Joe Rogan Experience Review podcast - 418 Joe Rogan Experience Review of Rick Perry & W. Bryan Hubbard
Episode Date: January 12, 2025This weeks sponsors Raycon Everyday Earbuds www.buyraycon.com/JRER Get FIFTEEN percent off sitewide Draft Kings www.draftkings.com New players can play five bucks to get a spin on the mystery wheel fo...r a shot at up to ONE THOUSAND in Casino Credits! Download the app and sign up with code JRER. For Iphone get from the Store Android playstore  www.JREreview.com For the latest Joe Rogan News and Blog posts Head to our Patreon to support the show For all marketing questions and inquiries: JRERmarketing@gmail.com  This week we discuss Joe's podcast guests as always: Rick Perry & W. Bryan Hubbard A portion of ALL our SPONSORSHIP proceeds goes to Justin Wren and his Fight for the Forgotten charity!! Go to Fight for the Forgotten to donate directly to this great cause. This commitment is for now and forever. They will ALWAYS get money as long as we run ads so we appreciate your support too as you listeners are the reason we can do this. Thanks! Stay safe.. Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/joeroganexperiencereview Please email us here with any suggestions, comments and questions for future shows.. Joeroganexperiencereview@gmail.com
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now schedule one says that there is no medical purpose for this compound
whatever
this might be
yeah and that it's addictive
and i began is
neither of those right clearly evidence if there's it as a matter of fact if
there was a definition
of a compound that was not scheduleule I, Ibergain
would be the top of the list most likely.
Yes.
All right.
So welcome to the Joe Rogan Experience Review.
That was Rick Perry and Brian Hubbard talking with Joe Rogan about Ibergain.
Now, you know, I knew who Rick Perry was, but never in a million years
would I have thought the conservative ex-governor of Texas would suddenly be
the biggest advocate for Ibergain, Ibergain treatment. Kind of wild, right? It, yeah, it is. I mean, sort of, um, unexpected characters in this, in this, uh, initiative.
Um, but I think that these two, at least, you know, seeing them on, on Joe's podcast,
I feel like they're making a really great team and I feel like they're going
to make something happen here, you know?
Yeah. I feel like they're making a really great team and I feel like they're gonna make something happen here.
Yeah, and they're not seen as a couple of hippies
that are trying to promote a psychedelic drug.
These are serious people, Rick Perry especially.
And he's drawn into this with
an incredible desire to want to help these veterans that are struggling so badly.
Yeah.
It's powerful.
I found it really powerful.
I found the combination of these two, like I said, that they are going to make an impact
one way or another. They have sort of different motivations, right?
Different moving stories and people
that have sort of driven them to get here.
Right.
Perry talks a lot about, you know,
this one specific veteran that impacted his life personally.
Yeah, Marcus Luttrell.
Yes. Legend. And, Marcus Luttrell. Yes.
Legend.
And, you know, Brian talks more about
these other moving stories about just people, children,
you know, even his wife that, you know,
were affected by the opioid crisis and, you know,
the pharmaceutical companies and their...
You had that whole bullshit story of opioids
and how awful they've been.
I'll tell you what, Brian Hubbard, interesting guy.
I mean, the passion on that guy,
it was almost like getting to like preaching energy.
I mean, this is someone that could not believe and have more passion in a subject than this.
That's what I was getting from it.
At some point, I literally wanted to stand up and say, amen.
He was so moving.
I said, in his stories and in his previous roles talking about the impact he had, you
know, managing the opioid crisis in Kentucky and, you know, having, you know, if he's not
a motivational speaker, he should be.
He's got the voice, he's got the passion, he's got the hair to go with it.
And he looks a bit like Zach Galifianakis.
He kind of does, but you know, it works.
And yeah, I got teary-eyed listening to him.
I got angry listening to him.
He just really brought a lot of emotions out for me,
which I think is the way that you're gonna have to go
about something like this initiative, right?
You're going to have to tap into people's emotions,
not just their logic.
Well, it's appropriate when you think
of what they're saying,
and it's that lives are being destroyed, okay?
