Sunday, February 8, 2026

It's a Green Day in the Bay


Lost in the controversy about Bad Bunny appearing at the Super Bowl halftime show is the fact that the cannabis-loving band Green Day will kick off the music portion of the Super Bowl with a performance at the game's opening ceremony.

In 1987, guitarists Billie Joe Armstrong and Mike Dirnt, both 15 years old at the time, along with bassist Sean Hughes and drummer Raj Punjabi, a fellow high school student from Pinole, CA, formed the band Desecrated Youth, later renamed Sweet Children. 

After signing with Lookout! Records in 1988 and before releasing their first EP in 1989, the group adopted the name Green Day. In the Bay Area, where the band was formed, "green day" was reportedly slang for spending a day doing nothing but smoking marijuana.

The band's name "was absolutely about pot," Armstrong told Bill Maher, adding, "We were trying to be the Cheech & Chong of punk rock." Armstrong went on to say that he stopped smoking weed after he had children, and then described a gravity bong to Maher. "I like burning the substance" as opposed to vaporizing, he said, because he "it smells good, it fills the room." Vaporizing felt like "one more reason to hide the fact that it should be legal." 

The band's 1977 album "Nimrod," scored with the acoustic ballad "Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)," which won the band an MTV Video Award for Best Alternative Video. The other singles released from Nimrod were "Nice Guys Finish Last," "Hitchin' a Ride," and "Redundant," all with rockin' riffs and rebellious lyrics of the type that the 60s hippies wrote. 

Green Day's "American Idiot" won the 2005 Grammy for Best Rock Album and was nominated in six other categories, including Album of the Year. The album helped Green Day win seven of the eight awards it was nominated for at the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards; the "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" video won six of those awards. A year later, "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" won Grammy Award for Record of the Year. 
  
The musical "American Idiot" based on the album opened in the Berkeley Repertory Theatre at the end of 2009. On April 20, 2010, "American Idiot" opened on Broadway, and Green Day released the soundtrack to the musical.


As they sang while undercover busking at a New York subway station with Jimmy Fallon, Green Day's song "Basket Case" asks, "am I just paranoid, or just stoned?" 

Meanwhile, there's increased scrutiny around alternative Super Bowl performer Kid Rock's lyric about "underage girls" being not statutory by mandatory. And Bill Maher has redubbed today "Super Bet Sunday" for "Wager League Sports" as the NFL partnered with DraftKings online sports betting and that drug (gambling) was permitted to advertise a special $300 bonus—not in dollars, but in betting credits. 

POST GAME UPDATE: The broadcast did warp the word "mindfuck" but the others in "American Idiot" came through loud and clear. All after "Time of Your Life" was used like a graduation day song to introduce NFLers like Lynn Swan, Payton Manning, and Joe Montana.

According to AlternativeNation.net, amid rumors that ICE would be present at the Super Bowl, as well as speculation that Bad Bunny might call out the agency during his live halftime performance, Green Day played a warm-up show at San Francisco’s Pier 29 on Friday night (Feb. 6th). Partway through the set, Armstrong said, “This goes out to all the ICE agents out, wherever you are. Quit your sh*tty ass job,” Armstrong said. “Because when this is over, and it will be over at some point in time. Kristi Noem, Stephen Miller, JD Vance, Donald Trump – they’re gonna drop you like a bad f*cking habit. Come on to this side of the line.” 

During the song "Holiday," which he dedicated to Minneapolis, Armstrong changed the lyrics from "the representative from California has the floor" to "the representative from Epstein Island has the floor." And he continued his long-running criticism of the MAGA movement, changing the lyrics in "American Idiot" to say, "I'm not part of the MAGA agenda."

A video featuring Grateful Dead drummer Mickey Hart was aired during the pre-game, celebrating Bob Weir and the band's love for the 49ers, and their choice of Levi's stadium for their 50th anniversary shows. 

"Join the Club" Film Tells the Story of Dennis Peron and Medical Marijuana

"Join the Club" is a powerful documentary about Dennis Peron and the origins of the medical marijuana movement, set in the gay rights movement and the AIDS crisis in San Francisco. The tactics of the US war on drugs that began with Richard Nixon and was carried on by successive US presidents is also presented in the film, making the DEA and its multi-jurisdictional forces look like the ICE of its day. 

