"Everything Must Go": Q & A with Derrick Jensen (2006)

From Arthur 23/July 2006.

One day in 1987 Derrick Jensen was browsing the public library when he came across a book that changed everything.

The Natural Alien by Neil Evernden exploded my worldview,” says Jensen, on the phone from his home on the Northern California coast not far from the Oregon border. “There’s a great line in there where Evernden makes an impassioned defense of some creature and somebody says, Well what good is it? And Evernden says the only response you can give is, Well what good are you? Not to make them feel bad but to show them that if you judge something solely by its utility to you, you ignore most of its being.

“It was the first book I ever read that talked about the basic stupidity of the utilitarian worldview.”

In his new book Endgame, Jensen argues that civilization—the utilitarian worldview put into practice—is not only stupid, it’s terminal. All forms of human civilization have historically worked to steadily exhaust the planet’s non-renewable resources, he says; therefore, no amount of technological ingenuity, no amount of political reform, no amount of Al Gore documentaries or carpool lanes or farmers’ markets or solar credits or biodiesel vehicles or Daryl Hannah in a tree will ever adequately replace what civilization has consumed in order to sustain itself, much less invert its fundamental imperative to use up the planet.

These are tough, hard-to-swallow ideas, the kind that we’ve heard in recent decades via controversial figures like Ted Kaczynski (aka The Unabomber), University of Colorado professor Ward Churchill and anarcho-primitivist theorist John Zerzan. But there’s a reason Jensen has gained a sizable following through his books, talks and interviews. What he brings to the table is a passionate directness, a command of the facts, and most of all, an ability to make a personal, poignant appeal not just for action, but for a mercy killing. He’s clearly a guy who won’t just let it go because he can’t let it go; he’s stayed up all night, doing some serious heavy lifting on all the inconvenient truths—the hopeless doomsday statistics, the possibility of imminent system crash—that the rest of us try to forget as we stumble to bed.

Of course he could’ve saved himself some of the trouble; at 900-plus pages, Endgame is far too long and rambling to be the definitive anarcho-primitivist text that its title and scope suggest. Still, it’s packed with provocative ideas that can explode your worldview, and so, in late April, I talked with Derrick about the ideas in Endgame that had provoked the most discussion around the Arthur office.

ARTHUR: Why does civilization need to be brought down now?

DERRICK JENSEN: A few years ago, I began to feel pretty apocalyptic but I didn’t want to use that word because it’s so loaded. And then a friend, George Draffan, said, ‘So Derrick, what’s it gonna take for you to finally use that word? Give me a specific threshold, Derrick, a specific point at which you’ll finally use that word. Will it take global warming? The ozone hole? The reduction of krill populations off Antarctica by 90 percent? How about the end of the great coral reefs? The extirpation of 200 species per day? 400? 600? Will it take the death of the salmon?’ And I thought about that. Salmon were once so thick around here that you couldn’t see the bottom of the river. You could hear the runs coming from miles before you’d see them. People were afraid to put their boats in the water for fear they’d capsize. And now, when I go out to Mill Creek, I start crying because I see two salmon spawning.

This civilization is killing the planet. They say that one sign of intelligence is the ability to recognize patterns. I’m gonna lay out a pattern here and let’s see if we can recognize it in less than 6,000 years. When you think of the hills and plains of Iraq, do you normally think of cedar forests so thick the sunlight never touches the ground? That’s how it was before. The first written myth of this culture is that of Gilgamesh deforesting that area to make cities. Plato complained that deforestation was drying up springs and destroying the water quality in Greece. The forests of North Africa went down to make the Phoenician and Egyptian navies. We can go north and ask, Where are the lions who were in Greece? Where are the indigenous of Europe? They’ve been massacred, or assimilated—in any case, genocide was perpetrated against them by definition because they’re no longer there.

If you start asking questions, the questions just keep moving back and back and back. This is a pattern that’s been going on for a long, long time. This culture has been unsustainable from the beginning. On a finite planet, you would think that we would think about that. You can’t exploit a planet and live on it too. At this stage, since there are no new frontiers to exploit, the planet’s falling apart.

So you genuinely believe the planet is nearing death?

Well, what measure do you want to use to determine the planet’s health? The climate is changing. 90% of the large fish in the oceans are gone. Phytoplankton populations are collapsing. Each summer a dead zone covers 8000 square miles in the Gulf of Mexico. Another blankets Chesapeake Bay. Another the Baltic Sea. Altogether, there are almost 150 dead zones, places where the water contains too little oxygen to sustain life. This number has doubled each decade since the 1960s. The cause? Industrial agriculture. Seabird populations are collapsing off the UK. American chestnuts are gone. The cod are effectively gone. Passenger pigeons used to fly in flocks so large they darkened the sky for days at a time. Same with Eskimo curlews. They’re gone. And do you know why there are no penguins in the northern hemisphere? Because they were eradicated. The great auk. Prior to the arrival of this culture they were present in unimaginable numbers. One of the early French explorers commented that you could fill every ship in France with them and it wouldn’t make a dent. The last one was killed in the nineteenth century.The grizzly bears that are on the California state flag, they’re essentially gone. I mean, somebody could certainly say, There’s still a tree standing, obviously things are okay. But that’s obviously an insane position. Nonetheless people keep taking it. That’s why I keep saying, Give me a threshold. At what point will you finally say that the oceans are getting hammered. If it’s not 90% of the large fish gone, is it 93%? 95?% 100%? How acidified does it have to get? What percent of the coral reefs have to die before we admit there’s a problem, and more importantly, do something about it? Give me a threshold.

We can choose whatever measure we want, and we find that stuff is falling apart. That shouldn’t surprise us. It’s just like any other relationship. If you have a girlfriend, do you believe you can sort of mercilessly exploit her and beat the hell out of her and cut her up and then expect for her to be able to maintain a relationship? Of course, given the rates of domestic violence, there are a lot of men who believe this too.

Why is it bad that certain species go extinct? Is it because all species have an inherent value and right to existence, or is it because they are useful to the ecosystem, and it’s their utility that we’re losing?

Well, it’s all of those. First, obviously salmon and sturgeon and smelt and migratory songbirds, they all… It’s simply WRONG to exterminate them. They are beautiful and wonderful beings on their own. The purpose of salmon is to be salmon. The purpose of forests is to be forests. That’s really critical. Second, forests suffer tremendously without the existence of salmon. Salmon provide a tremendous influx of nutrients into the forest. They put on about 95 percent of their weight in the ocean, and carry this weight into the forest and die. When the salmon come in, it’s time for a feast. In the Pacific Northwest, 66 different vertebrates eat salmon. Between industrial fishing, dams, industrial forestry, and the other ways the civilized torment and destroy salmon, and rivers in the Northwest starve: they only receive about six percent of the nutrients they did a century ago. Natural communities can only undergo so much stress. After that they collapse.

And yet civilization keeps chugging along, despite the deforestation and extinctions. People seem to believe that everything will work out via new technology or the system balancing itself out, even if they don’t know exactly how.

There’s something called carrying capacity, which is the number of any given species that a certain area can support permanently. Certainly populations can overshoot carrying capacity—you can have an island that can support a thousand deer forever but if you put 10,000 deer on it they’re gonna eat too much vegetation, they’re gonna cause erosion, they’re gonna permanently reduce carrying capacity. You can temporarily exceed carrying capacity, which is clearly what’s happening here.

There’s a machine image that Paul Ehrlich or somebody was using about how you have this airplane and you have rivets popping off the airplane. You keep saying I’m not worried about it. Well, eventually enough rivets are gonna come off that the wing’s gonna fall off and the plane is going to go down.

