Episodes

  • Bonus Episode 1 – Unionizing Harm Reduction w/ Jacob Clary
    Dec 8 2022

    In our first bonus episode, Alex is joined by Jacob Clary to discuss the labour movement, harm reduction and unionization. Jacob is a union member at a harm reduction org in NY state, and discusses the need to “understand harm reduction as a workforce to be organized”.

    We are releasing the bonus episode today in solidarity with OnPoint United! See here: https://twitter.com/OnPointUnited/status/1600830049791483905

    If you want to get in touch with Jacob about unionizing your own harm reduction organization, or just think he’s cool you can reach him on twitter at @acabdotgov

    In solidarity with all harm reduction workers fighting to unionize!

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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • 7 From Just Coca to Crack Vapes
    May 25 2022

    “”Pharmability”, the feasibility to refine materials to drugs by chemical synthesis, purification etc.” – Fabian Steinmetz & Maja Kohek

    What would it take to grow enough opium poppies for heroin, or coca? Further, how could this be done in an equitable way, recognizing that colonialism is at the heart of the drug war? Fabian is one of several researchers and activists working on these questions. When we initially invited Fabian to come on the podcast, we had hoped to talk about his publication exploring the feasibility and harm reduction merits of developing a vape for freebase cocaine (crack). What we soon learned is that Fabian, like many old school activists, has his hand in many projects. From kratom regulation to psychedelic reform to creating an equitable and non-exploitive coca market.

    Fabian, a toxicologist by trade, sees a future drug world & is actively imagining what a future drug world could be.

    Edited by Marcel Rambo

    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    [1] Farmability and pharmability: Transforming the drug market to a health-and human rights-centred approach from self-cultivation to safe supply of controlled substances

    [2] The cocaine-e-cigarette – A theoretical concept of a harm reduction device for current users of smokable cocaine forms – Fabian P Steinmetz, Heino Stöver, 2021

    [3] How to regulate stimulants: A practical guide | Transform

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    1 hr and 35 mins
  • 6 Hormonic Resonances
    Apr 7 2022

    “You can’t crush ideas by suppressing them. You can only crush them by ignoring them. By refusing to think, refusing to change.” – Ursula K. LeGuin, “The Dispossessed”

    *we highly recommend you read Adryan’s article before listening*

    https://filtermag.org/testosterone-criminalization/ <- yeah that one

    Testosterone was criminalized in the United States in response to its use by cis men in sports. The result for trans people has been urine screenings, being outed to police and anyone else who has access to the Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMPs). Trans & gender non-conforming people were not considered in this legislation and their absence from the conversation is just another example of transphobia.

    In Adryan’s article for filter mag, they point out that, “Gender variant people should be more than acknowledged in drug policy reform; we should be prioritized”. What would that look like, and what sort of futures would it create?

    Edited by Marcel Rambo

    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    [1] Adryan’s article: https://filtermag.org/testosterone-criminalization/
    [2] Lancet Opioid Crisis Commission https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(21)02252-2/fulltext
    [3] Framing Agnes: https://www.cbc.ca/arts/the-extraordinary-new-film-framing-agnes-interrogates-how-trans-stories-are-told-and-by-whom-1.6330162

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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • 5 Sexy Space Drugs in Post-Prohibitionist Afro Futurisms
    Mar 9 2022

    “You have to act as if it were possible to radically transform the world. And you have to do it all the time” – Angela Davis

    In this episode we get high on alien drugs in a totally sexy way with Mallory Culbert. Mallory is a tech wiz, artist, drug policy activist and the author of Joyeux #1 & 2. She imagines other possible futures, Afro-futures and how harm reduction weaves into not just what we are but could be. Joyeux #1 is an aesthetic masterpiece, and explores drug afrofutures, by reorienting how we see the past.

    Find out what the new drugs of the future will be, and remember, “Another World is Possible”

    Edited by Marcel Rambo

    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    CN: Discussion of sexual assault, gendered violence of the drug war, colonialism, inequality, rape culture

    [1] Joyeux #1 – Mallory Cullbert

    [2] Silencing the Past – Michel Rolph Trouillot (psst there’s an audiobook version)

    [3] Johnson & Johnson Vaccine & Colonialism (vid goes through the history, but stops at actually working through the problem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMY4UOA7E_w&ab_channel=JohnnyHarris

    [4] Medical testing in Africa (and why it’s colonial): https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2020/4/8/medical-colonialism-in-africa-is-not-new

    [4] “Rabbit Test”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbit_test

    [5] “science fiction to science fact” see Donna Haraway’s – Staying with the Trouble

    [6] JOYEUX #2 (thanks Mallory for making it available): https://drive.google.com/file/d/14ZKdzjjFv9SsXkSmAmBaLB0eEJ2rBnkJ/view?usp=sharing

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • 4 Breakfast in Latin America Part II
    Nov 27 2021

    See the show notes from Part I for more details

    Pura Vida

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    48 mins
  • 4 Breakfast in Latin America Part I
    Nov 26 2021

    “Who believes today that the war on drug trafficking is achieving victories? Quite the opposite. It’s been a resounding failure” – Juan Ramón Quintana, MAS Minister of the Presidency under Evo Morales

    *We will now be putting content notes at the bottom of every episode. Check there for trigger warnings*

    The War on Drugs takes place on multiple battlefields. It is a Global War and a true Forever War. Yet, the ways that it is fought, and the damage it leaves in its wake is different wherever you go. To have a another drug future, a better drug future, means imagining the multiple and sometimes incommensurable futures that can uplift us all. The only way to do that is together, and the only way we can start is by being in conversation with each other.