Filmmakers Kip Andersen and Chris O'Connell were able to conduct the last interview with Peron just before he died in 2018, and his story is told in flashback with remarkable footage of Peron's historic Cannabis Buyer's Club, including police video from an officer who infiltrated the club, news reports, and interviews all skillfully edited together. 

Born in the Bronx, Peron was drafted into the Vietnam War where he recounts seeing 1000 dead soldiers the month that he arrived. Eschewing alcohol as "the war drug," Peron smoked his first joint instead, and the filmmakers do a wonderful job of depicting how that changed his life. Bringing back three pounds of marijuana when he returned from Vietnam launched his career as a pot dealer and activist in San Francisco. 

Peron began his political involvement as a supporter of Harvey Milk, who was the country's first elected gay politician when he became a San Francisco supervisor. The assassination of Milk and Mayor George Moscone highlighted the terrible ongoing prejudice against the gay community, as did the arrests and police shooting of Peron. 

The film does an excellent job of taking us to the origins of the AIDS epidemic and the relief that patients were getting from cannabis. The death of Dennis's young, beautiful lover Jonathan West from AIDS catapulted him to begin distributing cannabis to AIDS patients and operating what was described as the first AIDS hospice, where patients could gather and support each other in community.

Interviewees include Cal NORML's Dale Gieringer, who played a key role in taking the medical marijuana movement statewide with California's breakthrough Prop. 215 in 1996, along with Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug Policy Alliance, Peron's right-hand man John Entwhistle, journalist Fred Gardner, artist Ruth Frase, and activist Terrance Alan, among others. Peron's attorneys Tony Serra and David Nick are interviewed, as are Dan Lungren, the conservative CA AG who brutally went after Dennis, and Joe Bannon, the country's first openly gay policeman who was reviled when he went undercover to take down the cannabis club. 

Footage highlights Brownie Mary Rathbun, a sweet little old lady who was arrested for baking and distributing cannabis brownies to AIDS patients. Also in the film are Gilbert Baker, the designer of the Pride rainbow flag, Wayne Justmann, the OG medical marijuana card holder who was a fixture in the movement, and San Francisco's progressive DA Terence Hallinan (whose policies were adopted by his successor, Kamala Harris). 

After his interview for the film, which was conducted after Peron had a stroke and had difficulty speaking, the filmmakers reported that he seemed to be at peace, as though he knew his story would be told. He died a few months later. 

"Join the Club" was shown as part of the SF Indie Fest at the Roxy Theater to a crowd of activists and supporters that thoroughly enjoyed it, cheering for the heroes and jeering the opponents. So far, it's only been making the festival rounds since its release in May 2024, but hopefully will soon see a broader release. 

Thursday, February 5, 2026

A "Jewel Robbery" with a Marijuana Twist

Kay Francis is offered a marijuana cigarette by William Powell in "Jewel Robbery"

In the pre-Hayes Code film "Jewel Robbery" (1932), William Powell ("The Thin Man") plays a suave jewel thief who romances a bored, jewel-grubbing Baroness played by Kay Francis. "In my own eyes, I'm shallow and weak," says Francis. "I fly about all day, pursuing furs, jewels, excitement....In the morning, a cocktail, in the afternoon, a man, in the evening, Veronal [a barbiturate]."  

After invading a jewelry store where Francis and her elderly husband are picking out a large diamond ring, Powell congenially holds everyone hostage and robs the store's inventory. He then takes the unusual step of offering the shop's owner a marijuana cigarette, saying, "Do smoke one of my cigarettes. Now, inhale deeply...." 

Despite having just been robbed, the man begins giggling so vociferously that Francis asks Powell, "What did you give him?" Powell replies, "A pleasant, harmless smoke. He'll awake in the morning fresh and happy, with a marvelous appetite."  

He then offers her a cigarette, saying, "They're harmless, really. Two puffs, and you'll be hearing soft music. The world will begin to revolve pleasantly. Three, a beautiful dream." She asks, "How do you know this?" and he replies, "Experience. I assure you, all the ladies fall asleep happily." "So that you steal their jewels in peace, I suppose," she replies. Refusing to smoke, she says, "I prefer to keep my wits about me, thank you" (which, considering her circumstances, was rather wise). 