This way of thinking, that if we just ignore the problems, things are going to be okay, is really really easy, and it’s one of the things the Nazis used to great effect. At every step of the way, it was in the Jews’ rational self-interest not to resist. Because they kept pretending that things couldn’t get worse. So, would you rather get an ID card, or resist and possibly get killed? Do you want to get on a cattle car or do you want to resist and possibly get killed? Do you want to take a shower, or resist and possibly get killed? At every step of the way they could talk themselves into not resisting. Zygmund Baumann has this great line, this is a direct quote, that “rational people will quietly meekly go into gas chambers if only you allow them to believe they’re bathrooms.” It’s the same thing. Rational people will go quietly and meekly to the end of the world if you’ll only allow them to believe that the salmon don’t matter.

So your argument is that the sooner civilization falls, the better—not just for animals and plants, but for humans.

If someone had brought down civilization, whatever that means, 200 years ago, people who live in the eastern US could still eat passenger pigeons and Eskimo curlews. People in the West, in the Northwest, could still eat salmon. I live on Tolowa land. The Tolowa Indians lived where I live now for at least 12,500 years if you believe the myths of science. If you believe the myths of the Tolowa, they’ve lived here since the beginning of time. When this culture arrived here a couple hundred years ago, the area was, as was true of so much of this continent, just ridiculously fecund. The indigenous peoples could have lived here essentially forever, so far as we know—12,500 years is long enough for me to call it ‘sustainable.’ If civilization had come down 200 years ago, the people who live here would still be able to support themselves. But if it comes down in another 30 years, 50 years, 60 years, a hundred years, 10 years, whatever, the people who live here —who live in this place right here—won’t be able to eat salmon. At some point the current system is going to crash, and there are going to be people sitting along the banks of the Columbia, which will be glowing from the radiation at Hanford, and they will be saying, “I’m starving to death because you didn’t remove the dams that were killing salmon. God damn you.”

So, even from the purely selfish human perspective, yeah, it would be good for civilization to end. The sooner this civilization goes the better, because there’ll be more left.

Can you honestly tell Joe and Jane Sixpack that they’d be better off if this civilization were suddenly gone?

My audience is generally people who recognize that the system is really messing things up, and I want to push them harder, as some people have pushed me harder. That said, I guess it depends on how “Joe Sixpack” defines himself. I used to have this habit of asking people if they liked their jobs. About 90% say no. Most people work jobs they don’t love to buy stuff they don’t want to live lives that are pretty unhappy, etc etc. This culture is killing the planet, and it isn’t even making most of us happy. Also, I often ask people at my talks, How many of you have had someone you love die of cancer? Usually about 70-80% say yes. The air in Los Angeles is so toxic that children born there inhale more carcinogenic pollutants in the first two weeks of their lives than the EPA (which routinely understates risks so as not to impede economic production) considers safe for a lifetime. In San Francisco it takes about three weeks.

Of course cancer is a disease of civilization, made far worse by the toxification of our entire environment. I have Crohn’s disease, which is a disease of civilization. I know people who have MS, which is a disease of civilization. My mom has diabetes. That’s another part of my argument against civilization: it’s toxifying our own bodies. There’s dioxin in every mother’s breast milk. It’s not just salmon. It’s all of us.

Yes, but couldn’t you say the same civilization gives us medicine and modern, miracle-working health care? Don’t civilized peoples, on balance, come out ahead of pre-industrial hunter-gatherer societies?

I have a bunch of responses. The first is that modern medicine—available to the rich, not the global poor—is horribly ironic, in that industrial health care is one of the most toxic industries on earth. It produces PVC medical devices to treat someone’s cancer, then puts them in the hospital incinerator to send back out and give someone else cancer. Or uses mercury in thermometers in the hospital, then send that up the incinerator to be deposited in fish and to eventually give more children—human and nonhuman—brain damage. Where does this make sense? Modern industrial medicine cures the cancer of some rich American who became sick because of the toxification of the total environment, and these processes lead to even more toxification, causing yet more poor people—and nonhumans—to die. The real wonder of modern medicine is that the poor buy into this at all.

There’s also some sleight-of-hand there. Part of that is there’s a really high infant mortality among wild humans, as there is among a lot of wild creatures. If you make it to 4-5 years old in the wild, you make it a long way. Read Health and the Rise of Civilization by Mark Nathan Cohen, a forensic archaeologist.

Thirdly, people who think bringing down civilization would bring mass misery are ignoring that this is what’s already happening! It’s just that most of us don’t see it. There are people dying right now, starving to death in India, now, because of the global economy. Seventy-eight percent of the countries reporting child malnutrition export food. During the much-publicized famine in Ethiopia during the 1980s, that country exported green beans to Europe. During the infamous potato famine, Ireland exported grain to England (and part of the reason the potato blight took hold in the first place was that the Irish were pushed to the poorest land). The famines come a lot of the time because a) people have been dispossessed, b) the land they were on is now used for cash crops for export and c), the water’s been stolen for semiconductor plants or aluminum smelters or whatever. The current system is already enslaving them and exploiting them. Several years ago I asked Anuradha Mittal, former executive director of Food First, if the people of India be better off if the world economy disappeared tomorrow. She laughed and said, Of course. One of the examples she gave is there are former granaries in India that now export dog food and tulips to Europe. These are people who are dying right now.

Water is a great example of the world economy killing people. People say the world’s running out of water? The thing is, 90% of the planet’s drinkable water is used for agriculture and industry. People are dying of thirst in India right now because the groundwater is being used to make Coca-Cola. This whole lifestyle is based on exploitation.

So what I’m really talking about when I’m talking about bringing down civilization is depriving the rich of their ability to steal from the poor, and depriving the powerful of their ability to destroy the planet. I don’t think there’s many people who would not be behind that. Then everything else is just tactics, you know? The question becomes one of targeting.

In Endgame, you talk about specific actions that can be taken by individuals or small groups that could bring civilization down immediately. You discuss E-bombs: devices that destroy electronics, cause no harm to humans and, according to the September 2001 issue of Popular Mechanics, can be built for $400. Are you really advocating the use of these weapons?

Before we go there, I have to say that my emphasis is not on technologies or on particular tactics or actions. My point is that we need to recognize that this way of life is killing life on the planet, and we need to stop it. After that it’s kind of like the old line by JFK about those who make nonviolent revolution impossible make violent revolution inevitable. Let’s stop this by the most peaceful means possible. But in the end let’s stop this, because there is nothing worse than planetary murder. Nothing.

We also need to recognize that those in power are not going to give up their stranglehold because we ask nicely. They won’t stop exploiting the poor and deforesting because we circulate an online petition. We need to recognize that. And we need to recognize that Harriet Tubman carried a gun. Now that she’s long dead she can be a hero, but if she were alive now she’s be wanted for theft (“stealing” slaves) and terrorism. Geronimo had a gun. Tecumseh had a gun.

I’m not saying that people should willy-nilly pick up guns or that everyone should go drop E-bombs everywhere. I’m saying we need to have our seriousness called into question. What do we want? Do we want smaller clearcuts, kinder clearcuts, fewer clearcuts? Do we want the Giants to win the World Series and oh, by the way, it would be nice if we still have a world? Do we want to keep our cars and computers and lawns and grocery stores even at the expense of life on the planet? More to the point, do we want to allow others to keep their cars and computers and lawns and grocery stores even at the expense of life on the planet, which of course includes at the expense of poor humans? Even more to the point, do we want to allow those in power to perpetuate this system at the expense of the poor and life on the planet.

