I looked at her Wikipedia page for all of ~15 seconds and I found this gem.

Means has spoken in support of raw milk, stating, “When it comes to a question like raw milk, I want to be free to form a relationship with a local farmer, understand his integrity, look him in the eyes, pet his cow, and then decide if I feel safe to drink the milk from his farm.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casey_Means

  • altphoto@lemmy.today
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    8 hours ago

    Mushrooms are great eating for us vegans or vegan-like. But raw milk, that’s just stupid and dangerous. These people should be forced to learn. Like put her in a room, if she wants out she has to look in the microscope and confirm if she can see some stuff moving in raw Milk and nothing moving in pasteurized milk. And when she’s finally out that’s the only topic she can legally talk about. Hey wanna talk about and make decisions on cancer? Guess what Buddy? Yeah you’re gonna have to learn that too!

  • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    19 hours ago

    From the headline she sounds like I would have enjoyed her company cause I be speaking highly of psychedelics and petting cows.

    Then you learn she’s a Republican and then in the Trump cabinet 15 minutes into the conversation and you’re like oh fuck oh no

  • TankieTanuki [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    22 hours ago

    When paired with talk therapy, it has been studied as a treatment for psychiatric conditions and alcoholism, but very little research has been done in healthy people.

    Little research has been done because it’s a controlled substance.

    It’s a controlled substance because we lack research. 🙃

    And since psilocybin can’t be patented, there is no profit incentive to fund research. Most efficient system.

    Bill Burr credits mushrooms for improving his personality.

    • OldSoulHippie [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      19 hours ago

      Seriously. Don’t make psychedelics a right wing thing just because of shit like this. The war on drugs is awful and if Republicans end it (they won’t) that’s great

    • Azarova [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      20 hours ago

      For real, not too jazzed seeing this kind of sentiment here. Psilocybin has been the only thing that has helped my CPTSD in any meaningful way. Years and years of talk therapy have done nothing at best or has been actively harmful at worst. Psychedelics are no magic bullet by any means, but they’re incredibly powerful tools to heal trauma if used correctly. If we actually manage to get some level of legalization/decriminalization/medicalization/whatever on psychedelics from whatever cranks are filling out the various health departments in the federal government, then so be it.

    • EllenKelly [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      19 hours ago

      I would imagine a big part of the ‘anti mushroom’ sentiment in the press is that they’re not currently controlled by bayer-bayer. They’re already in the same drug class as heroin in aus, and seeing celebrities go off about how ‘i could never love a man until i was high’ or whatever her point is, pretty frustrating

      heroin helped my mental health too, both these things being unregulated blackmarket drugs is what makes them dangerous imo

      I think psychedelecic therapy is tenatively legal here, but its guided with a tripsitter counsellor, which is probably better than eating mushrooms you find in a park and rolling around in the garden by yourself

      • MemesAreTheory [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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        6 hours ago

        Oh it’s all “touch grass” this or “logout” that, but when I go on a heroic spirit quest naked on my unmowed front lawn (IT’S FOR THE POLLINATORS JANET) after eating 20 caps I’m somehow being irresponsible?

        So much for the tolerant left.

  • Feinsteins_Ghost [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    21 hours ago

    understand his integrity, look him in the eyes, pet his cow

    this is key for preventing microbial infection typically prevented by the Pasteurization process.

  • Pastaguini [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    19 hours ago

    I think the reason these people praise raw milk specifically is because it’s enough to make you sick enough to require serious hospitalization but often not sick enough to die and be unable to pay back your medical debt, so from a healthcare expense perspective, it’s a pretty potent revenue driving tool. Plus you’ll probably get repeat customers.

      • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        18 hours ago

        Basically all psychedelic research has major methodology flaws and systemic issues behind it

        Methodology: Expectancy bias - the control vs condition is usually abundantly clear to both the participants and researchers. The impact of the drugs are so dramatic that it’s fairly obvious what category they’re in. So then people on the drugs expect to see benefits and clinicians (unexpectedly or otherwise) reinforce this

        Often co occur with talk therapy which confounds effect, eg which is helping?

        Often go by subject self report and not any kind of objective measure of symptoms

        Subjects are often highly selected, filtering comorbidities like bipolar disorder or suicidal ideation

        Very few, if any, have explored effect beyond 1 year or so

        There have been ethical issues on the part of therapists doing the trials (MDMA MAPS research specifically)

        Studies for addiction specifically are preliminary and small but do show promise

        Systemically:

        There is a huge demand for novel treatments for treatment resistant depression and PTSD. This will be an extremely lucrative industry

        There is a huge demand for a legitimized pathway to psychedelic drugs. If medical marijuana and ketamine treatment are any indicators there will be plenty of doctors that will be absolutely willing to meet you via zoom, basically ask “do you have ptsd?” and then write you a script for Molly. It’s positive that this will give users a safe source of these drugs free of adulterants and limit legal consequences but it will also reflect the above: lucrative industry.

        They likely have some benefit but are not the wonder drugs some people make them out to be. Mental health is complex, ptsd and depression are difficult and aren’t really cured as much as managed. Medications can help and novel medications are needed. There are likely no medications that would “fix” the issue on their own though. Patterns of behavior perpetuate sensitization to trauma and influence cycles of depression.

        Medication may be a part of that puzzle of achieving remission of course. using psilocybin as an example: one of the reasons it’s promising as a method is because it increases cortical entropy, which increases variability in brain patterns. There is also disruption of the default mode network, which can change self referential and ruminative thought. These effects are obviously desirable. But if you immediately go back to a pattern of hiding from your trauma, a life devoid of meaning, or a cycle of deactivating behaviors the pattern will potentially re emerge

        To expand on that last point this side steps the obvious elephant in the room of these treatments can’t fix systemic issues. I’ve been doing mental health treatment for over a decade and you can’t cbt or pills your way out of social issues. Even if mushrooms were a miracle cure for treatment resistant depression it would just come right back after spending a few months or years in a system where you constantly scrape for a paycheck to barely cover costs, dread the future you can’t afford to retire in, and recognize the system that will not throw you a life preserver when you are drowning.

        A huge percentage of the people I work with that are depressed and can’t “beat it” aren’t that way because they haven’t found the right pills, talk therapy, or lack of trying. It’s because they are stuck in a system that gives them no resources to explore their passion and creativity. They were in high school and were interested in art, science, music, writing, dance, whatever. But then they entered “job mode” and the time and money they had for their hobbies diminished rapidly. Now it’s 5,10,20 years later and social spaces not dedicated to getting drunk are rare or expensive, they spend 50-70% of income on housing and medical expenses, they work 50+ hours a week in a job unrelated to their interests, that they “fell into”.

        Imagine if they had equitable housing, a pension, and healthcare. The ability to be able to go back to school and study something they were more passionate about and make it work without incurring extreme debt or having to balance it with employment that impairs their ability to focus on studies. Would it work for all of them? No. But would you see a lot of people with “treatment resistant depression” start to just feel better and more secure

      • OgdenTO [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        22 hours ago

        There is lots of research about low dose mushrooms being extremely effective at treating things like PTSD and depression