Albert Hofmann, a chemist working for Sandoz Pharmaceutical, synthesized
LSD for the first time in 1938, in Basel, Switzerland, while looking
for a blood stimulant. However, its hallucinogenic effects were unknown
until 1943 when Hofmann accidentally consumed some LSD. It was later
found that an oral dose of as little as 25 micrograms (equal in weight
to a few grains of salt) is capable of producing vivid hallucinations.
Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary, who
promoted LSD and other mind-bending psychiatric drugs, was arrested and
imprisoned for drug-related crimes.
Photo credit: DEA/Timothy Leary arrest
Because of its similarity to a chemical present
in the brain and its similarity in effects to certain aspects of
psychosis, LSD was used in experiments by psychiatrists through the
1940s, ’50s and ’60s. While the researchers failed to discover any
medical use for the drug, the free samples supplied by Sandoz
Pharmaceuticals for the experiments were distributed broadly, leading to
wide use of this substance.
LSD was
popularized in the 1960s by individuals such as psychologist Timothy
Leary, who encouraged American students to “turn on, tune in, and drop
out.” This created an entire counterculture of drug abuse and spread the
drug from America to the United Kingdom and the rest of Europe. Even
today, use of LSD in the United Kingdom is significantly higher than in
other parts of the world.
Psychiatric mind-control programs focusing on LSD and other hallucinogens created a generation of acidheads.
While the ‘60s counterculture used the drug to
escape the problems of society, the Western intelligence community and
the military saw it as a potential chemical weapon. In 1951, these
organizations began a series of experiments. US researchers noted that
LSD “is capable of rendering whole groups of people, including military
forces, indifferent to their surroundings and situations, interfering
with planning and judgment, and even creating apprehension,
uncontrollable confusion and terror.”
Experiments
in the possible use of LSD to change the personalities of intelligence
targets, and to control whole populations, continued until the United
States officially banned the drug in 1967.
Use
of LSD declined in the 1980s, but picked up again in the 1990s. For a
few years after 1998 LSD had become more widely used at dance clubs and
all-night raves by older teens and young adults. Use dropped
significantly in 2000 or so.
“The
days following my LSD use, I was filled with anxiety and extreme
depression. Following my first ‘trip’ on LSD, I would eat it frequently,
sometimes up to four or five times per week for an extended period.
Each time I would take the drug, mentally I was drifting more and more
out of reality. The eventual effect was the inability to feel normal in
my own skin.” —Andrea
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