This isn't a slight inconvenience.
Right.
It's that these people's lives are getting destroyed.
They're getting directed towards
taking opioids to fix how they're feeling. And it's not doing that. It's creating addiction
and death and destroying families while these pharmaceutical companies make a hell of a lot
of money. And on the other side, where Rick Perry is, he's seeing these veterans destroying their
marriages and often committing suicide because they just are not getting the support that
they need.
There's like the treatments that they're given, that they have access to at the VA,
is just not helping them.
And we've heard this a lot, even from
Special Forces people that we know personally, that it's a real issue and it's heartbreaking.
I wanted to play this clip from Tim Ferriss' podcast about Ibogaine. It's pretty short,
but it gives an idea kind of of what the experience is, what
the trip is. So before we get into the rest of the review, I think it's kind of useful
because when I was listening to Rick and Brian talking on this, the whole time I'm thinking,
I just, I don't know what it's doing. Like what is that thing that Ibogaine does? But
anyway, let's play this.
The thing that I found really interesting about this drug is that it produces
what I think is probably the most stereotyped trip, if you want to call it,
or the psychological phenomenon that happens alongside the drug effects.
And so people will describe this earlier life autobiographical replaying
of emotionally salient memories that are kind of epoched in time.
Some people would go, we've got life review, right?
Life review or slideshow, yeah, exactly.
And so, you know, it's interesting, everybody's kind of got a different version of what the
slideshow ends up playing out to be like for them.
And so some people would say, I found myself in this room and it was like my TV from childhood and all of
a sudden it was playing all these things, or I found myself in a hall of mirrors and it was
playing all these things. So like the context can be very different, you know, but the action,
the mind seems to shape that, but the actual replay seems to be pretty stereotyped.
Stereotype meaning like this, it's a pattern that repeats.
Or it's just like a common characteristic.
It's a common characteristic.
And it's.
Yeah.
So I don't know if that helps that kind of, you know, that, that gives me an
idea of what's going on, you know, it's the slideshow review of your life, how you got to where you are and through that, somehow, that reflection.
Maybe it's a process of like, you just don't have the denial in there, you're faced with
what you did to get to this.
It's not to say that it's anybody's fault.
When it comes to PTSD, that's not the person's
fault or a pattern of behavior that led to it. But addiction is complicated and it helps
clean up people's addiction as well. Fascinating, really.
Yeah. I think it's fascinating the way they describe it. Like it rewires your brain basically to
fix these things that are ailing you that you're falling into. Maybe you have resentment
over it. Are you, you know, you're fighting it, but you can't, you're losing this fight
with something. And I also find it very interesting that there's multiple, you know, scenarios in which this potential, you know, drug and,
and, you know,
you know, process going through a treatment plan with ibogaine is useful.
It's not just for people with one specific ailment, you know,
there's a lot, there's addiction, there's PTSD, maybe potential, you know,
other issues
that we haven't even discovered yet.
It seems quite broad.
And also one thing I would add, you know,
the further I get along in my new career as a therapist,
and a mental health therapist, you know,
not to say that you see the holes
in the system that you're working in,
but you know, you start to see what
other elements can be useful.
This drug seems very effective when administered to help people through these things, addiction,
depression, and just these other major concerns that they have in their life.
Um, but if you start training medical professionals, especially mental health
professionals, psychologists, you know, that sort of thing, to be able to
administer this medication and then, you know, have time to integrate what their
experience was, follow up with appropriate
therapy, things get more effective really quickly.
So there's also the potential for this combination of therapeutic behaviors.
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And I think that veterans as a specific group of people
have less resources and more problems accessing those resources than the average
individual. Right. Right. And this group tends, you know, there is a high number of veterans
that live in rural areas. You know, that's a, that's a statistic that you can find that
if, you know, living in a rural area, having PTSD, maybe being
lower income before going into the service or whatever, you know, you don't have mental
health access, they're on VA benefits. And so they have like sort of the cards stacked
against them. And so the idea that, you know, someone like Brian Hubbard has $842 million in settlement funds, is that right?
