A presidential administration finally seems to agree.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently told members of Congress:
"This line of therapeutics has tremendous advantage if given in a clinical setting and we are working very hard to make sure that happens within 12 months."His suggested timeline for green-lighting psychedelic therapy surprised even the most bullish supporters of the drugs. And it comes as psychedelics are making inroads in deep red states like Texas, where former Trump cabinet secretary and ex-governor Rick Perry has thrown his full support behind the effort.
The administration's embrace of psychedelics has sparked both excitement as well as concern from those in the field, who worry the drugs might be discredited if they appear to be rushed onto the market or are too closely linked with Kennedy, who is known for controversial views on vaccines, antidepressants and fluoride.
"I'm quite optimistic," says Rick Doblin, whose organization has pursued the medical use of MDMA (or ecstasy) since the 1980s. "But I'm also worried that the message the public might get is 'Well, RFK likes psychedelics and now it's approved.'"
FDA may reconsider MDMA
Under President Joe Biden, the FDA rejected MDMA as a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder, citing flawed data and questionable research. Regulators called for a new study, likely taking several years. It was a major setback for Doblin and other advocates hoping to see the first U.S. approval of a psychedelic for medical use.
But the agency appears ready to reconsider. FDA chief Marty Makary, who reports to Kennedy, has called the evaluation of MDMA and other psychedelics "a top priority," announcing a slate of initiatives that could be used to accelerate their approval.
One new program promises to expedite drugs that serve "the health interests of Americans," by slashing their review time from six months or more to as little as one month. Makary has also suggested greater flexibility on requirements for certain drugs, potentially waiving rigorous controlled studies that compare patients to a placebo group.
That approach, considered essential for high-quality research, has long been a stumbling point for psychedelic studies, in which patients can almost always correctly guess whether they've received the drug or a dummy pill.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and FDA also recently hired several new staffers with ties to the psychedelic movement.
Greg Ferenstein, a fellow at the libertarian Reason Foundation, who also consults for psychedelic companies, said:
"These are all very promising signs that the administration is aware of the potential of psychedelics and is trying to make overtures that they're ready to approve them. We didn't hear anything about that in the Biden administration."A spokesperson for HHS did not respond to a request for comment.
As a presidential candidate, Kennedy discussed how his son and several close friends benefited from using psychedelics to deal with grief and other issues.
A number of veterans lobbying for psychedelic access have already met with Trump's Secretary of Veterans Affairs, Doug Collins. "What we're seeing so far is positive."
But some experts worry the hope and hype surrounding psychedelics has gotten ahead of the science.
Philip Corlett, a psychiatric researcher at Yale University, says bypassing rigorous clinical trials could set back the field and jeopardize patients:
"If RFK and the new administration are serious about this work, there are things they could do to shepherd it into reality by meeting the benchmarks of medical science. I just don't think that's going to happen."Texas goes all-in on ibogaine research
As officials in Washington weigh the future of psychedelics, some states are moving ahead with their own projects in hopes of nudging the federal government. Oregon and Colorado have legalized psychedelic therapy.
And last month, Texas approved $50 million to study ibogaine, a potent psychedelic made from a shrub that's native to West Africa, as a treatment for opioid addiction, PTSD and other conditions. The research grant — the largest of its kind by any government — passed with support from the state's former GOP governor, Perry, and combat veterans, some who have traveled to clinics in Mexico that offer ibogaine.
Ibogaine is on the U.S. government's ultra-restrictive list of illegal, Schedule 1 drugs, which also includes heroin. So advocates in Texas are hoping to build a national movement to ease restrictions on researching its use.
Bryan Hubbard of Americans for Ibogaine, a group formed with Perry, said:
"Governmental systems move slowly and inefficiently. Sometimes you find yourself constrained in terms of the progress you can make from within."Ibogaine is unique among psychedelics in both its purported benefits and risks. Small studies and anecdotal reports suggest the drug may be able to dramatically ease addiction and trauma. It was sold for medical use in France for several decades starting in the 1930s, but the drug can also cause dangerous irregular heart rhythms, which can be fatal if left untreated.
Some veterans who have taken the drug say the risks can be managed and ibogaine's healing properties go far beyond antidepressants, mood stabilizers, counseling and other standard treatments.
Marcus Capone struggled with anger, insomnia and mood swings after 13 years as a Navy Seal. In 2017, at the urging of his wife Amber, he agreed to try ibogaine as a last resort. He described his first ibogaine session:
"A complete purge of everything. But afterward I felt the weight just completely off my shoulders. No more anxiety, no more depression, life made sense all of a sudden."A nonprofit founded by the Capones, Veterans Exploring Treatment Solutions, or VETS, has helped over 1,000 veterans travel abroad to receive ibogaine and other psychedelics.