Powell then hornswoggles a security guard into carrying his loot out to the getaway car, and gives him as a tip his box of marijuana cigarettes. The guard fully enjoys smoking one of the joints, inhaling deeply. When he is questioned by the police, he offers the chief one of his stash and the two are soon yukking it up fully. Francis of course falls for Powell, but never gets a chance to try another of his cigarettes. 

Two years later, Gertrude Michael sang "Sweet Marijuana" in the 1934  film "Murder at the Vanities," apparently released just before the Motion Picture Production Code (known as the Hays Code) went into effect. 

Following a series of Hollywood scandals involving drugs in the 1920s, legislators in 37 states introduced almost 100 film censorship bills in 1921. The studios chose to self-regulate, hiring Presbyterian postmaster Will H. Hays, a former head of the RNC, to head the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. Hays reviewed scripts and in 1924 he introduced a set of recommendations that forbade depictions of drug trafficking and urged caution in depicting drug use, among other proscriptions like not ridiculing clergy. These evolved into the Production Code, with input from a Catholic editor and a Jesuit priest. 

The Hays Code forbade the use of graphic violence, profanity, obscenity, promiscuity, miscegenation,  homosexuality, criminality, and substance use. It disallowed any sort of ridicule for a law or "creating sympathy for its violation." A recurring theme was "that throughout, the audience feels sure that evil is wrong, and good is right." The code was replaced in 1968 by the motion-picture rating system still in use today.

In 2009, the movie "It's Complicated," in which Meryl Streep and Steve Martin smoke pot, was slapped with an "R" rating from the MPAA, said to be due to a lack of "a negative consequence for their behavior." 

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Cannabis in the Epstein Files

The DOJ's online searchable (and heavily redacted) Epstein Library reveals that convicted sex trafficker / financier Jeffrey Epstein seemed to be tracking marijuana legalization globally, and may have invested in a cannabis company in the US Virgin Islands months before he was re-arrested and died in his prison cell in 2019. 

Epstein pleaded guilty and was convicted in 2008 by a Florida state court of procuring a child for prostitution and of soliciting a prostitute in a sweetheart deal that didn't seem to affect his business or other activities. 

An MD with a redacted name wrote to Epstein on 9/5/2010, "AND do you know WHO aside from the Israelis owns most of the water capture technology.... Hint...I adore him and he just cut off all his hair and I will see him in concert at the state fair on the 16th... (scroll down) WILLIE NELSON! Maybe marijuana does make you a better you." (Nelson played the Puyallup, WA state fair on 9/16/2010. His hair did look shorter in photos from the fair. Reportedly he did own a water capture company.) 

On Sep. 21, 2013, [REDACTED] wrote: "[REDACTED] suggested perhaps medicinal weed for me ;)" Epstein replied: "Yes, my 2nd great idea after Zombie Porn! They say these things come in 3's So we should all cash in on the next one!" Hong Kong based academic and tech bro Gino Yu sent Epstein a link on August 23, 2016 to an article titled, "Researchers find lab rats on marijuana just can't be bothered" with the comment, "Roaches on dmt next?" One of Epstein's attorneys Erika Kellerhals wrote in an email on September 7, 2016,  "All these marijuana guys are stuck using credit unions because no banks will take their money. IBE angle..." probably referring to International Banking Entities. In December 2018, Epstein received a pitch about a cannabis investment fund.  

David Mitchell, a longtime investor and financier who connected Epstein to Todd Boehly, co-owner of the LA Dodgers and Lakers in 2011, forwarded Epstein an article on February 1, 2019 titled, "Meet Israel's many medical marijuana millionaires - including former Prime Minister Ehud Barak." On March 1, 2019 the article Mitchell forwarded was, "Martha Stewart Will Advise Cannabis Grower on Products for Humans and Pets." And on March 7 that year, he forwarded a Statement from FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb on signing of the Agriculture Improvement Act and the agency's regulation of products containing cannabis and cannabis-derived compounds. Analyses of the cannabis market from Harvest and Akrell Ventures are part of the files. 

US Virgin Islands Governor Albert Bryan, Jr. signs medical marijuana law on 1/19/2019. 

American businesswoman and former US Virgin Islands first lady Cecile de Jongh, who was on Epstein's payroll, responded to a Jan. 19, 2019 email from Epstein asking, "any feed back from albert?" [USVI's new Governor Albert Bryan, Jr.]. De Jongh responded, "I see that he got back to STX [St. Croix] this afternoon to sign the medical marijuana bill." Mitchell wrote to Epstein about the new law on the following day, asking, "what name should I put the shares into?"