Something like that, to manage in this sort of initiative
to get Ibogaine, like a Ibogaine treatment plan going
for individuals in these groups.
You know, the struggle he's gonna have and the obstacle he's up against is
ensuring that it reaches all the right programs in all the right areas in the
right number. Right. Right. So how do we know that, you know, there's an,
and on top of that,
making sure that those funds don't get tied up through the red tape and the
bureaucracy, right? Like, well, you know, I would assume that there's going to be a lot of stops put in
place.
I mean, this is kind of what like the FDA is constantly doing is making it harder and
harder that, you know, for these types of treatments to be passed for whatever reason.
I mean, it's probably because, you know, they're not gonna be in bed with pharmaceutical companies.
So there's not big profits there.
And I mean, this is why it comes back to how,
you know, Brian was talking about the opioid epidemic
and how that is really been the solution for veterans
really suffering up until now.
Well, still is, I mean, Ibogaine is not available,
but I mean, that was their option.
And it was quickly passed by the FDA
and to say no oversight, it's a weird thing
because the FDA, it does a lot of things
and it does protect us, it does make sure
that drugs that get to market aren't killing people
on X, Y, and Z.
Yet they still kind of do.
Yeah.
And there's some ugly ones that get through.
And then they're massively overprescribed and it takes years to kind of curb that and fix it.
And who's taking responsibility for that?
Yeah.
You know, for the FDA to put their hands up and be like, look, we really dropped the ball
on this and we took too long to fix it and a lot of people suffered and our job is to
ensure safety.
And you know, we're really going to put our best foot forward, find a better solution
to help these people because we've got ground to make up for what we've done.
We've actually made the situation worse and destroyed
families. So, oh, now there's this new therapeutic potential solution. Obviously, it's not legal.
There's a lot of hurdles, but we're going to work with the right people, do the research,
find the efficacy, make sure it's safe and push it through. It just doesn't seem like they work like that.
It's almost like they just stand there going,
no, you prove it to us, and we're the side.
And no, actually, you can't even study that.
We're just gonna make it like that.
It's sad.
It's sad to think that people could have,
whether it's pride or, you know, obligation to shareholders or whatever it is
that may stop these individuals or these groups,
you know, these pharmaceutical companies
from admitting their faults and sort of like making amends
and trying to come out and fix it, like you said,
and really try to turn it around.
Like that's so unlikely.
I think what's more likely is that individuals
like Perry and Hubbard, they're going to make enough noise,
they're gonna build up all the right allies,
they're going to get enough people behind them
that there's gonna be undeniable evidence and support
that they have no choice but to say, okay, fine.
Yeah, I hope so.
Yeah.
I really do.
I mean, because it all comes down to access, right?
At the end of the day.
So obviously at first, certain people will get access, right?
I'm hoping it's the veterans that are, you know,
close to suicide or just really in a kind of their own self-destructive
kind of process because that's where it needs to go. But all the way down to addictions and
addiction treatment. I mean, in therapy, I know that there is a massive problem with addictions
and there's so many things you can be addicted to. And not everyone has
access to a therapist. How effective addiction therapy is, probably better than not going
to any therapy, but addictions are tough to beat. And there's a massive range of how
affected you can be by this. So to create an environment where people have access to a treatment like this. And
we're talking a one time go through, you know, from what I've heard about it, it's not that
you need to do Ibogaine time after time after time to figure out where your issue is. Or,
I mean, people are doing it and then they're like, quitting drinking, quitting whatever drugs,
quitting gambling.
I mean, it's kind of remarkable.
Yeah, I'm really anxious and excited to see
what Perry does, you know, trying, I think,
sounds like he's trying to work with the Texas Medical Center
down in Houston, like partnering with them
on the research behind this,
the potential for this treatment.
And,
Oh, that's right.
That's the huge hospital he was talking about.
Huge hospital down in Houston.
And you know, what, what the potential is, is when you work with like the biggest medical
center in the country, essentially, and you work with, you know, motivated people that do have put a lot
of support behind their veterans, like the people of Texas, and a motivated
leader, leaders like these two, like they're gonna get somewhere.
