me, Suboxone or Methadone.
In other words, you just attach a manacle that leads all the way to some pharmaceutical
company and they're going to juice you for the rest of your life.
And that, I don't know if, I mean, you hear about a lot of dark stuff these days, conspiracy
theories, reptilians,
all that stuff, but look no further than this.
That's right.
Vampires are real.
Yeah, yes they are.
And have you ever heard of a book called Empire of Pain by a gentleman named Patrick Radden
Keefe?
I have not.
There's a book called Empire of Pain and it's by Patrick Radden Keefe.
And I can't remember the year in which
it was published but before I even knew my gig as chairman of the opioid commission in
Kentucky was on the horizon, I happened to read this book in April of 22 and it is a
history of essentially the Sackler family, the Sackler family's creation of Purdue Pharma
all the way back to its very beginning and the way in which it evolved into being the
manufacturer of America's opioid epidemic through the deployment of Oxycontin. And what the book makes very clear in
concrete,
historically documented
reality is that the opioid epidemic
precipitated by the creation and detonation of Oxycontin,
particularly in areas that have had generational issues related to poverty, joblessness, and
high levels of disability, was a premeditated act.
The opioid epidemic, absolutely premeditated.
The addictive nature of Oxycontin was known by its creators.
Purdue Pharma, most folks don't know,
was the inventor and producer of Valium
back in the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
And there was a companion company
that the Sacklers created that did nothing other than capture
and analyze data.
And what they observed was that the communities which
had the highest dispensation rates of Valium
in the 60s and 70s were also those very same communities that
had the highest rates of generational joblessness,
poverty, and disability.
When it came time to market and distribute OxyContin,
they relied upon the data distribution maps for Valium
to inform their marketing strategy for Oxycontin.
Wow.
They essentially used the pipeline of poverty
through which to deliver the poison of their pills
to captive populations who rely on public
benefit systems to essentially deliver medical services that are founded upon high-powered
pharmacology to anesthetize human beings to the pain that they live with every single
day.
Also known as the Ten Crack Commandments.
Now the Sackler's good news, they're all in jail now.
Isn't that great?
We arrested every single one of them
because obviously people-
Are they in jail?
Oh, every one because our judicial system understands
that if some vampiric, dark family,
some family so vampiric and horrific that even in fiction, no one's ever
written usually, like, you know, vampires, they come in like ones, you get Dracula, you
know, but a whole family of alchemical vampires intentionally putting their dark fishing hooks
into impoverished people so that they will make money via insurance companies.
Yeah, they arrested every single one. Life in prison, right?
I don't think anybody's been arrested out of that family.
Are you kidding? Can you look that up, Josh? Aren't all the Sacklers in jail right now are under the jail?
Probably some of them had the death penalty. I mean that kind of thing.
Think how many people they... how many people would you say have died because of the
Sacklers and what they did? Oh if we go back to the very beginning,
we and if we tie the deployment of Oxycontin to the evolution of the opioid epidemic through
the heroin phase and now into the fentanyl phase. We are well into the seven figures.
Seven figures?
Yes, sir.
Seven figures.
Now, if, I mean, and this is, I'm sorry to ask you to do ridiculous math, but on average,
how much money do you think the Sacklers made per oxy addict prior to them dying?
I wouldn't be able to break it down on an individual level, but what we know is that
at its height and at its most profitable span that went for about 10 or 12 years,
oxycontin cells for Purdue Pharma were $100 million a month.
So to put that in perspective,
state of Kentucky, which along with West Virginia
and other portions of central and southern Appalachia
were ground zero for the deployment of Oxycontin.
The state settlements with opioid distributors
and manufacturers currently stands at about 900 million dollars.
That money will be paid out over 15 years.
So the entire state of Kentucky for the carnage that has been unleashed on it for 30 years
now will get in 15 years what Purdue Pharma made in 9 months of Oxycontin sales.
That gives you perspective. Last thing I have to ask about the
the
Sackler vampires and all the other vampires who are
Doing this kind of I mean for lack of a better word chemical warfare on Americans
Do you think that they have something to do with the...
Okay, let's talk about like the...
And I know a lot of this is just families when they're going through,
having someone going through addiction,
you need to build some kind of defense mechanism,
and to do that you invent like just what you said,
a lack of moral character.
These people are liars, cowards.
They don't want to face their own pain, they're weaklings.
Certainly, the moment you humanize them the way you are,
which is like, no, you don't understand,
they have a traumatic brain injury,
then suddenly all the walls you're building
so that your heart doesn't have to be broken,
they fall back down.
But do you think any of that sort of characterization
of the opioid addict is actually,
those flames are fanned by big pharma because
it serves their purpose.