Bringing down civilization is not a monolithic act. It’s a billion different acts done by a billion different people. First, it’s recognizing that this culture is killing the planet. Next it’s realizing we can do something to stop it. Next it’s finding what you love. And next, it’s determining to act to defend your beloved. Everything after that is tactics.

And every different action has a different morality. It would be outrageously immoral to set off an E-bomb at a hospital. But on the other hand I think it’s almost impossible to make a moral case against taking out cell phone towers, which kill between five and 50 million migratory songbirds every year. If one cares about migratory songbirds—or if you care about not having the jerk at the next table yammer on about his latest financial conquest while you’re trying to eat, or if you care about the EMF waves which might or might not be dangerous—then it’s impossible to make a moral case against taking out those towers.

If E-bombs are so easy to make, why hasn’t one been detonated since Popular Mechanics put them on their cover?

I have no idea. That’s a good question. Except of course they have been detonated: by the US military, which tests and produces them.

I wonder that about a lot of things. Years ago—and before I say this I have to make absolutely clear that in no way am I even in the slightest advocating this—I was talking to a genetic engineer who said it’s really a piece of cake to make genetically modified diseases—all you really needed was three graduate students and a $100,000 laboratory, which is no big deal. He was stunned that it hadn’t happened yet. Once again, both of us are opposed to this, and were surprised no one has done it yet.

Another important thing to say about taking down civilization is that even before we get to the E-bomb stage there is a lot of other work to be done. And a lot of this work is not tremendously dramatic. A guy at one of my talks said, “I wanna go to China and take out a dam but I can’t do that ’cause it’ll kill villagers below.” Of course that comment ignores the villages destroyed by the erection of the dams. I responded, “Look before we even talk about this, of the two million dams in the United States, probably three-quarters of a million of them are tiny, illegal, not serving any economic function, and the only reason they’re standing is because of inertia. Nobody’s bothered to take them out. If you want to take out a dam, go take out one of these. Not even the cops will care.” The point is that we can get all excited about doing underground illegal stuff, but there’s a tremendous amount of entirely legal work we’re not doing.

The whole reform vs revolution question is bullshit. I used to teach creative writing at Pelican Bay, which is a Supermax security prison. I fully recognized that every time I walked in to that prison that I was participating in the biggest, most racist gulag on the planet. You can’t get much more reformist than teaching creative writing there. But at the same time many of my students said that the only thing that was keeping them sane was our classes. So in that moment any sort of belief I had in reform vs revolution question just fell apart, because once again: we need it all. That’s one of the great things about everything being so fucked up, that no matter where you look there’s great work to be done. If your call, if where your heart leads you is to work for battered woman’s shelters, wonderful. Wonderful, wonderful. If it calls you to write for Arthur and to push a perspective that is anti-authoritarian or whatever: wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. If it pushes you to do a timber sales appeal: wonderful also. We need it all.

But your book is about bringing down civilization—it’s not about filing timber sales appeals.

True, but I don’t exclude that by any means. I talk about the military strategy of hammer and anvil, a strategy used by Lee at the battle of Chancellorsville, where you keep a large part of your army back as an anvil, as a defensive force, and you send the rest of your army around to act as a hammer, an offensive force. Defensive work is incredibly important because if we all wait for the great glorious revolution, there’s not going to be anything worth saving left anyway. But at the same time if all we do is this defensive work, this culture is gonna just keep grinding away at everything, and there’ll be nothing left then either.

It’s like any revolution. The Black Panthers said this, the Zapatistas said this: 95% of any revolution is non-violent. A lot of it is education. A lot of it is this other stuff. And yes, of course the situation is desperately urgent, and yeah, dramatic stuff needs to be done. But I don’t even see, for the most part, people doing the less dramatic stuff. That’s what I find the most horrifying.

Having said this, that’s not an attack on most people because I understand… I’ve got friends who have two kids and are working jobs that they and their partner are making seven bucks an hour and they’re trying to raise two kids: “What, you actually want me to do something for the fairy shrimp in addition? Are you out of your mind?” I’m not judging my friends or other people for that but I also know that a tremendous amount of time is wasted watching television. I’m not saying anything against downtime either. I like to play online poker or whatever. I’m not saying that we need to spend every waking moment pushing and pushing. But we need to start doing the work. And we need to start doing it soon.

I kind of make fun of ‘fair trade’ but I gotta tell you, I think ‘fair trade’ is way better than ‘slave trade.’ But the problem I have is that’s not sufficient. Timber sales appeals aren’t sufficient. Working at battered women’s shelters isn’t sufficient. That’s really the whole point: what we’re doing isn’t sufficient.

You’re just talking about re-prioritizing.

Thank you! End of interview, you know? Every cell in my body wants for us to have a voluntary transformation to a sustainable way of living, where we would voluntarily have a softer landing, where we would recognize that we’ve overshot carrying capacity, that our way of living, which is based on the use of nonrenewable resources, won’t last. But I don’t think that’s going to happen.

If your concern is for the well-being of the humans who will be alive during and immediately after the crash, then what you need to do is start preparing people for the crash. Because it’s gonna come anyway. And if you don’t believe it’s gonna come, then we really honestly have nothing to say to each other. We can talk about what do you think about JD Drew for the Dodgers this year. What the hell’s wrong with the Angels? But if you do believe that a) there’s going to be a crash and b) it’s going to be messy and c) the current economic system is dismantling the ecological infrastructure of the planet, which means the longer it takes, the worse things are going to be, what that means is what you need to do is to start finding out what local plants can be used for antibiotics. What are local water purification systems you’ll be able to use. How are you going to build shelters. How will you pull up parking lots to make gardens. Learning self-defense and forming committees to deal with the additional violence that might (or might not) break out. Getting to know your neighbors, both human and nonhuman. How’s that for a start?

In the end, I think the primary measure by which we will be judged by those who come after will be the health of the landbase. Everything else builds from there. The people who come after aren’t going to give a shit as to whether we voted Democrat, Republican, Green, anarchist, or none of the above. They’re not going to give a shit about whether we were pacifists or not pacifists. They’re not going to give a shit about whether we signed or didn’t sign online petitions. They’re not going to give a shit about how hard we tried. It’s no good to live in a groovy eco-socialist utopia with free love if the planet is toxified. Those who come after are going to care about whether they can breathe the air, whether they can drink the water, whether the land can support them. Everything else comes from that. This seems so obvious I’m embarrassed to have to say it, but this culture is so insane it needs to be said. And it needs to be lived.

(From Arthur 23/July 2006..)

YOUR CIVILIZATION SUCKS.


In what has become a common summer camp drill, nurses dispense medication at Camp Echo in New York.

July 16, 2006 New York Times

Checklist for Camp: Bug Spray. Sunscreen. Pills.

By JANE GROSS
BURLINGHAM, N.Y., July 15 — The breakfast buffet at Camp Echo starts at a picnic table covered in gingham-patterned oil cloth. Here, children jostle for their morning medications: Zoloft for depression, Abilify for bipolar disorder, Guanfacine for twitchy eyes and a host of medications for attention deficit disorder.

A quick gulp of water, a greeting from the nurse, and the youngsters move on to the next table for orange juice, Special K and chocolate chip pancakes. The dispensing of pills and pancakes is over in minutes, all part of a typical day at a typical sleep-away camp in the Catskills.

The medication lines like the one at Camp Echo were unheard of a generation ago but have become fixtures at residential camps across the country. Between a quarter and half of the youngsters at any given summer camp take daily prescription medications, experts say. Allergy and asthma drugs top the list, but behavior management and psychiatric medications are now so common that nurses who dispense them no longer try to avoid stigma by pretending they are vitamins.