Yeah. And you know what? He's the right type of person to be talking to Trump
about this too. I don't think that Trump, even as a Republican leader, has really
much prejudice or biases against treatments for addiction and suffering veterans. I mean,
Trump's brother died of alcoholism. He knows it's real. Yeah. You know?
Just the stats on suicide alone that Perry and Hubbard mentioned, unbelievable.
It's so shocking.
Almost feels like there's a kind of a systemic failure in the support of mental health needs
for veterans.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the only explanation, right? Like it's well known that people that,
you know, serve in the armed forces and all the different branches, they come back to
real life and they struggle and they have these post-traumatic stress disorders and
these symptoms and these barriers to reacclimating into real life. Why is the system that's set up to help them medically,
basically creating more problems for them
by getting them addicted to opioids?
Like, why is that the solution?
Why was it ever the solution?
It was probably all the options they were given.
It's not like doctors just get to sit there and go,
oh, we can give you anything.
It's like, as treatment plans go,
this is the first thing that we can do
because you're in a state, you're really struggling,
that's kind of numb you,
and I'm sorry these things are so addictive.
And I'm sure it's tough for the doctors too.
And the VA is just under-resourced, underfunded,
and it puts them in a really tight spot. I'm sure there's a lot of really passionate people The VA is just under-resourced, underfunded,
and it puts them in a really tight spot. I'm sure there's a lot of really passionate people
that work there that hope that it could get better,
but it's not also gonna be the most progressive
kind of healthcare that you're gonna get,
meaning they're not gonna try all sorts of more.
Experimental. Yeah, you know, more experimental.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Woo woo we type, you know, they're not going to put you out and be like, Oh yeah, you just
got to do a bunch of yoga and meditation.
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Yeah. And to be fair, I mean, I think everyone probably could benefit from some of those things as
well, right? Like the sort of alternative ways of dealing with mental health and physical
health that may not be so mainstream or that might have some connotations that go along
with it or some things that people may not feel like it's for them for a certain reasons that can't,
that I really can't really explain. But I think that when you hear the stories that these guys
talk about, especially Perry, when he's telling this like very personal story about the veteran
that really impacted him and how he came around to this and why he's dedicated the rest of his career
to making this happen.
You know, you realize that these are real people,
they served our country,
they've been left behind by the system
and it doesn't matter what has happened in the past,
we have to move forward, right?
And everyone needs to have a more of an open mind
about this because these are people that really need some help
and that, you know, at all costs.
Yeah, and like you said, they've been left behind.
And that's the heartbreaking thing here is, in a sense,
all of the people that could be helped by Ibogaine
are being left behind.
I mean, there are other treatments for things like addiction,
depression, the rest of it.
I mean, therapy is a big part of it,
but Perrick points out combining therapy,
like I was saying earlier,
with some sort of innovative treatment like Ibogaine,
it's a combination of a holistic solution
that we really need to start looking at because there just
has been no fix to the veteran suicide issue and that has to stop. Yeah. And on top of all,
of everything, the bureaucratic hurdles created for veterans going through the VA system,
hurdles created for veterans going through the VA system.
It sounds like a nightmare for them.
They've already been through so much. Now they have to fight through this red tape.
While they have PTSD, they potentially have brain injuries.
They've got physical ailments, they're hurting,
life looks so different for them.
And we're not only making it hard for them to get treatments
that can really help them, but maybe even making it feel
like we're just saying this like woo-woo medicine.
It's like, why are we not just saying,
if these things really help people, let's get it going.
Yeah, but again, it's so much red tape.
Yeah.
I mean, and I understand why it's there
when a medicine could be potentially toxic or poisonous
and have long-term really negative effects.
But things like this, and as far as I know,
it's non-toxic.
I mean, maybe there's like a point
of how much Ibogaine you could take
to where it would be dangerous for you.
But you know, I don't get the red tape with this.
This is coming from some old ideologies, you know, in the system that it's just not good.
And look, I get it.
Ibogaine, its potential is really exciting, but it also sounds risky, right?