In other words, if we start connecting the dots here, then suddenly the opioid addict
doesn't become like the spotlight's not on the opioid addict anymore, but on the strings
that are making the opioid addict do all the many things that we've all suffered from
That's a very astute observation and with reference back to the book Empire of Pain and I'm not here to hock it
It just happens to be the best most comprehensive history. I've read of Purdue Pharma the Sacklers and how it all played out
when
Oxycontin deaths started to be reported in
newspapers and the leadership of Purdue Farmer recognized that they had a
significant public relations problem on their hands, the instant response given
was these individuals are morally deficient people. There you go.
And we are not at fault for the moral reprobate who decides to make recreational use of a medication that is supposed to appropriately and responsibly treat pain.
Their moral failure is not our responsibility.
There you go. So the moral failure of this human being is what has been used as a shield from liability
for the engineered addictive nature of that medication.
Wow.
Without question.
That is incredibly evil.
Here's the other thing I'll mention, and I know that this might be skipping a little
bit ahead in conversational progression.
As I have been pursuing this Ibogaine mission, it has been ironic to me to encounter lots
of individuals within academic and public health medicine who are entirely comfortable
delivering treatment to people who are in distress that essentially serve to anesthetize the soul and slowly euthanize the body while simultaneously being very opposed
to anything that may allow a human being to feel the existence of their eternal soul.
That's what I want to get to because here, so you would think that Big Pharma aside, you would think that,
and I know there's real good data out there on Ibogaine,
it's fascinating stuff actually,
but I would like to hear the explanation
for why this heals addiction,
but you would think that the moment
that a treatment emerged, they could get your
son, your daughter, your dad back, that this would just be embraced at all levels,
state, federal, government, that people would be overjoyed to hear this. I mean, just from a
I mean, just from a purely monetary, like dark perspective, the cost of addiction in a community is, I can't even imagine what that could be.
I mean, aside from the jail time theft, all of that stuff, to remove this plague from
any community, it's going to like help the economy.
I know, obviously there's more important things in the damn economy, but you know, the cynical part of me thinks sometimes that's all
some people in the government are thinking about, but at least that's a good selling point alone.
And then you get to the spiritual reality, the healing that could happen, and also just like, whoa, like if this substance can heal almost horrific things that can happen
to a person outside of like, you know, cancer, terminal, other terminal diseases, what are
we working with here?
Like what is this stuff?
It implies a lot more is going on there, doesn't it?
Is a healing modality,
you know? So why isn't it being used right now in rehabilitation centers across the country?
Well, whether by accident or design, it's my humble opinion that many government systems
we currently have essentially commodify the problems that
they are supposed to solve, first and foremost for their own, the perpetuation of their own
self-interest in the acquisition of resources, importance and consequence within society.
Government agencies are not any more interested in making themselves extinct than the pharmaceutical
industry is on making the diseases that they treat with chronocity extinct
through the development of cures.
These government systems often monetize sustained human misery
as part of that commodification process.
So when you have a symbiotic relationship between government
and industry that relies upon the perpetuation of a problem rather than solving it.
If something comes along to disrupt the mutually beneficial revenue model on which they both
depend, they're going to get together and they're going to kill it.
That's a reality.
Now, as I sit here and say this to you, I can hardly believe how conspiratorial that
I sound haven't always been someone who has askewed that kind of thinking.
But I've had the opportunity to watch it, to witness it, and to be on the receiving
end of it around the Ibogaine Project and in other contexts as well.
I've told this story before about the experience running Kentucky's Social Security Disability
Program.
And this really is astounding.
Between 1980 and 2015, a 35-year timeframe, Kentucky's population grew by 20 percent.
Enrollment in the Social Security Disability Program grew 249 percent.
The enrollment of children in the disability program grew 449 percent. Between
2001 and 2015, the administration of opioid medications to Social Security disability
adults increased by 168 percent. I actually know 210 percent. The administration of habituating psychotropic medications to children within the social
security system increased 168% over that same time frame.
When I was in my first month on the job, we had a federal official from the social security
administration who oversaw our state system
come in for a semi-annual visit.
And I wish that I had recorded their introductory remarks because this person at the very beginning
of our meeting with the management team said, folks, claims are down and that's bad because
claims equal budget. And this was concrete confirmation that a government
agency that is supposed to deliver the benefits for individuals who are genuinely disabled wants
nothing more than to see every increase in rates of application and awards for individuals who can
be absorbed into that system. What you heard this firsthand
It's the first hand and this is what nobody wants to hear. I mean, this is the thing
It is easier
To not believe this stuff to believe it
forces the very least
You know some kind of cognitive action, you know you you, in other words, ignorance in this case.
Is bliss.
Yeah, absolutely.
Because the general idea is, you know,
the various levels of government responsible
for administering some kind of service to the community
using tax money.