“All my best friends take something,” said David Ehrenreich, 12, who has Tourette’s syndrome yet feels at home here because boys with hyperactivity, mood disorders, learning disabilities and facial tics line up just as he does for their daily “meds.”

With campers far from home, family and pediatricians, the job of safely and efficiently dispensing medications falls to infirmaries and nurses whose stock in trade used to be calamine lotion and cough syrup. Three times a day, at mealtimes, is the norm, with some campers also requiring a sleep aid at bedtime to counteract the effect of their daytime medications.

“This is the American standard now,” said Rodger Popkin, an owner of Blue Stars Camps in Hendersonville, N.C. “It’s not limited by education level, race, socioeconomics, geography, gender or any of those filters.”

Peg L. Smith, the chief executive officer of the American Camp Association, a trade group with 2,600 member camps and three million campers, says about a quarter of the children at its camps are medicated for attention deficit disorder, psychiatric problems or mood disorders.

Many parents welcome the anonymity that comes when a lot of children take this, that or the other drug, so none stand out from the crowd.

“It’s nobody’s business who’s taking what,” said one parent of an Echo camper whose child is medicated for A.D.D. and who asked not to be named for privacy reasons. “It could be an allergy pill. The way they do it now, he feels comfortable. He just goes up with everybody else, gets it and then carries on with his day.”

Increasingly popular is a service offered by a private company called CampMeds, which provides a summer’s worth of prepackaged pills to 6,000 children at 100 camps. The company’s founder, Dana Godel, said 40 percent of the children regularly took one or more prescription medications, compared with 30 percent four years ago. Eight percent used attention deficit medications last year; 5 percent took psychiatric drugs.

Borrowing technology developed for nursing homes, CampMeds distributes pills in shrink-wrapped packets marked with a name, date and time. Camp nurses simply tear each packet along the dotted line, sparing them the labor-intensive task of counting pills and reducing the risk of error and thus liability.

The proliferation of children on stimulants for attention deficit disorder, antidepressants or antipsychotic drugs — or on cocktails of all three — is not peculiar to the camp setting. Rather it is the extension of an increasingly common year-round regimen that has also had an impact on schools, although a lesser one, since most medications are taken at home.

Exacting diagnoses and proper treatments enable some children to go to camp who otherwise could not function in that environment, said Dr. David Fassler, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and a professor at the University of Vermont College of Medicine.

Dr. Fassler said that children with one behavioral or mood disorder often “have a second or even a third diagnosis.” A child with A.D.D. may also be depressed and anxious, he said, a combination of symptoms that can make such children pariahs in the close quarters of a summer camp cabin without the proper combination of remedies.

Some camp owners question the trend, however. Mr. Popkin, the camp owner in North Carolina, is among them. “It’s universal, and nobody really knows if it’s appropriate or safe,” he said.

And many experts say family doctors who do not have expertise in psychopharmacology sometimes prescribe drugs for anxiety disorders and depression to children without rigorous evaluation, just as they do for adults.

“There is no doubt that kids are more medicated than they used to be,” said Dr. Edward A. Walton, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Michigan and an expert on camp medicine for the American Academy of Pediatrics. “And we know that the people prescribing these drugs are not that precise about diagnosis. So the percentage of kids on these meds is probably higher than it needs to be.”

A few medicines growing in popularity, like Abilify and Risperdal, are used for a grab bag of mood disorders. But according to the Physicians’ Desk Reference, the encyclopedia of prescription medications, they can have troublesome side effects in children and teenagers, including elevated blood sugar or the tendency toward heat exhaustion, which requires vigilance by counselors in long, hot days on the ball fields.

Some doctors, nurses and camp directors are uneasy about giving children so-called off-label drugs like Lexapro and Luvox. Such medications are used for depression and anxiety, and have been tested only on adults but can legally be prescribed to children. Clonidine is approved as a medication for high blood pressure but is routinely used for behavioral and emotional problems in children.

“That doesn’t mean they are inappropriate or unsafe,” Dr. Fassler said, adding that camp nurses should be able to call the physician when they have questions, but that not all parents welcome that.

Few camp directors risk discussions with parents about behavioral or psychiatric drugs. “We don’t make these judgments for families,” said Marla Coleman, an owner of Camp Echo and a past president of the American Camp Association.

Figuring out how to distribute all this medicine has taken some trial and error, beginning with supervision by the nurses, who watch the children take their pills.

Some camps do it in the mess hall, citing informality to put campers at ease and the convenience of having everyone assembled in one place.

Other camps prefer the infirmary, to provide more privacy. Camp Pontiac in Copake, N.Y., built a special medication wing with its own entrance and a porch where campers wait their turn.

In Fishkill, N.Y., at a Fresh Air Fund camp for underprivileged children, one nurse in the infirmary deals with bug bites and skinned knees and the other dispenses Strattera and Zoloft, the first for attention deficit disorder and the second for depression, social anxiety or obsessive compulsive disorder. Children at the camp take a comparable amount of medication for behavioral and psychological problems as their more privileged counterparts, but more of them suffer from asthma and fewer from seasonal allergies.

The potential for drug interactions is compounded by the widespread use of allergy and asthma medications. Tofranil, an antidepressant for adults that is used for bed-wetting in children, is not recommended in combination with Allegra, for seasonal allergies, Advair, an asthma drug, or epinephrine, the injectable antidote to deadly allergic reactions to bee stings, insect bites and certain foods, primarily peanuts.

Despite a tenfold increase in childhood allergies over the last decade, some camp doctors think daily medication is overused. The owners of Camp Pontiac, Ken and Rick Etra, brothers who are ear, nose and throat doctors, urge parents to forgo prescription remedies for seasonal allergies when occasional over-the-counter antihistamines are sufficient. Their summer camp does not overlap with the height of the pollen and grass season, the Etras say.

They also discourage bed-wetting medications, which can leave a youngster groggy. “They don’t pee, but they’re zombies,” said Mimi Burcham, Pontiac’s head nurse. Instead, camp directors train counselors to wake certain children at midnight for a trip to the bathroom and replace soiled linens with identical sheets to avoid embarrassment.

CampMeds charges $40 per child for any length of stay or for any regimen, a cost that most camps pass along to families. The Fresh Air Fund camps do not use CampMeds, but not because of cost, said Jenny Morgenthau, the fund’s executive director. Rather, Ms. Morgenthau said, many of the families are too disorganized — some in shelters or in prison — to do the preparatory paperwork.

So Fresh Air’s campers arrive with an array of unmarked bags and bottles that cannot be used under state regulations, and without some of their essential medications. Susan Powers and Leticia Diaz, who run the infirmary at the girls’ camp, are accustomed to children bringing their brother’s expired asthma inhaler or their grandmother’s sleeping pills in a perfume bottle. Sometimes the medications are missing because they have been sold on the street or used by adults, Ms. Powers and Ms. Diaz said. It takes a few days to unscramble.

The nurses at high-end camps have the opposite problem, with parents who try to involve themselves in all aspects of their children’s lives. Some, for instance, may view the daily photographs posted on the camp Web site, see their child is sunburned and call the camp director to ask for more diligent application of sunscreen. That mind-set may produce ceaseless efforts to help the child, but it has the potential to lead to overmedication, many camp owners and doctors say.

Ms. Burcham, a special-education nurse during the school year, said she often worried about her unfamiliarity with some of the drugs. She often turns to the Physicians’ Desk Reference for guidance, or sometimes calls her father, a psychiatrist.

