Where I Stand on Magic Mushrooms

The author clarifies his position on psilocybin policy

Michael Pollan
GEN

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Credit: Diverse Images/UIG/Getty Images

MyMy position on the recent initiatives to change the legal status of psilocybin in various jurisdictions is somewhat nuanced and perhaps for that reason has been misrepresented in several press accounts. To be clear: I support decriminalization. “No one should ever be arrested or go to jail for the possession or cultivation of any kind of mushroom,” as I said in my New York Times op-ed piece. As I told interviewers in the days after the Denver initiative passed, I would have voted in favor of it had I been eligible.

However, I think it would be premature to push for the legalization, commercial cultivation, and sales of psilocybin mushrooms for non-medical use. My reasons:

1. Unlike decriminalization, legalization would encourage businesses to enter the market; they would not merely offer access but would actively promote the use of magic mushrooms — an important difference. The risks of unsupervised psilocybin use are considerable, and of a different order than the risks of cannabis. People with a personal or family history of schizophrenia, for example, need to be actively discouraged from using psilocybin; reckless or casual use can have more serious consequences than the casual use of cannabis, particularly in high doses, when the presence of a…

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Michael Pollan
GEN
Writer for

Author of Food Rules; In Defense of Food; The Omnivore’s Dilemma; The Botany of Desire; A Place of My Own and Second Nature.