You like to imagine the people in those jobs
are these kinds of benevolent angels, public servants.
They could have had any job they wanted,
maybe made some more money, but they decided,
no, I am going to help.
I'm gonna give up my dream of being a rock star.
I could have been a rock star.
No, no, no.
I'm gonna work in the Social Security Administration
and make sure that people who can't afford medical care
get the medical care they need.
Cut to you getting a terrible teaching in reality.
And some, again, I don't mean to use these words,
but for lack of a better word, it's a demon.
It's like, listen, you want the budget cut?
Then don't really help these people all the way, because otherwise we're going to lose
money.
Keep them there.
Keep them there.
So another story I'll tell you, and this one is Kentucky specific, but it's not unique.
Guess what?
Yeah, I'm wearing a Midnight Gospel shirt, but underneath all my shirts, you know what
I also wear?
Oh yeah, baby!
This is a true classic!
That's right.
I don't go a day without wearing one of these beautiful, true, classic t-shirts.
These are incredible, friends.
Listen, it's great to have a cool shirt with a bunch of like Midnight Gospel
cats on it. But come on, you want to do that? You're going to wear that all day long, wear
it around all the time? Sometimes you need a nice, simple, sophisticated t-shirt. This
is true classic. The ultimate innovation in t-shirt design. I don't know how they did
it, what they did. I can't imagine the studies they did.
I picture journeys, expeditions to Antarctica,
gathering secret knowledge from the beings
that live within the Hollow Earth.
None of that would surprise me
based on how incredible this shirt is.
It fits perfectly.
It's got that, it's got that softness. You know what I mean?
Any of you people out there actually care about your upper body and the way a t-shirt
feels against it.
Those of you who aren't savages, who don't mind having some weird mix of God knows what
in your shirt, rub it against your nips. Why don't you just travel into the future and spit on your grave?
I don't know if that'd work actually because you'd still be alive.
Travel into the multiverse and spit on your grave instead of wearing those garbage shirts
that you wear. I'm telling you, true classic, if you're a t-shirt person as I am,
this is better than Disclosure. This is better than they finally find the Ark of the Covenant.
This is better than they capture a Bigfoot. This is better than most things. Because now,
on this planet, not only do we have the Dharma teachings of the Buddha, not only do we have the Dharma, teachings of the Buddha,
not only do we have LSD,
not only do we have artificial intelligence,
not only do we have Elden Ring,
we have true classic tees.
And that means the world ain't that bad, folks.
True classic shirts are designed to accentuate your guns!
It's very important.
They got way more than just shirts.
They got perfect jeans, Henleys, button-ups, joggers, and more.
Free shipping on all orders. 100% perfect fit guarantee with easy returns trusted
by over 4 million customers and 200,000 plus 5 star reviews and whoever left under 5 star
review for these shirts may a bat fly out of your belly butt. May it just a bat crawl.
I don't know how it got in there. Just a bat egg hatched in your...
Do bats have eggs?
Huh.
It's a relief.
Level up your day night or everyday style with clothes that actually fit right.
Just go to my exclusive link at trueclassic.com slash Duncan to save. That's trueclassic.com slash Duncan.
Shop now and elevate your wardrobe today.
Your body is a temple. Drape it with true classic. That's not them. They did not say
to say that. It's not their motto. I remember, I think it was in 2018, 2019, for years there had been a tremendous amount of distress within Kentucky counties about county jails
housing state prisoners.
Now, probably two-thirds of Kentucky's county and state prison population, they are there
for substance use issues, the overwhelming majority of which are opioid issues.
The counties would say, state is overwhelming our ability to maintain our jails because
of how many state inmates we're housing.
We've got to have some relief.
So individuals who came to recognize that we cannot incarcerate our way out of drug
addiction, there has to be a different approach
because the incarceration model has not worked
and will never work.
Decided that they would pursue
some criminal justice reform legislation
that would result in the depopulation of the county jails
of state prisoners who have been incarcerated
for substance use issues.
This should have been received with enthusiasm because the counties had been complaining for years about the overcrowding of their facilities
with state prisoners who've been locked up for drug addiction issues.
So this legislation starts moving through
and guess who is opposed? Can't imagine.
The counties themselves because once the legislation was put out, they did the math on the per diem
reimbursement rate they were receiving from the state and they recognized that if the
state let out non-violent drug offenders from county jails, they were going to lose the
money that came with housing them.
So while they had previously been complaining about the overcrowding and the
conditions and the difficulties, the even greater problem became the loss of
revenue if the state were to release nonviolent drug offenders and they got
their act together and opposed it with full force.
Government has a vested interest in the perpetuation of the problems that it seeks
to solve.