But federal scientists have looked at the drug before — three decades ago, when the National Institute on Drug Abuse funded preliminary studies on using it as an addiction treatment. The research was discontinued after it identified "cardiovascular toxicity."
"It would be dead in the water," in terms of winning FDA approval, longtime NIDA director Nora Volkow said.
But Volkow said her agency remains interested in psychedelics, including ibogaine, and is funding an American drugmaker that's working to develop a safer, synthetic version of the drug.
"I am very intrigued by their pharmacological properties and how they are influencing the brain. But you also have to be very mindful not to fall into the hype and to be objective and rigorous in evaluating them."




Reader Comments
I took psilocybin mushrooms a few times with close friends as a teenager many years ago and always thoroughly enjoyed the experience, although it was far from administered under medical supervision!
There's been lots of fascinating research published over the past 15 years regarding psilocybin micro dosing showing all sorts of positive effects from assisting in learning new languages to improving athletic performance to overcoming depression and anxiety. In the same time period the UK government changed the legal status of psilocybin mushrooms from a grade C (same as cannabis which is illegal here) to grade A (same as heroin and cocaine)! even for fresh mushrooms which were completely legal when I took them as a teenager, only becoming a grade C prohibited drug if dried.
Further there seems to be a huge proliferation of online open drug dispensaries with everything, from cocaine, to heroin, meth, mushrooms etc...all semi grey area /legal... !!
Check this one out....[Link]
Didn't know that, the link is pretty wild thanks for sharing.
I've always been a believer that drug users shouldn't be treated as criminals but as people who have serious problems in their lives for whatever reason. During my teens and early twenties met a lot of people who confirmed that and I got to know several people in my local community who died from overdoses at very young ages. It's help and guidance they need, not unrestricted access to more of the same block out all your problems type of drugs, especially not the ones that can kill and addict you so easily. One without the other is a recipe for disaster whereas I feel differently about psychedelics, it seems they teach people to want to change for the better rather than simply helping numb or forget your problems. Alcohol is of course the most popular choice people use for that purpose, we have a big problem with it in the UK and the aggression it unleashes in some.
hmmm
This might the attempt to drug the populace into docility, just like in The Brave New World by Aldous Huxley where people are given Soma the drug to feel good.
Maybe someone should dose the entire Congress with some psychedelics and then have them focus on the thought 'WHO ARE YOU?' - The deeper they go, the more truth they may find. Then what happens...
"These mRNA vaccines are going to change mankind. They are changing you – your psyche, your brain." Dr. Sucharit Bhakdi with Dr. Peter Breggin"You are losing your individuality and personality." Dr. Sucharit Bhakdi--April 2022 Dr. Peter and Ginger Breggin Jul 20, 2025 [Link]
MAOI's were the first antidepressants which he said had a horrible track record, and were eventually pulled of the market. I warned a friend several times about this after I listed to another interview with Breggin calling MB out....May friend said...oh it works great for me, you must be listening to AI nonsense....OMG !
[Link]
The Diagnosis
The treatment
The side effects after treatment
After a bit over a year I am back at work, part time and am doing ok. I am planning two more full trip sessions and a microdosing regime in the next 6 months.
Whilst the psilocybin mushroom is not legal, truffles are not on any scale, they are classed as sclerota.
Yes, psilocybin therapy can be very helpful. The most robust data is on full dose vs microdose. MDMA is also highly effective for trauma/ptsd. Did a dose on the weekend for my cptsd. Good luck !
my wife actually had a copy of black sabbath's first album when i met her.
on 8-track.
i am not sure why. it (heavy metal) is not (and so far as i remember, was not) her musical interest.
anyway, it (that 8-track) is one of the many things that have mysteriously disappeared over the years.
and far away.
ned,
out
eg: N.I.B.
love is a mystery.
beyond belief.
ned,
out
To withhold the smallest gift is not to know love's purpose.
Love offers everything forever...
i have a girl that i know.
well, she's not mine, i don't 'have her' and she's not really a girl. she is a grown woman and she is not mine. i am just an old man that just so happens to see her once in awhile, for basically very trivial reasons.
i repeat: she is not mine. we are not in love. it is incidental contact.
but just about every time i see her, she says to me: 'i trust you.'
can anyone here, guess why?
??
ned,
OUT
.
I quietly place this here as a after thought to a previous argument I had with a frequent filer a couple months ago regarding vaccines in general, and their comment that the U.S. no longer has mercury in their jabs. Well, now that's the case months later...
And following up on an earlier discussion today with two wise SOTT readers, note this quote: such expedited studies done by FDA using digital twin system (currently the DODIN, previously the global information grid, previously the sentient world simulation).This was passed through a variety of bills (allowing FDA to conduct expedited reviews using this system rather than direct "slow" testing of actual population. But regardless, I am NOT nor will I ever be interested in synthetic (spiritless) pharma drug versions of something natural.