Without proper supervision, potentially. I mean, they describe it really exciting, but it also sounds risky, right? Without proper supervision, potentially.
I mean, they describe it as like a hard reboot.
Yeah.
You know, it's resetting neural pathways in the brain.
Do you know, I sound ignorant saying this
just because I just listened to this whole podcast,
but how is the treatment administered?
Is it a oral medication?
Is this an intravenous medication?
How do they actually?
I don't know.
Do you smoke Ibogaine?
I don't know.
I really don't know.
I didn't even think to look that up.
Gosh, we're gonna have to Google it.
Yeah, we'll have to figure out something there.
How is Ibogaine used?
What would be interesting to see is Perry's push for legislation and action around Ibogaine. It's something we should watch out for.
It's going to be really interesting to see how he maneuvers around the stigma and kind of these outdated drug laws that
have held back this type of treatment.
Again, I think that he's really the messenger for this.
If you take somebody that traditionally has been very conservative but also an effective governor. So, you know, he's not just some quack, wacko out there.
It's gonna build confidence.
And I really think that that is the way
to get these things passed.
Advocates like that, it's just kind of hard to argue with
because he gets so much respect
from many conservative people.
And again, you're dealing with veterans.
It's like who doesn't want to help veterans
at the end of the day?
Especially ones really struggling.
Well, veterans and just people, you know?
Hubbard talks about this really moving,
towards the end of the podcast,
this really moving story about his wife
and her story with Ivy Gain, you know, and how it
started with, it transformed her life really, because she was addicted to opioids. And obviously
he's not saying it's all perfect and everything, just go with it. Like even though like I saw,
you know, it work, we need more research, we need more, but that's, that's sort of what
they're advocating for, right? It's like how to find the best, most effective, you know, plan of treatment.
How do we get it managed and, you know, under the right supervision and doctors that are
interested in and enthusiastic about this.
Yeah. They were definitely responsible for with their ideas. I mean, listen, they both
believe in this. They've seen people that have done the treatment
and they know it works.
But also they're not doctors.
They're not coming out saying,
this should be immediately available.
They're saying, hey, run your studies, do your tests
and see the results and then allow it to be administered
if it works.
Right.
And that's really what we're missing.
We're just missing so much of that.
Like give it a chance.
And that's the same for like psilocybin and MDMA therapies.
I mean hurdle after hurdle.
Yeah.
Something.
Back to what we were just saying before, we neither of us understood how this was actually
administered. It's just taken orally. Oh, you found some is like a pill. Yeah, I suppose it's
used historically in, you know, um, in religious ceremonies to gain spiritual enlightenment,
you know, just like, um, what's the other one? I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll ask. I can never say it.
I was, you know, one of those like that's been used
for centuries. Like it's not new to us, right? To humans. It's just new to the Western world.
It's new to, um, you know, modern medicine and people are scared of things like that.
Like for whatever reason we've seen that, you know, and maybe, maybe we blame the war
on drugs. I don't know for people being afraid to try new things and to sort of seen that, you know, and maybe maybe we blame the war on drugs. I don't know
for people being afraid to try new things and to sort of, you know, when like the what
you the clip you played at the beginning of this podcast. When something is labeled a
schedule one, it basically shuts all doors to even do research on it. It just says there's
no potential medical gain from it. And so when something is labeled that it really puts up, you know,
more than tape, like it's a brick wall that makes it almost impossible for
something to happen. So you have to get approval for that wall to come down.
You have to then get people to get closer to it and help you clean up the bricks
that have fallen. Like this is, you know, just in my head, how they, how,
clean up the bricks that have fallen. Like this is, you know, just in my head how they, how,
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long journey ahead of them and um i, you know, in support of this.
I think, you know, again, like we've said over and over, you can't shut down ideas that
could potentially help people in such a life changing ways when they really need it.
Like this isn't medical cannabis for back pain, but this is, you know, preventing our
veterans that have served their country for, you know, preventing our veterans that have served their country
for, you know, five, 10, 15, 20, 30 years from killing themselves.