Because if you solve those problems out of a sudden, you don't need the same scale and
scope of administrative bureaucracy that you once did.
And that means it gets the axe.
To quote a Lyft driver, he said this to me years ago, if you make umbrellas, you need a terrain.
That's beautifully said and exactly right.
If you make umbrellas, you need a terrain.
I'm going to have to use that one.
I don't guess you know that Lyft driver's name is like credit to you.
No, I don't, but it blew my mind when he said that.
It's amazing the wisdom that you can get
from left and over drivers
if you just engage them in conversation.
It's fabulous.
I am convinced they're oracles sometimes.
I don't know what that is, but that's a different podcast.
Let's get into this.
First of all, I'd love to know briefly,
what is the structural damage that happens
to the human brain after opioid addiction?
What are we looking at there neurologically?
Can you see it on an MRI?
Is it distinguishable?
Like if I take the brain of an opioid addict,
put it next to a healthy human brain, what's the difference?
There is a significant decrease in frontal lobe activity
with individuals who are opioid dependent.
The frontal lobe being the region of the brain responsible
for all of our executive function and decision making
and just basic day-to-day living.
Okay.
There is a substantial decrease in frontal lobe
neural activity within the brain
of an opioid dependent individual.
And this is both sides of the brain or just dim?
The frontal lobe is right across the front on both sides and when you image the electrical
activity you're able to see a significant diminishment of that within the frontal region.
So what is the explanation for why that's happening?
That's just there's not enough dopamine happening or is there another explanation for is there scarring that's happening? There's just, there's not enough dopamine happening.
Or is there another explanation for it?
Is there scarring that's happened to the brain?
Is there a lack of neural connections that's happening?
You are, I'm a lawyer because I can't do math and science.
So in some ways you're asking me a question
that goes beyond just a very rough and approximate ability to explain.
The best thing that I can say is that opioids
depress the body's metabolism in all spheres.
It is a depressant.
So you're slowing down your metabolic function.
You're slowing down your brain's neural activity.
And over the long term, that depressant effect can assume permanency.
Just while when somebody has been dependent long term, whether they've gone through an abstinence program
or whether they have used medically assisted treatment, if they ever do fully come off,
oftentimes there will be permanent impairments of executive function
because of the way in which the brain's activity has been rewired and permanently changed by opioid dependence.
So the dimmer switch just stays down.
It's not going.
Okay, so I begin.
What is it?
First of all, where, where, how did you encounter this stuff?
And then most importantly?
What's what's it doing? Why why is it that so many there's so many reports that people who are like late-stage?
Opioid addicts one session. I've heard yes, and it's gone. Yes. So what first of all, how did you stumble upon this stuff and?
What are the theories on why that's happening?
so
Back in 2018 I started noticing stories about the discovery of
psilocybin's impact on alcoholism
Yeah, and the degree to which psilocybin was able to essentially help people who had been alcohol dependent for decades stop drinking
right I come from a family that has I just
terrible terrible generational history of alcohol dependency it has caused tremendous damage
To my to my kin for as long as anyone can remember. I was probably in my early 20s before I could be in around
an adult holding an open can of beer
and may not almost have a total panic attack seeing it.
I mean, it's been wicked.
Yeah, because you saw the shift as a kid, that shift.
We see your dad with the booze.
Or any other relative who's a grown man
and you're a small child and you watch it go down.
It's a terrifying experience.
So in 2018, I saw that psilocybin demonstrated some dramatic effects on essentially helping
resolve alcoholism.
And I started following with some consistency the degree to which scientific research was
beginning to validate the therapeutic application of particular psychedelics to treatment-resistant depression, anxiety, and alcoholism.
I came across an author who writes a sub-stack publication called The Journey, and the pen
name of the individual is Julia Christina.
I believe her real name is Julia Rybelt.
And she wrote about her own experiences using psilocybin to
overcome what had been lifelong issues of treatment-resistant depression,
anxiety and a near-fatal eating disorder. She wrote about her experiences just
beautifully and after I got the job to run the opioid commission in Kentucky, I
reached out to her and said, hey, here's my job. I've read your
writing. It's beautiful. I would love to have a conversation with you if you would be willing
about what may exist within the world of plant medicine that would have application to opioid
dependency. So she and I had a telephone call together on July the 29th of 2022. And she
said, Have you ever heard of Ibogaine? And I hadn't, never heard of it in my life.
I'm not the most well-read person, but I've got a wide variety of interests,
and this was something that was new to me.
She in turn put me in touch with a lady named Juliana Mulligan,
who's a licensed clinical social worker in New York City
and worked in a harm reduction clinic at that time.
And she said, I'm going to put you in touch with Juliana Mulligan.
You ask her to tell you about Ibogaine.
So I contacted Juliana, told her who I was,
told her who had referred me.