Epstein was arrested again six months later on July 6, 2019, on federal charges for the sex trafficking of minors in Florida and New York. He died in his jail cell on August 10, 2019.

In May 2023, JPMorgan Chase & Co. "unveiled new accusations that the U.S. Virgin Islands was complicit in Jeffrey Epstein's sex crimes, including that a former first lady for the territory sought student visas for some of the disgraced financier's victims," according to Reuters.  De Jongh worked with Epstein in 2011 when the USVI was drafting new sex offender laws, JPMorgan said. "This is the suggested language; will it work for you?" de Jongh asked Epstein in a May 2011 email.

Epstein also got involved in helping get jobs, clients, or academic placements for his friends and their children.  Marijuana use didn't seem to matter to them.

Attorney Jack Goldberger wrote to Epstein on June 8, 2009, "I told them about his misdemeanor marijuana conviction. 'if we kicked everyone out who had marijuana convictions we'd have no one working here' Its ok but don't highlight it." Epstein replied, "forward to joe." The subject was "axel," perhaps referring to Richard Axel, a Columbia University Professor, Nobel laureate, and co-director of the Zuckerman Institute. The Guardian reported that, in 2010, Axel attended a birthday party in Paris for Epstein, and that Axel had earlier said of Epstein, "He has the ability to make connections that other minds can’t make... He is extremely smart and probing." Mortimer Zuckerman, a prominent Columbia donor, invited Epstein to join then-University President Lee Bollinger, Law ’71, at two dinners in 2013 to celebrate the $200 million University neuroscience institute that Zuckerman endowed in 2012. 

Victims of the Epstein / Maxwell sex trafficking ring were asked in depositions about their marijuana or drug use, and their admissions were used to smear them in court. 

One victim whose name is redacted is said to have boasted about her marijuana use her MySpace webpage, where admissions of purchasing and using marijuana and marijuana paraphernalia were found. She reportedly stated she "can't wail to buy some weed!!! ... 1 can't wait!!! . . . (hold on: let me say that again) I can't wait to buy some weed!!!.. . I also want to get a vaporizer so I can smoke in my room because apparently there 'narcs' everywhere." She was also said to have posted a photograph of a marijuana cigarette and labeled it "what heaven looks like to me." This information and supporting documentation was provided by the defense to the Palm Beach Police Dept. 

Another victim who was 16 when she met Epstein "currently uses marijuana every day for anxiety," according to the files. (No wonder.) In a heavily redacted deposition, a girl who was 14 or 15 when she met Epstein said she used only marijuana before she met him, but began using cocaine and Ecstasy after meeting him. She recounts a woman performing oral sex on her while Epstein had sex with the woman from behind. In an FBI interview where a victim was also asked about smoking pot, she said that Epstein had a "weird shaped penis" with a "peehole on the side of his dick."

A big reason for Epstein's meteoric rise in the financial world was his relationship with James Cayne, who became a director at Bear Sterns in 1985. Epstein names Cayne as an executor in a will found in the DOJ files. 

Cayne is mentioned in the 1/4/2026 New York Times Magazine article "Scams, Schemes, Ruthless Cons: The Untold Story of How Jeffrey Epstein Got Rich," which says, "Rumors, perhaps fueled by envy, began to spread that Epstein was helping Cayne to pursue women and score drugs, according to several of their colleagues." His relationship with Cayne "really catapulted" Epstein, and the two were described as "sleazeballs."

In 2008, Cayne cashed in his share of Bear Stearns for $61 million, sending their stock down 5%, and stepped down as chief executive before the firm went bust. The Wall Street Journal blog said that during 10 critical days of the bank's crisis in July 2007, Cayne was playing in a bridge tournament in Nashville, Tenn., without a cell phone or an email device. The WSJ also reported that Cayne sometimes smoked marijuana after bridge tournaments, citing interviews with attendees at the tournaments. He  denied one alleged incident in 2004, but when asked whether he smoked pot during bridge tournaments on other occasions, he said he would respond only "to a specific allegation." 

In one of his last acts as CEO of Bear Stearns, Cayne made a payment of around $2 million to a woman who was poised to file sexual harassment charges against its chairman, Alan "Ace" Greenberg, according to The Daily Beast. 