Unpacking the shipment of medicine at Pontiac in mid-June, she tried to make sense of a packet from CampMeds for an 11-year-old who, for the first time, would be taking Concerta, for attention deficit disorder, along with Clonidine and Wellbutrin, both mood disorder drugs.

“I’m not a specialist, and that’s very disturbing sometimes,” Ms. Burcham said. “How do I know if we’re really getting it right?”

Then she carefully placed the medications in a plastic bin marked with the camper’s name.

Devendra talks about his festival…

L.A. Alternative Press

Freak Fest
Five fitful days in the head, heart and record collection of avant-folkist Devendra Banhart.
by Lesley Bargar

The term “festival” is an incredibly loose one. In Los Angeles, it can signify everything from a breakfast special at IHOP, to a jump castle free-for-all, to a soy-celebrating street fair, to 100-ish musicians declaring Fuck Yeah!!! on the streets of Echo Park. Most recently, the word “festival” has been pinned onto what L.A.-based eccentric freak-folk overlord/event curator Devendra Banhart has termed Hypnorituals and Mesmemusical Miracles Hanging in the Sky. “It was all about putting words together that all link together and can flow like honey,” he explains.

…Well, despite that—for the sake of clarity, let’s say—we’re calling the five day event taking place this week arguably one of the most unique, diverse and noteworthy convergences of unconventional musicians and artists to take place in Los Angeles in the last five years. Honey indeed.

The event, curated by Banhart, features musical acts ranging from ’60s psychedelic legends to Vermont multi-instrumental collectives to local nouveaux hip-hop pioneers to first-time performers. “The curating thing is something that’s always interested me,” says Banhart. “Me playing a show is exciting and I love it, but it’s not as thrilling as choosing a show and hearing the music that you love live.”

The inspiration for the festival, as he tells it, was watching his friend Jonathan Wilson—who had previously only played in bands—get up at Tangiers and play his solo debut. “It was the first time I was seeing him play alone on this stage with these beautiful songs. I started thinking that I’d love to do a sort of mellow fest, a mini fest. That’s the idea of putting together this festival: It’s a lot of these people’s first shows ever—and that doesn’t mean that they haven’t been playing for years and years.”

To clarify, we asked Banhart to point out some of the Hypnoritual Mesmemusical highlights, and explain how and why these particular artists nestled their way into the heart of Devendra and onto the tiny, appropriately flamenco-frequented stage of the El Cid.

Entrance: For Entrance, the new record that just came out is like a new start. It feels like something so new. The only band I can compare Entrance to at this moment is Brightblack [Morning Light]. The way that Brightblack sounds is like how Entrance sounds, except Brightblack is on downers and Entrance is on uppers. (Tuesday, July 18)

Ruthann Friedman: She had a hit song [“Windy” by the Association]. She used to live with David Crosby. She can tell these stories! She has this recording of her jamming with Bukowski on the drums. I heard it at her house; it’s amazing. Ruthann lives about 10 blocks from me, so I went over and I said, “Do you want to play a show?” and she said, “Sure!” But she has some really big issues with the joints in her hands. She’s had to have some therapy and re-learn the guitar. So in some ways it is like a first show after that. (Wednesday, July 19)

Adam Tullie and Friends: This is Adam’s first show ever. I’ve known him for a long time. He runs a clothing company called Cavern. His music is just his recordings at home, and I’m the only person who has heard them. And I like it. So I’m like, “Adam, please, play a couple tunes!” I had to convince him. (Wednesday, July 19)

Nobody and the Mystic Chords of Memory: When I first moved to California when I was 13, my favorite band was Strictly Ballroom. I hadn’t heard music like that. Then I was hip to the Beachwood Sparks stuff, and All Night Radio, and all these little branches. It’s amazing. So Mystic Chords of Memory with Nobody is so good, and for me, being a super fan of their first band, to have them play was amazing. But in no way is it selfish, though. I mean, every song is pure pop pleasure. (Playing Thursday, July 20)

Subtitle: I found out about Subtitle from a bootleg tape, and I totally fell in love with it years and years ago. And I know Gino from Aron’s Records, and he instantly treated me fucking amazingly—with love, with respect. I fell in love with him. He’s just such an incredible human being. Being around him is so inspiring, it really is, you know? Gino is an amazing, amazing, amazing performer and lyricist and songwriter. He’s an amazing songwriter. Stuff like bubbles out, flows out. (Thursday, July 20)

Hecuba: No one has heard Hecuba, and they make the weirdest music I’ve heard in a long time. But it’s not weird in that it’s un-listenable or conceptual or cerebral. It’s weird in the way that it’s like jazz meets Beyonce meets Iggy Pop. It’s all these pop things thrown in the weirdest way together, and just barely joined together. Actually, another way to describe it is very Iggy Pop and Annie, the musical. I was like, “Please, would you play?” And they were like, “We’ve never played before, so this is the first show for us.” It worked perfectly for the festival. (Friday, July 21)

Michael Hurley: His history is legendary. The first album he ever made was made on the same machine that Leadbelly made his last album. From then on he’s been making records and records and records, but he’s always stayed way under the radar. Those who know him have all his records, and those that don’t, don’t. He’s someone to me that needs to play more and more and more and that people need to get hip to. He’s a legend, and a very special example of American uniqueness. An example of paving your own way, your own road, your own world. Incredible. And he’s so funny too, I love that. (Saturday, July 22)

Sir Richard Bishop: Sir Richard Bishop is legendary for Sun City Girls. On his own he’s done a lot of touring and done a lot of stuff, and made a couple records on Vanguard and all that, but he is someone who watching him live is a fucking mind-blowing experience. So good. So good! People need to see more of him, I want to see more of him. (Saturday, July 22)

Stuart and Caan: This is their first show in America ever. These cats are from the UK, but lived in India for a long time, and now they live in a bus in Spain, studying flamenco. And this is their first show ever in America. (Saturday, July 22)

Hypnorituals and Mesmemusical Miracles Hanging in the Sky takes place July 18-21 at El Cid. 4212 Sunset Blvd., Silver Lake. $10 per night. http://www.foldsilverlake.com

MARI KONO OPENING AT PETALS.

The Artwork of Mari Kono featured at Petals!

The walls of Petals Nail Salon are now adorned by the artistry of Mari Kono!

Join us on Sunday, July 16th between the hours of 2-5 pm for a viewing of her original artwork.
Don’t miss this opportunity to meet Mari and learn about what inspires her beautiful images.
All artwork will also be available for purchase. Please RSVP at (213) 620-9960.

We will be serving light refreshments catered by Grill Lyon.

About Mari Kono:
Mari Kono is a collage artist born and raised in Los Angeles, California. She has exhibited her work at museums and galleries across the U.S., including the Honolulu Academy of Arts, the San Jose Museum of Contemporary Art, Spirit Square in Charlotte, North Carolina and Intersection for the Arts in San Francisco, California.

About the Art:
“Inspired by psychedelic art of the1960s, Japanese design and fantasy illustrations from Faerie-tale books, my collages are intended to release more love, understanding and compassion into the world. My palette includes self generated digital images, in combination with materials gathered from books and magazines, found scraps, wrapping paper, glitter, paint, rubber stamps and dimensional objects. As I work, I pray that my collages might instill a sense of mystical pleasure in all who encounter them.” –Mari Kono

For more information about Mari and her artwork, please visit her website at http://www.marikono.com

Petals Nail Salon
Honda Plaza in Little Tokyo
408 E. 2nd Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012

(213) 620-9960
http://www.petalsnailsalon.com

Appointments highly recomended

New Hours of Service (starting July 10th):

Tuesday thru Friday: 11am to 7pm
Saturday: 10am to 5pm
Sundays: By Appointment Only (must be made by the previous Thursday)

*************
Digital and Paper Collage Art!
http://www.marikono.com

WHO THEY'RE BOMBING…

ARTHUR GOES TO LEBANON, SYRIA AND EGYPT.