And I said, tell me about Ibogaine.
Now at this point, I had heard thousands of addiction stories
of various intensities and destructive dimensions.
Juliana had one of the most hardcore addiction stories
that I had heard.
She had been opioid dependent for about a decade.
She had been repeatedly incarcerated.
She had been in and out of every treatment program
that could be designed to treat opioid addiction.
She had been homeless at one point in time.
And she explained that just the lifestyle
that she had to lead in the United States to secure supply became so just brutal that
she wanted to go somewhere where it didn't have to be so bad.
She said that she got a job teaching English as a second language classes in Columbia and
she moved there.
Now Columbia has open pharmacy which means you can just walk in and get as much as you want as often as you want.
And she said she started teaching those English
as a second language classes,
and she would go to the pharmacy
and get as much as she want whenever she wanted.
And she said that she lived this way
for about a year and a half.
And she said she got up in the mirror one morning,
got up from bed one morning and looked in the mirror
and she said, I recognized that I was going to die. I had tried everything that I could possibly
try. I was more dependent than I had ever been and I was going to die. And I also recognized
that I was desperate to not and I needed to give myself one final chance. And she said,
I had received Suboxone, I had received Suboxone.
I'd had Suboxone treatment.
She said, for her, it was miserable,
and that she felt that she had been lied to by the provider.
Because when she said she tried to take herself off,
the withdrawal from Suboxone made her harem withdrawal
seem like a cakewalk.
She said it was the most brutal opioid withdrawal
she had ever experienced.
She said she got online, started just looking on the internet for opioid cure.
This word ibogaine came up.
She said, I read about it.
It seemed too good to be true, but I was literally willing to do anything.
And she said, what I didn't know at the time is that ibogaine comes with a cardiac risk.
If you receive more than you should, it will prolong the time between your
heartbeats and in some cases will stop your heart altogether. So you can potentially go into cardiac
arrest and die if it's not properly administered. She said that she found a clinic in Guatemala
that could get her in fairly quick.
She didn't know that there needed to be
due diligence research around safety
and therefore she didn't do it.
So she went to this place in Guatemala.
They gave her twice the amount
that she should have received.
She said that she went into cardiac arrest
six different times and nearly died.
And while she had recollection of her abogaine experience,
she couldn't remember much else. She said that she woke up in the intensive care
unit of a Guatemalan hospital and she said when I opened my eyes I recognized
that I felt the best I had ever felt in my entire life. She said not only was my
physiological opioid addiction gone, not only did I not experience
any withdrawals whatsoever, but for the very first time in my life, having been repeatedly
told that I was a diseased individual who was going to have to live with this condition
for the rest of my life, that it was inescapable and that I was forever impaired.
In fact, because I had been fully and completely restored physiologically, I knew psychologically
that my life was my own.
For the first time, I felt as though I had agency and control and could define my own
future and be in control of my destiny.
I was going to have a life that would be defined by my choices rather than one driven by my compulsions.
And she said, most importantly for me, I came away with a concrete affirmation that I am
a spiritual being who has a unique and special purpose to achieve with my life and given
to be by my Creator. Now, I cannot think of a greater gift we can give our fellow
person than to be able to affirm the reality of our human divinity. When we combine the
physiology, the psychology, and spirituality of Ibogaine into one beautiful botanical package,
the only conclusion I can draw is that yes indeed,
by whatever name we call our Maker, our Maker has delivered for us on this earth miracles
that are readily available in God's creation with which we can heal the wounds that we
inflict on ourselves and each other. And within the context of what is a devastating public health epidemic within the United States
of America, we have the opportunity to deliver a genuine curative therapeutic miracle for
individuals for whom everything that we have currently
have to offer has failed. And I am not here and have never suggested that
Ibogaine is for everyone, that it becomes standard
operating procedure and everybody be made to take it as a gateway to
recovery as those who support, in many cases, opioid maintenance treatments
suggest need to be applied for that model. I'm just here to suggest that we diversify, expand, and
improve upon our available options by including Ibogaine as a choice that
individuals may exercise in consultation with their families and their own
physicians as an alternative method to pursue long-term recovery. Wow. And I don't know how anyone who has a proper understanding
of what this can do and who is genuinely concerned
about the condition of their fellow person
would stand up and deny or oppose the introduction
of an additional alternative to improve people's lives.
That's all we're asking.
Well, I mean, first of all,
that was beautiful. Thank you. And I can see that you feel, I mean, I'm a kind of
divine calling here. I feel like you you have to do this and that must be a weird
feeling and I don't know how much you can talk about that without people are
like, great, what do you think you are? But I don't mean it like that. I mean, I
can just feel your passion
because you've been in communities where you've seen,
having personally experienced this with one individual.