    That’s why, over the next several months, we will be interviewing Latin American drug policy and harm reduction activists. Our first two, are Latin America Network of People who use Drugs (LANPUD) activists, Ernesto Cortes of ACEID and Marialba Quesada Abrams of LPSD and a Youth RISE International Working Group Member. Ernesto & Marialba are both from Costa Rica, both anthropologists, and both activists looking to not only interpret the world, but to change it. We will be doing one-on-one episodes with both of them, as well as Marisa Morales from LPSD and is based out of Mexico. We hope to keep doing even more!

    Edited by Marcel Rambo

    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    CN: Discussion of sexual assault, gendered violence of the drug war, colonialism, inequality, rape culture

    [1] Source for quote above https://jacobinmag.com/2021/11/us-war-on-drugs-dea-bolivian-democracy-coup-morales-quintana-interview

    [2] On Canna-colonialism, Dawn Paley https://towardfreedom.org/story/canadas-cannabis-colonialism/

    [3] “The Troubles of Medical Cannabis in Colombia” https://www.tni.org/files/publication-downloads/policybrief_52_eng_web.pdf

    [4] The Dope: The Real History of the Mexican Drug Trade (pssst there’s an audiobook) https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-dope

    [6] You can check out the readings we did for this episode: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/xxfpeslxhvpuzpw/AABVJ9NcyXIswAG6sQnk_L7qa?dl=0

    [7] Go like ACEID & LPSD, also check out Ernesto’s writing on the topic here: https://www.tni.org/en/smokable-cocaine

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    1 hr and 15 mins
  • 3.5 Looking Back to the Future
    Nov 15 2021

    “The way I see it, if you’re gonna build a time machine into a car, why not do it with some style?” – Doc Brown, Back to the Future

    Clarie & Alex take a moment to talk about the previous episodes, what’s been going on. As well as some weird. We unpack some of our conversations with people, talk about Stargate SG-1, how history shapes our sense of what is possible, and who we’d want to have on next.

    Edited by Marcel Rambo

    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    Notes:

    [1] We highly recommend you look through some of these readings for our upcoming talks with Latin American activists: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/xxfpeslxhvpuzpw/AABVJ9NcyXIswAG6sQnk_L7qa?dl=0

    [2] We reference this thought-provoking piece on Anarchist Responses to HIV & Hep C: https://anarchiststudies.org/thoughts-on-an-anarchist-response-to-hepatitis-c-hiv-by-alexander-mcclelland-zoe-dodd/

    [3] Karen Ward Twitter thread on non-medicalized safe supply futures in BC: ​​https://twitter.com/kwardvancouver/status/1451033912847724545

    [4]Claire’s paper on Isotonitazene (feel free to DM or email Claire/Drug Futurisms for a copy if behind paywall) https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0955395920302784?via%3Dihub

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    56 mins
  • 3 Uprooting Prohibited Futures w/ Garth Mullins
    Oct 21 2021

    “What is the future we dream of? It is tearing up the drug war by the root. And to me, the roots are in capitalism” – Garth Mullins

    One person’s now is another person’s future. In times of crisis making the future becomes necessary. In 2013, it would have seemed incredibly unlikely that Canada would legalize cannabis. Now in 2021, drug policy activists in Vancouver, including Garth Mullins, have been involved in providing an alternative drug supply of heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine, through a co-operative model in Vancouver.

    We go off the rails and into outer space this episode. We talk about drugs, past, present, and of course, future. Sci-Fi writer, Ursula Le Guin once said that, “Science fiction is not predictive; it is descriptive. Predictions are uttered by prophets…” and so to does our conversation, embody the now, and the now so far off in the distant.
    We experiment with a new theme for the show, “Would you do this drug?”

    Edited by Marcel Rambo
    Help us imagine better drug futures by having a conversation with a friend, sharing the podcast or supporting us at patreon.com/DrugFuturisms

    Notes:
    [1] Mark Fisher (2009) Capitalist Realism
    [2] We reference Silvia Federici’s interview on The Dig https://www.thedigradio.com/podcast/silvia-federici-on-women-and-capitalism/
    [3] Learn more about the Drug User Liberation Front (DULF) https://www.dulf.ca/
    [4] Kim Stanley Robinson’s “Mars Trilogy” is a series of future-thinking socialist fiction

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    1 hr and 25 mins