In one of many articles over the years speculating how Epstein accumulated his weath, he was said to run money for the Bronfmans, the Canadian family that made a fortune pushing liquor into the US during alcohol prohibition, something denied by Cayne. 

It's time to lessen laws, taxes and regulations on legitimate cannabis businesses worldwide to get the holy herb out of the hands of sleezeballs like Epstein, who traffic in human beings, and the scumbags he serviced. 

Monday, January 19, 2026

Bye Bye Bobby

Some deaths hit you hard. Bob Wier, who was still in his teens when he hooked up with Jerry Garcia to start making music, passed on January 10 after a brief illness, and Deadheads everywhere mourned and celebrated his life. 

I first saw the Grateful Dead on their "Live at Last" tour in the late '80s, after Garcia came back from a coma to re-learn the guitar. I thought, "This is where the 60s went" when I saw the parking lot scene: hippie selling colorful crafts, grilled cheese sandwiches and other goodies in a makeshift community that followed the band from show to show. I saw them play with Bob Dylan and several other shows back in the day when you could send in for tickets as part of a lottery for big shows. 

Bill Clinton float with a phattie at the 1993 Grateful Dead Mardi Gras show.
My hemp activism started when a cute hempster guy invited me to the 1991/92 New Year's Eve show at the Oakland, CA colosseum he'd pulled tickets for. It was an unforgettable show, with Baba Olatunji starting it out drumming through the crowd, and Bela Fleck and the Flecktones blowing us away with a drummer whose kit looked like a guitar. It was the year the band's manager Bill Graham died, and since he would traditionally come out as Father Time at midnight at their epic NYE shows, film of him playing Father Time year after year was shown instead. 

I also got to their Mardi Gras show in 1993, when one of the floats depicted the newly-elected Bill Clinton with a saxophone in one hand and a huge burning joint in the other (pictured). As a hemp activist, I wo-maned a table selling tie-dyed hemp shorts and shirts at a string of shows in Sacramento and at Shoreline amphitheater in the Bay Area. The band's keyboardist Vince Wellnick stopped by the booth and picked out our most colorful shirt, which he wore onstage. I ran into Wellnick later on his way to Wier's wedding in Mill Valley. 


A memorial for Wier was held Saturday in downtown San Francisco where thousands gathered. 

Joan Baez spoke, saying Wier was part of a group that created a loving, caring community. "I didn't get it. I was a Mom saying, 'You can go, but don't smoke any of that dope.'....It's been a long journey for me. My own kid, who I was not that present for, found a family with you, Bob, and your people."

John Mayer, who Weir recruited to step into Jerry Garcia's (by way of Trey Anastasio's) huge shoes to  form Dead & Co., shared at the memorial that he and Bobby were born in the same day, exactly 30 years apart. "I come from a world of structural thinking....Bob learned early on that spirit, heart, soul, curiosity and fearlessness was the path to glory. He taught me to trust in the moment, and I like to think I taught him a little bit to rely on a plan. Not as a substitute for the divine moments, but as a way to lure them in a little closer."  

"How many nights we all lived so fully in each second, following the music around twists and turns, through forests and over majestic vistas, taking in the magnificent inner views and wondering how we all got so lucky to have found this music invited into this dream together," Mayer recalled. 

Wier's wife Natascha (left) and daughter Monet (right) notice a hawk flying over the crowd
as daughter Chloe (center) speaks at the memorial. 

When Bob's youngest daughter Chloe ("the other daughter") spoke about azimuth, a nautical/navigational term Wier used to describe the connection between the band and their fans, a beautiful red-tailed hawk began to circle the crowd, joined in the end by a second hawk before flying away. Bob would say that Garcia never really left him, that he still found him up on his shoulder. He and Jerry died 11,111 days apart. 

Wier's wife Natascha lead the crowd in 108 seconds of silence, something Bob would call "Taking a Holy Instant" in the day. To end the gathering, Mayer played "Ripple" (a Garcia/Robert Hunter tune) on Bob's guitar, and the crowd sang along: 

If my words did glow with the gold of sunshine
And my tunes were played on the harp unstrung
Would you hear my voice come through the music?
Would you hold it near as it were your own?

....If I knew the way, I would take you home. 

A song Bobby wrote and sang, "One More Saturday Night," took the crowd out and Chloe, holding a red rose, boogied down with Baez. 