Like, I'm pissed.
I can't imagine what it's like to experience it,
to know all the data that you know,
to have to sit with families, no doubt,
and witness the wreckage, the carnage in a place
that is one of the most decimated places in the country because of this poison.
So the passion is beautiful.
Thank you.
There's no question in my mind that at the heart of trauma and addiction is profound
spiritual affliction. If we are trying to address
the physiological and psychological dimensions of the human being,
we're only getting to two-thirds of the problem. We have to look
at the entire human being, and that means the human being
as a spiritual creature whose individual significance
should be and
must be affirmed if we were going to give anyone hope of a better day than
what they are living in the midst of despair. And any solution that omits the
recognition of the spiritual significance of the human being is a
solution that is destined to fail. Absolutely, but you know the world we
live in right now, those words are not safe words.
The secularist, materialist world, saying soul, creator, what?
You can't even say, especially related, medicine.
No, no, no, we're machines, we're machines.
And this is the world we're living in.
As people get, you know, my wife is Catholic, she's a devout Christian.
She tells the wrong person she's a Christian.
They act like she said she chops cats' heads off under the full moon or something like
that.
I mean, it really freaks people out these days.
It's wild, man.
People are real upset by the language you just used.
And then to take that language
and try to tie it in with an actual medical treatment, that's got to be controversial.
It's only controversial to individuals who look at life through a purely materialist perspective
where human beings who are in control of human systems are able to assert those
systems to control and subjugate other human beings. And with that I'll come
to this point and this again is jumping a little further in the conversation
than you may be ready for. But based on my observation of having participated in
this discussion around the Ibogaine for what's coming up on my third year. And every day is a blessing to be able to do this. I can't
believe what a wonderful opportunity it is to serve this cause. But as I see it, there's
no question whether we're talking about trauma and addiction or whether we are talking about
the advancement of an alternative treatment modality that addresses the spiritual nature of the human being.
This is a spiritual struggle.
And it is a contest between human beings who wish to play God and everybody else who's
not going to have it.
That's what this is.
That's the battle line. Those who want to
play God versus everybody else, it's not going to have it. And that latter group is much
larger than the former. I think you can take individuals, regardless of what their sectarian
tradition is, and come upon some very foundational recognitions of common truths, and one of those truths is
we all bear the image of an eternal creator whose essence is almighty
unconditional love for each of us, and that kinship is one which obliges us to
recognize, elevate, and celebrate the spiritual significance of every life, not just in American
society but across this world.
And if Ibogaine's medicalization within the U.S. health care system can help affirm those
broader realities for folks who have never experienced the first inkling of their soul's
existence, then we have delivered a beautiful social change that will create
a better world for all for years to come. Oh, that's beautiful. Yeah, those are the stakes.
This episode of the DTFH has been brought to you by ShipStix. Look, I've been working on like different people you see in the airport.
I don't know if you guys could see that.
That's the American Grubster.
He's got a bumpin' backpack that he's gonna hit you with when he goes through the aisle.
He's wearing a baby shirt like Minecraft or something.
He's got sweaty ham hocks.
But you see a lot of people in the airport, and you see the golf men, golfers, as they
call them, hauling around their golf bags, freaking out, checking their bags bags their precious golf clubs their million-dollar golf clubs
literally the
Connection to God in this world for a golfer is their golf clubs
They're precious precious golf clubs and the stress not to mention their shoulders
Chafing is they run through the airport. The anxiety is they sit and wonder
whether are my golf clubs gonna make it?
Are they gonna be lost again?
You've seen the way airlines throw shit around.
And I'm sure there's many people working in airline
who love nothing more than take your precious golf clubs
and slam them to the ground with hate.
And even if it doesn't mess your clubs up,
that hate gets in there and that hate will mess up
your golf game, period.
That has been proven in many studies at MIT
and a variety of other established institutions.
I'm not gonna bore you with the math or the science
or whatever, but I've read that stuff.
And hate, golf clubs absorb hate. No one knows why. I'm not going to bore you with the math or the science or whatever the whatever, but I've read that stuff and hate
Golf clubs absorb hate. No one knows why
That's why the lightning strikes
This brings us to today's glorious sponsor skip airports dress and costly airline fees with
Complementary insurance real-time tracking dedicated support and on-time delivery to schedule your shipment attach your label and ship sticks
Handles the rest deliver your gear directly to your destination.
ShipStix offers white glove shipping
for golf clubs and luggage.
They get treated the way you need them to be treated.
They don't get injected with hate.
Travel worldwide without luggage.
ShipStix delivers to 180 countries
for a hassle-free, gear-free journey.
You can enjoy the flight and all the luxury of flying
without having to worry over your clubs.
Right now, ShipStix is offering our listeners
20% off your first shipment
when you go to ShipStix.com.