“Dr. Moustache and The Egyptian Gentleman (Pts. I & II)”: American journalist/photographer Daniel Chamberlin spent three weeks traveling through the Middle East this summer. Part I of II chronicles adventures in Egypt and Lebanon, from Cairo’s Cities of the Dead to the Hezbollah gift shoppes at the Israeli border. From the November 2005 issue of Arthur.

“The Further Adventures of Dr. Moustache and the Egyptian Gentleman (Pt. III)”: An American traveler spends three weeks in Egypt, Lebanon and Syria. Reporting and photography by Daniel Chamberlin. From the January 2006 issue of Arthur.

BEDAZZLED, THE BED SITTING ROOM tonight

Thursday, July 13 – 7:30 PM
1922 Egyptian Theatre
Hollywood

Peter Cook and Dudley Moore Salute – Double Feature:

Brand New 35mm Print! BEDAZZLED, 1967, 20th Century Fox, 107 min. Dir. Stanley Donen. The definitive Mod Comedy, filled with leaping lesbian nuns, bottles of Froony Green Eyewash and Raquel Welch as Lillian Lust (the Babe with the Bust). Peter Cook wrote the screenplay and stars as the deliciously hip Devil, merrily ripping the last page out of Agatha Christie novels. Dudley Moore co-stars as the hapless hamburger chef who trades his soul for seven chances to bed the luscious Eleanor Bron.

THE BED SITTING ROOM, 1969, Sony Repertory, 91 min. Dir. Richard Lester. An ultra-rare lost classic, this surreal dark satire anticipated and influenced Monty Python and blended DR. STRANGELOVE-style apocalyptic barbs with Salvador Dali-meets-FELLINI’S SATYRICON visual brilliance. Lester and British comedic guru/Goon Spike Milligan (who co-authored) concoct a post-nuclear-holocaust Britain as a device to savage every last sacred cow – utilizing absurd characters drawn from a who’s who of British comedy (Milligan, fellow Goon Harry Secombe, Marty Feldman, Roy Kinnear, Arthur Lowe, Peter Cook & Dudley Moore) and leading thespians (Ralph Richardson, Rita Tushingham, Michael Hordern, Mona Washbourne). The film defies capsule descriptions but is universally hailed as the Holy Grail of black comedy by those lucky enough to have seen it. Check out the raves on IMDB. File under “un-miss-able!” NOT ON DVD!

The Arthur Magazine Email Bulletin No. 0042

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email Bulletin

No. 0042

July 13, 2006

Website:

http://www.arthurmag.com

Comments:

editor@arthurmag.com

Hello consenting adults,

1.  SAVE THE DATES.

The ARTHUR NIGHTS festival is happening October 19-22 in Los Angeles.

More details soon.

2. THURS JULY 13: LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY, MUSIC AND REFRESHMENTS IN ECHO PARK

If you’re not going to see the bonkers “BEDAZZLED”/”BED SITTING ROOM” double feature at El Rey… why not join Arthur Magazine and The Journal of Aesthetics and Protest for our weekly Echo Park Social(ist) Aid & Pleasure Club?

Tonight’s DJs are:

10pm Ms. Sam Ott

11pm Mr. Erik Bluhm

12mid French people celebrating Bastille Day

THe EPS&PC happens every Thursday at

Little Joy

1477 Sunset Blvd. LA , CA 90026

21+

9:30pm to last call

FREE

3. SORRY IT’S LATE, WE WERE BUSY WATCHING GHANA IN THE WORLD CUP: NEW ISSUE OF ARTHUR NOW AT THE PRINTER….

This issue features….

Who are BRIGHTBLACK MORNING LIGHT and how did they make one of the most beautiful albums of our time? Daniel Chamberlin catches up with the nomadic quiet-souls under a full moon in Joshua Tree. Photography by Eden Batki.

Good riddance to bad rubbish: why DERRICK JENSEN wants civilization to end–now.

John Patterson on the little-seen, oft-suppressed work of dissident filmmaker PETER WATKINS.

Arthur asked GODSMACK singer Sully Erna to explain his pro-war statements and his No. 1 million-selling pop-rock band’s involvement in military recruiting campaigns. Then things got stupid.

Author Ed Halter on protesting inside online video games; plus a brief history of the heavy crossover between video game makers and the Pentagon. With illustrations by Geoff McFetridge.

New earfuzz tones and drones from New Orleans: Gabe Soria interviews the BELONG dudes. Arik Moonhawk Roper paints a picture.

New Herbalist columnist Molly Frances on the wonders of MINT.

DOUGLAS RUSHKOFF on why he’s not moving to Canada.

Comics by J.T. MILES

SIGILS, LOGOS & LUCKY CHARMS: how to recognize them and use them. By the Center for Tactical Magic.

Survivalism for Hipsters 101 by Dave Reeves

“Bull Tongue” columnists Byron Coley & Thurston Moore review the latest emanations from the deep underground.

C & D take multiple infusions of Comets on Fire, Vetiver, Awesome Color, “Zizek!”, “Beavis and Butthead Vol. 2”, “Phi Ta Khon: Ghosts of Isan”, “A Visit to Ali Farka Toure”, Tony Allen, “Eccentric Soul: The Big Mack Label”, James Hunter, Ramblin’ Jack Elliot, Loren Connors, Charalambides and “The Golding Institute Presents Final Relaxation.”

More info, free double-PDF download, and pre-order info at

http://www.arthurmag.com

4. AUG. 1, 2006: ARTHUR/BASTET RELEASES JOSEPHINE FOSTER-CURATED ALBUM TO BENEFIT COUNTER-MILITARY RECRUITING CAMPAIGNS

“So Much Fire to Roast Human Flesh” features music by THE CHERRY BLOSSOMS, FEATHERS, MICHAEL HURLEY, MEG BAIRD, ANDREW BAR, GOATGIRL, DEVENDRA BANHART, KATH BLOOM, CHARLIE NOTHING, DIANE CLUCK, JOHN ALLINGHAM & ANN TILEY, JOSEPHINE FOSTER, ANGELS OF LIGHT, RACHEL MASON, PAJO, MVEE, KATHLEEN BAIRD, LAY ALL OVER IT and cover artwork by FRED TOMASELLI.

“All profits from sales of this compilation will be distributed to specific counter-military recruitment and pacifist organizations and programs,” says Josephine. “We hope to assist them in their efforts promoting peace and non-militarism in the United States. All of the musicians represented here are US citizens. Our voices join with many others across this land that freely question and openly oppose war.”

Available August 1 for $12US/14Can/17World postpaid

More details and pre-order info at

http://www.arthurmag.com

5. NAKED APPEAL

Photographer/author/Arthur contributor Susanna Howe writes:

“I’m working on an art project and am looking for two things:

1) Mercedeses that have been converted to biodiesel or vegetable oil.

2) people who are interested in posing nude.

“I’m looking to shoot portraits of the cars with people, and want to strip the people of all context (clothes). I am also looking for people who do not have very current haircuts, tattoos, etc. I appreciate your thoughts on this and if you can suggest someone, I’d sure be grateful. Also, this is a California project, although if you know people/cars elsewhere, especially on the Eastern Seaboard, I’d be happy to consider them.”