Now everybody's dancin' down the local armory
With a basement full of dynamite and live artillery
Temperature keeps risin', everybody gettin' high
Come the rockin' stroke of midnight, the place is gonna fly...


Wier's Politics, and Pot



Deadheads also gathered last week at 710 Ashbury Street, the house bandmembers were living in when, on October 2, 1967 the place was raided by San Francisco narcotics officers, and Wier and Ron "Pigpen" McKernan were arrested for pot possession. The arrest made national news, and Garcia's picture was reportedly used to represent a lawless hippie in an ad for Nixon's presidental campaign the next year. When the band was busted in New Orleans in 1970, they made music out of it for one of their most famous songs: "Truckin" (above).   

Rock/pot journalist Steve Bloom recalled working at High Times when the Dead were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1994: "During the media session I fired off a question about Deadheads getting busted by narcs at shows for marijuana and LSD. The band members (Garcia was not there) seemed surprised by the question, but then Bobby stepped forward, decrying the situation and calling for drugs like that to be legal." 

In 2015, NORML was invited to table at the "Fare Thee Well" shows in Santa Clara, the 50th anniversary celebration that many thought would be the last Dead shows. HeadCount, the better-funded group that organized the "Participation Row" there that I participated in, noticed the long lines at our booth and soon started a campaign to register pro-pot voters, which doubtlessly helped with coming ballot measures. 

According to the LA Times, Dead & Company said they would bring at least 300 supporters of legal pot to their May 10, 2016 performance on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” when a legalization measure was heading for the California ballot. "Members of organizations including the California Cannabis Industry Assn. and the Los Angeles medical marijuana collective Buds & Roses were encouraged to wear T-shirts, carry signs and even dress up as giant joints to get their message seen on national TV," the Times reported. [UPDATE: Word from someone who was there said that when supporters showed up dressed as a giant pot leaf, they were kicked out because "it was a family show."]

The band hoped marijuana-advocacy groups could sponsor their Kimmel appearance, but programmers wouldn't permit a cannabis ad to run (they still don't). “The folks it would be hitting on that broadcast would be outside our normal sphere of influence,” Wier said in an interview. “We’re about music, but we’re about other stuff as well, and we always have been. We need to make our feelings on the subject as apparent as we can.” 

Nancy Pelosi spoke at the memorial about Wier being a lifelong Democrat who loved his country, and who tried to get her to flash a "Vote" sign in a Grateful Dead motif at an event, but she insisted he do it instead. He gave her the sign though, and she showed it this time. His daughter said he would always speak of finding ways to get along with "our friends the Repubs." 

Bob and the band at the Kennedy Center in 2024

Pelosi noted, "Isn't it great that Bob got the last Kennedy Center Honor (when they were truly Kennedy Center Honors)." Interviewed on the red carpet at the event, Wier said that the band was persona non grata for most of its history, but now "everything's changed. Except us....That roar that I'm hearing is the sound of doors opening." Indeed, Dead & Co.'s 30-night residency at the Las Vegas Sphere was followed by another 18 nights to celebrate their 10-year anniversary in 2025.  And their three days of shows at Golden Gate Park drew 60,000 fans each night and raised 2.2 million for charity (NORML, which could really use some $$s right now, wasn't among the recipients).  

With a name that practically spelled "Weird," Bobby was unique. Will anyone step into his huge sandals and keep the music going? One way or another, it's bound to happen. It was said that Bob imagined the band's influence lasting 300 years; symphonic, bluegrass, and other forms of interpretation of their extensive catalog of songs have been mentioned and imagined. 

Monday, January 5, 2026

Elaine Pagels, Gnosis, and LSD


Elaine Pagels, the classical and biblical scholar who was among the first to translate and interpret the Nag Hammadi manuscripts writes in her 2019 book Why Religion? A Personal Story that she tried LSD shortly before feeling impelled to write her bestseller The Gnostic Gospels (1979). Gnosis, the direct experience of God, is something often powerfully enhanced by entheogens like LSD. 

Pagels grew up in Palo Alto, the child of academic parents (who were horrified by her dabblings into religion as a child). She had an early fascination with the trippy Gospel of John, which was also Emily Dickinson's favorite Bible book. In high school, she hung out with a group of artists, and writes that she knew the (years older) Jerry Garcia, and attended his first wedding (to a very pregnant young woman). In high school, he dated Garcia's friend Paul Speegle, who died in a car crash that Jerry, also in the car, survived, and she surmises that the name The Grateful Dead “must have resonated from the crash he’d survived five years earlier.” The car crash also caused her to leave her new-found religion when born again Christains told her her Jewish friend would burn in hell. 