Use the code DUNCAN. Go to ShipSticks.com, use code Duncan
to get 20% off your first shipment
and save yourself the hassle this golf season.
That's S-H-I-P-S-T-I-C-K-S.com.
Make sure you use the code Duncan so they know we sent you.
Thank you, ShipSticks.
["ShipSticks Theme Song"]
The problem is this normalization, okay? So let's take the example of the for-profit prison model.
So somehow elected officials or people working in the state can get away with saying, listen,
we're not going to make as much money if we don't incarcerate people with a spiritual disease,
even though the incarceration isn't helping anyone at all,
we won't make as much money.
Now, somehow people hear that,
and they're, I guess, I guess there's something there.
Now, imagine this.
What if these very same prisons,
instead of just holding people in a prison cell,
were actually, let's say, extracting blood from them. Just extracting some blood every day, I
don't know, a liter of blood every day, and then they were feeding that blood to a gargoyle that
lived in the bottom of the prison. Now, there would be people surrounding that prison with torches.
You can't hold people
in here for their blood to feed your evil gargoyle. So what you're saying isn't even
controversial when you point out there does seem to be a very clear distinction between
some hopefully smaller subsection of society that's managed to mechanize humanity and somehow ignore the very root of what makes
a human human, whether you want to call it soul, interconnectedness, whatever that may
be, to imagine the true healing.
And anyone who's been to a birth, you know, just a run-of-the-mill birth without a midwife,
anyone who's been to a birth without a doula. Just watch the way humans enter this world, and you will understand exactly the point
this gentleman is making, which is when a baby enters this world, it is not treated
like the sacred, holy, incredible thing.
The sense of the presence of the divine in the room, the strange familiarity with that
feeling, the overwhelming sense of love, and
this being bringing much more into the world than their little body would indicate.
All of that is annihilated by the for-profit model of the hospital, wants to put drops
in the baby's eyes, put a thermometer up the baby's butt, chop the tip of the baby's dick
off, right?
All the things that happened in a flurry
in the midst of this mystical experience.
Essentially, for lack of a better word,
a kind of medical black mass happens in the midst of birth.
That's a very unique phraseology.
That's what it, I've got three kids
and by the third we figured it out.
But the first one, you're just a babe in the woods,
you don't know what's happening when they're like, we got a spray scorpion spit in the baby's eyes. I guess so!
Now you don't really do that. But so, and I don't know what that thing is in the world, but I think
it's good to say it's there, because people, whether it's just some kind of coalescing of greed or something,
some systemic manifestation of greed, or whether it's actual demonic forces that just for
shits and giggles want to like ruin humanity, I don't know, but it's there for sure.
One of the foundational principles that came out of the Enlightenment,
which is the intellectual movement that produced America's Founding Fathers,
was the elevation of empiricism, the way in which the scientific method was designed
to distill out objectively observable realities from which truth could be derived. Empiricism has created a tremendous amount
of forward evolution for the human species
since the 17th century.
It's been a wonderful thing.
Empiricism has some blind spots.
And one of those blind spots is the reduction of the human being to the merely material.
Right.
Empiricism opens up the doorway to reductionism.
And when you take a reductionist approach to the human being,
you open up a Pandora's box of potential horror that can be afflicted through systems that operate within the zone
of what C.S. Lewis called the banality of evil.
Evil is not promulgated by the big scary monster that is obvious and that we can all communally
recognize as horrific. evil operates in the most sanitary, respectable, quiet, and mechanical ways so as to not draw
suspicious eyes or ears to its silent activity.
Goosebumps! That is so perfect!
Thank you.
There's no robes.
I didn't even rehearse that one. That was just me talking to you.
The banality of evil.
You look at the movies, you know, the vampire.
Robes, nice cape, castle.
No, no, no. That's not what it looks like at all.
It's not.
Oh, it's just like a background hum.
It looks like this.
Yeah, you gotta wear the costume.
You gotta put that nice clean suit and press tie and yeah.
We gotta wrap it up. I know
you got a heart out but I have two quick questions. Number one, I'm listening to it as someone who
might be listening right now and is either in the midst of addiction themselves, has a family member
loved one in the midst of addiction, doesn't have time for Ibogaine to become something that is prescribed,
what should they do?
And number two, people like me,
who are now ready to run into the ocean for you,
how do we participate in helping your cause?
So on the first question,
I have to give a little contextual disclaimer.
When I started down this road, at some point, I determined that if I were going to be credible
and if I were going to have the necessary influence within this debate, that I needed
to be willing to practice what I preached.
And that meant taking the medicine to understand it.
So just so that I could say in the face of criticisms and scare tactics
and all the attacks that I had seen be thrown at it in Kentucky,
so I'm going to do this so that I can understand exactly what it is, what it does,
take the risks and come out on the other side so that I could speak to it.