Contact Susanna at:

sh@susannahowe.com

6. TUE JULY 18-SAT JULY 22: MY GOODNESS WHAT LOVELY MUSIC YOU HAVE…

“HYPNORITUALS AND MESMEMUSICAL MIRACLES HANGING IN THE SKY: 5 NIGHTS OF SOLEROS AND BANDOLEROS” AT EL CID IN LOS ANGELES, CA

Programmed by DEVENDRA BANHART

Presented by The Fold and Arthur Magazine

Night One – Tuesday, July 18 –  FEATHERS, JANA HUNTER, ENTRANCE and THE WHITE WHITE QUILT, Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the patio +more….

Night Two: Wednesday, July 19 – RUTHANN FRIEDMAN, VIKING MOSES, CASUAL FOG, ADAM TULLIE AND FRIENDS, DHAYAN ROARK, Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the patio +more….

Night Three – Thursday, July 20 – NOBODY AND THE MYSTIC CHORDS OF MEMORY, SUBTITLE, ENTRANCE, MOUNTAIN PARTY, Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson! dublab DJ sets all night on the patio + more…

Night Four – Friday, July 21 – RUBIES, HECUBA, COCONUT, BENNY GILLESPIE, Astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson, dublab DJ sets all night on the patio +more….

Night Five – Saturday, July 22 – MICHAEL HURLEY, SIR RICHARD BISHOP (Sun City Girls) , STUART AND CAAN (India – First ever US performance), astral Advancement by Eric Ernest Johnson, dublab DJ sets all night on the patio +more….

The Fold in El Cid

4212 Sunset Boulevard

Los Angeles, CA

21 & over (sorry!)

$10 tickets for each show

A limited number of $30 full-festival passes are available now at

http://www.virtuous.com

More info:

http://www.foldsilverlake.com/

7. WED JULY 19: L.A. BEAT HISTORY FILM SCREENING IN VENICE, CA

“DIRTY FEET (1965, 95m): Folk singer Tim Morgon stars in this rare gem telling the story of an LA Beat & the environment surrounding Balboa’s Prison of Socrates club. DUMB ANGEL magazine co-editors & West Coast music historians Brian Chidester & Domenic Priore will show short films & a slide-show chronicling the Beat coffee houses, poets, painters and musicians from ’60s hot-spots like Sunset Strip’s Unicorn, Hollywood’s Cosmo Alley, Venice’s Gas House & Venice West Café (now Sponto Gallery), Hermosa Beach’s Insomniac Café & Lighthouse, Long Beach’s Rainbow Sign, Seal Beach’s Rouge et Noir, Buena Park’s the Mecca, City of Orange’s Paradox, Newport Beach’s Sid’s Blue Beet & Laguna Beach’s Café Frankenstein, and debut footage & unreleased music by Hollywood mystic Eden Ahbez (writer of Nat ‘King’ Cole’s 1947 hit ‘Nature Boy’). Plus: surprise guests speakers & 6:30pm preshow with The Insect Surfers – live instrumental Surf music with a psychedelic tinge.”

7 DUDLEY CINEMA

SPONTO Gallery

7 Dudley Ave, Venice

310-306-7330

FREE admission

8:00pm

Come early – seating is limited

More info;

www.81x.com/7dudley/cinema

8. THURS JULY 20: GRANT & DEEPAK TEAM UP AT SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON.

Scottish comics author (and Arthur No. 12 cover star) GRANT MORRISON will engage in “a far-ranging discussion about Dark Knights, Devis, and the development of tomorrow’s mythologies” with DEEPAK CHOPRA (!) next Thursday, July 20, from  3:00-4:30pm in Room 20 at the San Diego Comic-Con.

Event info:

http://www.comic-con.org/cci/cci06_prog_thu.php

Arthur No. 12:

http://www.arthurmag.com/store/index.php?ID=17

9. SHIT, FORGOT TO TELL YOU ABOUT THIS LAST TIME.

Did you know? Arthur/Bastet’s recently released “The Suoni Per Il Popolo Festival – 2006” CD spotlights work by artists who performed at the Montreal festival last month. Includes music by WHARTON TIERS ENSEMBLE,  EXCEPTER, DRAGONS 1976 , AVIA GARDNER, FEU THERESE, TETUZI AKIYAMA, CREEPING NOBODIES, CINC, DIANE CLUCK, TRIPLE BURNER, DIEBOLD, THAMES, AIDS WOLF, AWESOME, TRIO X and JERUSALEM IN MY HEART.

Now available.

$12US/14Can/17World postpaid.

More details and order info at

http://www.arthurmag.com

10. SAT AUG 26: CENTENNIAL, WYOMING WILL NEVER BE THE SAME.

Arthur co-presents

The 7th Annual UPLAND BREAKDOWN

MICHAEL HURLEY & The SENSITIVOS, THE STOP & LISTEN BOYS, SPOT, MICHAEL HURWITZ & The AIMLESS DRIFTERS and AMY ANNELLE

SAT. AUG. 26 / 3-9pm

$10, Kids free

(Rain’ll move it indoors, 21+)

BEARTREE TAVERN & CAFE

CENTENNIAL, WYOMING

“Centennial is tiny, doesn’t even have a stop sign so the street address is not visible on the building anyway.”

Info 307.742-2410

11. ADVERTISING IN ARTHUR IS CHEAP, EASY AND WILL WORK WONDERS FOR YOU.

Inquire with Ms. Jesse Locks at

jesse@arthurmag.com

12. FILE UNDER “THE OLD WAYS ARE THE BEST WAYS”…

From the July 11, 2006  Washington Post:

“Psilocybin, the active ingredient of ‘magic mushrooms,’ expands the mind. After a thousand years of use, that’s now scientifically official.

“The chemical promoted a mystical experience in two-thirds of people who took it for the first time, according to a new study. One-third rated a session with psilocybin as the ‘single most spiritually significant’ experience of their lives. Another third put it in the top five.

“The study, published online today in the journal Psychopharmacology, is the first randomized, controlled trial of a substance used for centuries in Mexico and Central America to produce mystical insights. Almost no research on a psychedelic drug in human subjects has been done in this country since the 1960s. It confirms what both shamans and hippies have long said — taking psilocybin is a scary, reality-bending and occasionally life-changing experience….”

Article continues at

http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1347

Hiding in plain view,

The Arthurites

Los Angeles, California

An Empire Lost to Time Is Reborn on a Dinner Plate

New York Times

By MICHAEL T. LUONGO
Published: July 12, 2006
Buenos Aires

In Latin America, Argentina has always been the country least influenced by indigenous culture, while maintaining its European ties. But now many Argentines, feeling the effects of external forces like globalization, are re-evaluating the country’s long-shunned culinary roots.

This new attitude is showing up on the plates of restaurants in Buenos Aires. The food of the Incas, a 15th- and 16th-century empire that once stretched into modern Argentina, is finding new panache.

One of the first restaurants to work with Incan ingredients was De Olivas i Lustres in the trendy Palermo Viejo neighborhood. Its owner, Miguel Moreno, and his business partner and chef, Sebastián Tarica, experimented with quinoa, a grain sacred to the Incas, and amaranta, or amaranth. Mr. Moreno claims amaranta has “more protein than any vegetable on the planet,” a necessity for the Incas because “there was not much meat in the Andean diet.”

The restaurant’s 13-course tasting menu incorporates these grains, along with meat from animals once hunted by the Incas and local tribes: llama; nandu, an ostrichlike bird; and yacare, a small river alligator. Kebabs include lamb breaded in what Mr. Tarica calls “popcorn of amaranta,” air-puffed kernels of the grain, and chewy strips of yacare with olives and onions.