Yeah. It's truly saving lives. It's stopping families being destroyed. And you know, the
other part of it for the general public, the addiction part of it, I mean, you know, and
also depression for many people in society, if it can benefit
them, it's like, look, there's never going to be a cure for these things.
But if there are really good treatments in place and supported by therapy, um, yeah,
but the post treatment support is very critical here as well.
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, it should be and it has to be.
But the drug itself, it just seems so effective
that I don't know if people that are going down
to Mexico to do Ibogaine are getting a lot of post
therapeutic support and it's still benefiting them greatly.
I mean, wow, not saying it's a cure-all, but it's something.
You know, this episode reminded me of how complicated
the opioid crisis really was, you know,
and you know, it's not just about funding,
it's about creating access and breaking down the stigmas. It's like on one hand, people are making so much money from the opioids.
They're not looking to find any other treatment to come in and take away their
money. And then it's just a bunch of lawsuits as people's lives get destroyed.
Right. Which is disgusting.
Yeah. And these two, you know, Perry and Hubbard,
they've, I feel like they've really only scratched the surface of what it will
take to change public perception about I've gained and psychedelics alike.
There's a, they have a huge hurdle ahead of them and you know, they're sort of
these pioneers and it's going to get worse before it gets better.
I'm sure the more noise they make about this, the more pushback they're going to
get the more, you know, uh, you know, traditionally conservative, you know,
people and those in support of, um, these pharmaceutical companies and their
success are going to say like, you know, this isn't the right way to go.
We're looking in the wrong direction.
But I, as someone who feels like, you know, innovation, you know, is important,
whether it sort of serves everyone or just a small portion of people like we have to
push forward with this, even if there's a small potential that it helps people in the
way they're anticipating. Yeah, we have to push forward with this, even if there's a small potential that it helps people in the way
they're anticipating. We have to continue to push and I think these two are going to follow
through with it and they're going to take those hurdles in stride. You know?
Yeah, that's true. And coming on Rogan is the way to do it. I mean, it's now millions of people
have heard this message and what better way to get it out.
What's really nice about this, and Rogan does like having governors on, he loves chatting
with them, even ex-governors like Perry, it's one of those things where if they make some
ground, significant ground, he'd be willing to have them on again to get the update, to
see how much further it's gone because he really wants to advocate
for these people, which is wonderful. And, you know, it's, it's hearing their personal
stories makes a difference. You know, people connect with the human side of the issues
more than stats.
Yeah. Yeah. I can't repeat it enough. You know, the moving stories they talked about, the passion they have for this project, you
know, it makes me want to support any and all funding and research for drugs like Ibogaine
and their treatment plans and you know get behind this.
I think some of this was eye-opening for me. Some of this was known,
but not really like a top-of-the-mind type thing where it's like, you know,
coming off the back of the election, coming off the back of all of these like big topics that have been so
front of mind recently. Like this is something that can probably easily fall to the wayside for a lot of people.
I would say I don't personally know too many veterans that have experienced this. I know a few but
there aren't like, you know, a day to day in my life as much as they are in yours. And so it's really
like it's, I don't want to say the word refreshing, but it's, it's a different bit
of information that like, I'm actually really grateful that I was able to hear more and
learn more about.
It's one of the reasons I really enjoy listening to Rogan.
Like it's always, I'm always learning something.
Right.
Because where else would you have heard this?
No.
Where else would you get that level of detail about something that we all know is a problem,
we've not heard solutions for it, and it's like, okay. Yeah, we've identified our news feeds look
very different. Your feeds and my feed is so different. So this stuff doesn't come up for me.
I get it when I'm listening to Rogan and obviously it's really eye-opening and you know I feel
like everyone should tune in a little bit to what's gonna happen in the future
with this. Yeah yeah well that's it for this week we're gonna end on that. Guys
check this podcast out with Perry and Rogan and stay tuned for what they can
do with this. We hope good things and right now we just want to give a shout out.
All the best to our veterans out there or anybody struggling with addiction and depression
and hopefully help us on the way.
All the best and we'll talk to you guys next week.
Cheers.