So in November of 2023, my wife and I both traveled
to a place called Ambio, which is just south of Teomano
where a lot of US Special Forces veterans have gone
and we received Ibogaine followed by 5-MeO-DMT.
There is another clinic that operates in Cancun
called Beyond, B-E-O-N-D.
And they have recently announced a program
called Beyond Service that provides essentially
free Ibogaine treatment for US veterans
who have come back with the experiences of war,
trauma, as well as traumatic brain injury.
Both Ambio and Beyond have been fairly prominent in terms of their provision of Ibogaine treatment
for a few years now.
So in December of last year, my wife and I traveled to Beyond and received Ibogaine there
so that we could understand how each of those clinics provide their treatment.
You asked me a question that triggered this explanation.
Which is where people who are like ready.
Where do they go?
Yeah.
So my wife and I have had personal experiences with Ambio south of Tijuana and we have had
a personal experience with Beyond which is in Cancun.
Both of those providers adhere to top-notch safety protocols.
They have impeccable safety records and if an individual is curious as to where they
can go now to try to seek treatment, I would recommend that they check out Beyond, B-E-O-N-D
or AMBO, A-M-B-I-O, and make a determination based on, you know, what schedule availability
and resources are if they are able to make the journey to those clinics.
A person should never, ever, ever look to order online or to self-acquire and to self-administer.
This is a serious medication that comes with serious risks
and it must be administered in a clinically controlled medical setting.
Oh my god, I have a horror story that I can't even tell about someone who went the path you just talked.
And it's, don't, I mean, I can't tell the story, but it is one of the most horrifying permanent damage.
I'll just leave it at that.
So continue please.
Your second question, how to support.
I think the very first step in any process of public debate is the introduction of subject
matter and the delivery of proper education around that subject, whether
it's you or those in your audience, whatever informational resources that they can find
that are credible. And I would mention the journal Nature Medicine and it's January 4, 2020,
January 5, 2024 article on Ibogaine. The journal Nature Medicine is one of the top three
medical research journals in the world. They published the dramatic results of
Ibogaine treatment for US Special Forces veterans in that edition.
Informational resources that are based in empirical science. The Kentucky
hearings that we had are readily available. There were three. One was in
July, the other was in
September of 23. The Kentucky Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission public hearing in September
of 2023 was one of the most powerful public proceedings that I had ever had the opportunity
to witness. And it was 24 individuals who had received, provided, or had sent loved ones for ibogaine treatment.
You can go view those, disseminate that information.
Right now, the most critical strategic beachhead is the state of Texas,
where we are pursuing what's called the Texas Ibogaine Initiative.
Your listeners can go on to Google and type in Texas Ibogaine,
and there will be a webpage that comes up that is attached to the Reed Foundation.
I currently serve as the executive director of what's called the American Ibogaine Initiative
for the Reed Foundation.
The very first objective is to create a public-private partnership within the state of Texas that
will develop Ibogaine as an FDA approved medication.
That campaign is in full force right now.
I would encourage your viewers and listeners to go to the Texas I began initiatives website,
sign up for newsletters, and disseminate through their social media platforms
and any other circles of influence that they can find what is happening here in Texas
and start calling with respect and with joyful encouragement, not rage or resentment, joyful encouragement,
your elected representatives here in the state of Texas, and ask that this legislation be supported.
The more people that are organically involved in the democratic process, the better our prospects are for success.
And as events around the Texas High Began Initiative are
announced through social media platforms that are connected to it I would just
encourage your audience and viewership to engage those elevate those and lift
them up for public consumption and understanding. Beautiful you're the best
thank you so much I feel so inspired really thank you so much. I feel so inspired. Really. Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure. Listen, I am modest clay, but I believe in some spectacular things,
particularly the preciousness of my brothers and sisters in this life.
And if I can be an effective servant of that preciousness, it's my honor to do so.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All those links will be in the comments section or if you're
listening to this in the comment section at dougatrustle.com. Thank you so much for coming
on the show. My pleasure. That was Brian Hubbard everybody. Go to the Texas Ibogaine Initiative.
All the links mentioned are going to be in the comment section of the YouTube clip or in the
comment section at dougatrustle.com for my dearest audio listeners. If you're sick of commercials on of the YouTube clip or in the comments section
at dougatressell.com for my dearest audio listeners.
If you're sick of commercials on this show or in general,
I get it, subscribe in my Patreon or on the YouTube.
Either way, you're gonna get commercial free episodes
of the DTFH, either audio or video.
Trying to figure out a way to get video on Patreon. We're not there yet.
I love you!
I'll see you next week.
Until then, Hare Krishna.