Mr. Tarica uses quinoa in his favorite dessert, a mandarin orange stuffed with the nutty grain and sunflowers, drenched with honey and topped with a flower petal garnish. It hits the tongue with a tart, gritty sweetness. Another dessert is caramelized amaranta with yogurt — crunchy, sweet and tangy all at once.

Mariana Moreno, Mr. Moreno’s wife, said she thought the return to the country’s roots was “a reaction to globalization,’’ adding that such globalization hurts fragile economies like Argentina’s.

Marcelo Epstein, the owner of Sabores Argentina, a company that supplies restaurants with native ingredients, agreed.

Argentines “started creating a resentment to foreign things,” he said. “It was a change in mentality, together with that ‘let’s eat Argentine’ feeling,” that encouraged the use of Inca ingredients.

In 1998, Mr. Epstein had only about five or six clients. Now he has nearly 120.

Some Argentines in the food business say locally produced ingredients were embraced because of the peso crash in 2001, when restaurateurs sought to reduce their use of expensive imports. But Mr. Epstein said, “No one can tell me we’re buying it because it’s cheap.” Nandu, he said, is $12 a kilogram, much pricier than beef.

Just as many say the return to Incan ingredients is more about discovering “old” flavors.

Guillaume Bianchi, head chef at the Buenos Aires Hilton restaurant, cooks native foodstuffs using French techniques. In 2003, he was among the first local chefs to put llama on the menu. His braised nandu started as an hors d’oeuvre, he said. “It was excellent, so I dedicated to put it in the menu.”

Mr. Bianchi’s ingredients — like a spicy nandu prosciutto — pleasantly surprised conservative business patrons. “First they were a little bit shocked,” he said, “but I think it’s very well accepted now.”

Getting clients used to the products is not the only issue, however.

“Meat from llama can be very tough,” said Inés Villamil, the hotel’s food and beverage manager. Grains can be problematic, too. “Since the products are natural they are therefore of an inconsistent quality, or limited in quantity,’’ she said. “It can be hard to set a menu with the items.”

But creativity can overcome this. During the lunch buffet, “quinoa can be prepared like rice, or it’s like couscous, served cold in salads,” Ms. Villamil explained.

In the vegetarian restaurant Bio, quinoa takes pride of place as a main dish in the hands of Maximo Cabrera, the chef. Quinoa risotto is his favorite dish. He knows of five quinoa varieties and uses whatever type comes in that day.

He adds Parmesan cheese, yogurt, onions, carrots, scallions, mushrooms, white wine, and peppercorns and other spices. The mixture is then molded into an almond shape.

“It is all natural and organic,” he said, and light compared with traditional rice risottos. The tang of the yogurt and the texture of the quinoa form the overall impression.

“It’s illuminating to cook with these items,” Mr. Cabrera said. “Quinoa is a sacred ingredient. The conquistadors had hoped to destroy it,” to consolidate power over the Indians, he said.

For him, cooking with Incan foods is a way to bring back the country’s past. Still, as a chef, he wants to use the ingredients in modern ways.

He picked through a handful of Andean potatoes, pebblelike blobs of various colors that bear no resemblance to a modern potato. “The potatoes are tiny because they were grown on terraces,” Mr. Cabrera said.

His eyes sparkled as he thought about the ancient culture he now serves. “The borders are new; they are political,” he said of modern Argentina. But of the Incans who first grew the Andean potatoes, he said, “These people are Argentine.”

"Magic Mushroom"'s Mystical Properties Confirmed

July 11, 2006 – Washington Post

By David Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer

Psilocybin, the active ingredient of “magic mushrooms,” expands the mind. After a thousand years of use, that’s now scientifically official.

The chemical promoted a mystical experience in two-thirds of people who took it for the first time, according to a new study. One-third rated a session with psilocybin as the “single most spiritually significant” experience of their lives. Another third put it in the top five.

The study, published online today in the journal Psychopharmacology, is the first randomized, controlled trial of a substance used for centuries in Mexico and Central America to produce mystical insights. Almost no research on a psychedelic drug in human subjects has been done in this country since the 1960s. It confirms what both shamans and hippies have long said — taking psilocybin is a scary, reality-bending and occasionally life-changing experience.

The researchers say they hope the experiment opens a door to the study of a class of compounds that alter human perception and erode the boundaries of self — at least in some users. They hope it will provide new insight into how the brain works and what neurochemical events underlie moments of mystical rapture.

If the generally positive effects of the drug are confirmed by other studies, the research is likely to raise the question of whether people should be allowed access to psilocybin for self-improvement or recreation.

Rigorous study of these substances has been shunned since the 1960s, although it is not legally prohibited. Research on them was a casualty of the muddled mix of science and advocacy by people like Timothy Leary, the LSD guru and former Harvard psychologist once called the “most dangerous man in America” by President Richard M. Nixon.

“Our study has shown we can conduct a study of this type safely, and that the effects produced are really quite interesting,” said Roland R. Griffiths of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, who ran the experiment. “There is a clear neuroscience agenda to understand those effects, and clear clinical applications that could be pursued.”

Other brain researchers hailed the experiment as much for the fact that it was done at all as for its findings.

“These are some of the most potent compounds we know of that can change consciousness,” said David E. Nichols, a professor of medicinal chemistry at Purdue University who has studied the effects of psychedelics on rats and cultured cells. “It’s kind of peculiar they have just been kind of sitting on the shelf for 40 years. There is no other class of biologically active substances I am aware of that have been ignored like that.”

The study, which involved 36 middle-aged adults from the Baltimore-Washington area, was conducted over five years. The subjects were chosen from 135 people who answered newspaper ads. All said they were members of a religious organization, practiced meditation or took part in other spiritual activity.

The study was designed to minimize the effects of anticipation and group enthusiasm, which might color a person’s response. It also sought to examine the delayed, as well as immediate, effects of the drug.

The volunteers were randomly assigned to take either 30 milligrams of psilocybin (chemically synthesized, not extracted from mushrooms) or 40 milligrams of methylphenidate, the stimulant sold as Ritalin. The sessions lasted eight hours in a room where a person could listen to music, relax on a couch with eyeshades or talk with two monitors always in attendance. Each subject then took the other drug in a different session two months later.

Of the 36 people, 22 had a “complete” mystical experience as judged by several question-based scales used for rating such experiences. Two-thirds judged it to be among their top five life experiences, equal to the birth of a first child or death of a parent. Two months after a session, the people who had taken psilocybin reported small but significant positive changes in behavior and attitudes compared with those who had taken Ritalin.

One-third of the subjects, however, said they experienced “strong or extreme” fear at some point in the hours after they took the hallucinogen. Four people said the entire session was dominated by anxiety or psychological struggle.

Nichols thinks that last finding should give people pause.

“I think these drugs are potentially very dangerous,” he said. “I would be very disappointed if in any sense these results were used to encourage recreational use of these compounds. I wouldn’t want to take responsibility for anyone under unmonitored conditions coming up with those feelings.”

Alan Leshner, who headed the National Institute on Drug Abuse for seven years and now leads the American Association for the Advancement of Science, was both wary and excited about psilocybin’s reported effects.

“If it is ultimately shown to be benign but enriches people’s lives, who could object to that? But I don’t have that level of confidence at this point, given the paucity of research on it,” he said.

A scholar of mysticism, G. William Barnard of Southern Methodist University, suspects that most mystical traditions would not object to the idea that a chemical could allow a person to tune into a preexisting state of consciousness, usually ignored, just as fasting, prayer, yoga and other activities can. But there is less enthusiasm for the idea that this kind of research will unlock the mechanism of mystical insight.

“Most people I suspect would say that the neurochemistry is not the full cause of these experiences,” he said.

(Courtesy D. Cotner!)