« BackThe Acid King (2001)rollingstone.comSubmitted by udit99 4 days ago
  • dang 17 hours ago

    Related:

    LSD chemist William Pickard to be released from prison - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23947157 - July 2020 (375 comments)

    The "Acid King," Serving Life Without Parole - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12211097 - Aug 2016 (25 comments)

    Other (more loosely) related threads:

    The LSD Museum (2021) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36673288 - July 2023 (25 comments)

    Owsley Stanley: The King of LSD (2011) - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32651502 - Aug 2022 (57 comments)

    Nick Sand, Orange Sunshine LSD chemist, has died - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14207957 - April 2017 (82 comments)

    Grateful Dead Fan Timothy Tyler Has Been Granted Clemency - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12395737 - Aug 2016 (211 comments)

    • udit99 16 hours ago

      Hey dang, unrelated question but.... I posted this a couple days ago and it seemed to have resurfaced somehow. Never seen that happen in any past submissions. Is this a new HN feature? Slow news day bumps up some potentially overlooked posts?

    • cadamsdotcom 11 hours ago

      Hey dang, not suggesting anyone do it - but...

      A tool which creates this post for you (probably shouldn't post it because slop, but just making the draft) could be a fun project!

    • 3dsnano 15 hours ago

      Prior to the LLM age, I found it very difficult to program while on LSD or psychedelics. I just could not sustain the logical inference needed to keep track.

      However, using a voice dictation program combined with a usb foot pedal and cursor, I have overcome this impasse in an interesting way.

      What was once the Ballmer peak, I should perhaps rename the Pickard Pinnacle. What a time 2B alive.

      • codr7 12 hours ago

        Computers and hallucinogenics are a lousy combo in every possible way. Even if you manage to interface, they're still digital, which just limits your experience.

        My advice is to write/draw your ideas while tripping and save the digital stuff for later.

        Trees and flowers is a much better focus, animals; as analog, natural and physical as possible. Playing instruments is nice if that's your thing.

        Take or leave.

        • Bayart 5 hours ago

          That's just your personal preference. There's no "right" way of tripping balls, just ways that fit more people. I love very digital environments, with neon lights and 70s prog synth music or 90s techno. At a certain point it becomes organic.

        • Bayart 5 hours ago

          My personal experience is that anything that forces you to focus on details and anchors you runs counter to what you're getting out of psychedelics. Not just precise logical thinking but even things like focusing on letters. Writing becomes challenging when the letters are fractals flying everywhere.

          • Mizza 14 hours ago

            What does the foot pedal do? On/off for the recorder?

            • 0_____0 14 hours ago

              It's a bit shocking to me that one would try to program on LSD - can you say a bit more about what you're up to?

              Personally I feel I save the experience for when I have a question of life and would benefit from a perspective shift. Or might enjoy a different experience of being in nature.

              • nlawalker 14 hours ago
                • 0_____0 11 hours ago

                  Found this one anecdote in that thread and I'm pretty sure this would be me as well.

                  > I tried to code on shrooms once.

                  > I ended up writing a C++ program that just made the internal speaker beep in an infinite loop, and tried to compile it with a C compiler.

                  > I started laughing hysterically and I became quite scared that the C compiler was going to get angry with me, so I went outside and stayed away from my computer in fear.

              • financetechbro 14 hours ago

                What kind of programs are you churning out under this mental state?

              • leesalminen 17 hours ago

                I had the pleasure of recently meeting Leonard and spending a couple weeks together. What a unique and interesting person. I think he’s the smartest person I’ve ever met. His stories are captivating. Could spend a very long time chatting with him.

                • cypherpunks01 17 hours ago

                  Has he been doing well?

                  I'd read he met Ross Ulbricht in USP Tucson when they were both serving life without the possibility of parole. I hope they can reconnect now that they're both free.

                  • leesalminen 16 hours ago

                    Yes, he’s living life to the fullest!

                    The most active 80 year old I’ve seen. Lots of travel, speaking at conferencing, networking in his professional circles.

                    Believe it or not, he’s a fairly conservative person. He’d never done yoga, breath work, sauna, cold plunge, saline IVs. I had the honor of pushing him out of his comfort zone a bit with the hippy health stuff.

                    He’s speed run learning how to use a smartphone and loves using it to connect all the people he meets together.

                    I think that was the most intriguing part of Leonard- his ability to pick up a new concept in minutes and apply it expertly. We were discussing modern cryptography and he was able to grok it in < 5 minutes.

                    Yes, he and Ross are still friends today. If I understand correctly they recently met up for the first time outside of prison.

                    • Thorrez 9 hours ago

                      >He’d never done yoga

                      Huh, the article says he did Yoga.

                      • cypherpunks01 16 hours ago

                        That's so cool to hear! Thanks for sharing

                      • Aurornis 14 hours ago

                        I’m kind of perplexed by the way Ross Ulbricht is held up as a hero after he was caught spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to hire hitmen to murder multiple people. Usually when I bring this up people try to change the subject to the FBI agent who tried to steal crypto or they suggest that there wasn’t enough evidence to support the claims (the court found that by a preponderance of the evidence he sent the messages). There are also claims that because they didn’t pursue those charges they do t “count” despite the preponderance of evidence. Some people just aren’t aware at all.

                        It’s a strange internet phenomenon where people seem to want him to be a folk hero and they’re willing to ignore or use mental gymnastics to wash away the fact that he was spending a lot of money to murder several people.

                        • ty6853 14 hours ago

                          The jury is out on whether the accounts linked to the hiring of the 'hitmen' was exclusively under the control of Ross Ulbricht.

                          The 'preponderance' was found by a judge, not a jury, so it's a different threshold than say demanding a jury in a civil suit where the jury would make a finding on preponderance. You effectively have a jury of one, where that jury member is highly intertwined with the same federal government that is prosecuting the crime, in a way that would surely eliminate them in voire dire for an impartial jury.

                          • Aurornis 9 hours ago

                            This is what I’m talking about: There was apparently a preponderance of evidence that messages were sent and money was transferred to have people killed. There was motive. There was evidence. A court reviewed it. It was introduced in a trial.

                            Yet there’s this desire to downplay it or wish it all away as a conspiracy against him. You have to suspend belief and assume that someone else sent the messages or that they were fabricated. It’s all really hard to believe unless you’re in the mindset that he’s a hero and you need to explain away the inconvenient parts of his history that detract from the person people wish he was.

                        • yapyap 15 hours ago

                          Ulbricht tried to put out hits on people, this man made a drug banned by governments. Both illegal but only one highly immoral.

                      • psyclobe 18 hours ago
                        • KingFelix 17 hours ago

                          yeah wild story, surprised Netflix hasn't done it yet. I've got his book on my shelf too I will start one day, The Rose Of Paracelsus: On Secrets & Sacraments

                          • leesalminen 17 hours ago

                            It’s a very, very hard read. His vocabulary is insane. I had to look up so many words. Very rewarding to make it to the end though.

                            • vik0 15 hours ago

                              What kind of a book is it, genre-wise? Was it interesting? I'm deciding if I should read it someday or not

                              • atommclain 14 hours ago

                                My understanding is that it’s a loose autobiography.

                                I read through two thirds of it during Covid. I think it’s has an unfair reputation of being a challenging read; yes you’ll encounter new vocabulary, but the narrative itself is really interesting and clear.

                        • richrichardsson 17 hours ago

                          I'm not sure where they get the idea that 20mics is a "dose". Microdose perhaps, but I've always been under the impression a modern "dose" of acid is 100mics, so the premise that they're less than in the 60s etc. still holds.

                          • standardUser 16 hours ago

                            I used to sell acid in the 90's and I couldn't even guess at the actual content of LSD per hit we were selling. Every sheet or vial was different, and if my dealer was ever telling me "X micrograms" I probably ignored it the same way I ignored every drug dealer's marketing pitch. For us, it came down to understanding the amount of this particular acid needed for a trip. I've taken 5+ hits at a time that were weaker than single hits from different origins.

                            • aradox66 15 hours ago

                              Ah, yes, the ol "it was just one tab, but it's very strong/pure."

                          • lukasb 16 hours ago

                            According to this he predicted the the fentanyl epidemic in the 90s: https://petrieflom.law.harvard.edu/people/affiliated-researc...

                            • empath75 17 hours ago

                              I think people might under appreciate how easy LSD was to get in the US in the 90s and early 2000s.

                              I was living in a fairly boring suburb, and was a complete nerd and had access to as much LSD as I wanted at less than $5 a hit when I was in high school in the mid 90s, and it continued to be easy to find well into the early 2000s.

                              • SoftTalker 11 hours ago

                                I’m assuming it’s always been easy, if you’re looking. I had no clue where or how to buy drugs when I was in high school.

                                • psyclobe 17 hours ago

                                  Indeed, I did a lot of it during those years as well; introduced so many friends to it. What a time to be alive.

                                  • GuinansEyebrows 17 hours ago

                                    Strychnine will do that :(

                                    Edit to add: i'm just talking about the rash of strychnine poisonings related to LSD usage in the early 2000s. it put a real damper on the party for a long time and for a lot of people.

                                    • krispyfi 13 hours ago

                                      Do you have a source for that? Wikipedia says it's an urban legend. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_legends_about_drugs?se...

                                      • GuinansEyebrows 13 hours ago

                                        Not really but urban legend or not, it scared a lot of people off the stuff for a while.

                                      • nanolith 9 hours ago

                                        It never happened. I've heard varying versions of this urban legend from the late eighties through to modern time. The reality is that an LSD trip can cause physical discomfort, especially toward the end. Sometimes this discomfort is stronger than other times. For some reason, people have confused this with strychnine.

                                        There is no avenue in synthesis or purification in which LSD and strychnine would come into contact. There is no benefit to cut LSD with strychnine. The amount of strychnine necessary to have any effects on humans is too close to the lower end of lethality to be a useful cutting agent.

                                        That being said, there are side-products in LSD synthesis or purification from natural substances (e.g. ergot fungus cultures) can leave related substances as impurities. These can cause vasoconstriction, which is unpleasant. This isn't strychnine, and it's unlikely to be dangerous as small amounts of impurity. It doesn't feel very nice, and it can cause bruising. Or, people tripping can just bump into things and be clumsy. Either way, the explanation that this comes from strychnine is and has always been bunk.

                                        It should be obvious, but please don't confuse any of this with an endorsement of the drug. That's a separate topic. The most I'll say here is that I don't recommend it.

                                    • e6quisitory 17 hours ago
                                      • Deprogrammer9 12 hours ago
                                        • linuxguy2 18 hours ago

                                          [2001]

                                          • dang 17 hours ago

                                            Added above. Thanks!