“Many of us, of course, have left religious institutions behind, and prefer to identify as ‘spiritual, not religious,’” she writes at the outset of Why Religion? “I’ve done both – had faith, lost it; joined groups, and left them....What matters to me more than whether we participate in institutions or leave them is how we engage the imagination – in dreams, art, poetry, music – since what each of us needs, and what we can engage, obviously differs and changes throughout our lifetime.”

After graduating Stanford, Pagels applied to a Harvard doctoral program in the study of religion, and was rejected by Prof. Krister Stendahl because, he wrote, “women students have always quit before receiving a degree.” However she was encouraged to apply again the following year if she was “still serious," and after completing a Masters in classics at Stanford and continuing to study advanced Greek and Latin, she re-applied and was accepted. There she studied the “secret” gnostic gospels discovered at Nag Hammadi in 1945, written in Coptic around the 2nd - 4th century AD.

Her husband Heinz, a physicist and author of The Cosmic Code who was interested in consciousness, took part in an LSD experiment at Palo Alto Veteran's Hospital while in graduate school. What he took "wasn't a placebo," he told Elaine later, "saying how astonished he was to see stars and galaxies being born and dying, while others emerged, through what felt like innumerable ages." The summer they married (1969), he encouraged his new wife to try it, "promising to cope with any difficulty that might arise." 

Pagels writes she "anticipated that what would happen might involve what I was writing about, some kind of Christian vision. Instead, as I sat in the apartment, looking out at the sky, the trees in light wind, and the garden, I saw everything alive as fire, gloriously intertwined. Watching, ecstatic and speechless, for about five hours, I finally managed to say, 'I guess that solved the dying problem.' What horrified me before, when [her high school friend] Paul died—that a beloved person could simply disappear, and disintegrate—now seemed to resolve into a deeper unity of the whole." 

That fall, she returned to Cambridge to complete her dissertation and doctoral exams, graduating with distinction. She began to teach, writing two "scholarly books" and several articles, and working with a group of nearly 30 scholars to translate, edit and publish more than 50 texts from Nag Hammadi. Concern that their work wouldn't be understood by the public led her to write The Gnostic Gospels, a less academic and more approachable text.  

One of the first to read the long-lost Gospel of Thomas, Pagels noticed that rather than focusing on Jesus's divinity, the teachings there encourage his followers to find the divine in themselves. “If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you,” saying 70 says.

In 1970 she began teaching at Barnard College (a women's school). Asked to speak at a conference there about women in the early Christian movement, she realized she'd been taught nothing about that. "While thinking about the conference, I suddenly realized that although the sources in the New Testament often marginalize women and minimize their roles, the secret gospels and other texts found in Egypt—some, especially—abound in feminine images, even for God," she wrote. "None of my male colleagues had noticed this, and I hadn't either, until I had been asked to confront the question."

"The Secret Revelation of John, for example, opens as the disciple John, devastated by Jesus's death, goes out in to the desert alone to grieve, when suddenly 'the whole creation shone with light, and the world was shaken.' Terrified, John says be heard Jesus's voice speaking from that light, saying, 'John, John, why do you weep? Don't you know that I am with you always; I am the Father; I am the Mother; and I am the Son!" 

Pagels writes that anyone reading the Bible in Hebrew would see that the words "spirit" (Ruah) and "wisdom" (Hokmah) are feminine, but that when translated to Greek and Latin, Ruah became the genderless pneuma and spiritus, losing connection with the divine Mother. "I realized that Israel's god was an anomaly—a single-male god, who, unlike other male gods among his contemporaries, had no feminine partner, as in Egypt, where Isis and Hathor were worshipped along with Ra and Horus, or in Greece or Rome, where Zeus and Jupiter were paired with divine wives, sisters, and lovers, like Hera and Juno." 

“I feel like it sort of just opens some windows on a tradition that had seemed pretty much closed and sort of codified a long time ago, like, these are the correct ways to understand God, as a father, as a son,” Pagels says about the lost images. “And now people say, ‘Oh, well, there’s many different ways of thinking about this. And for me that is like a window opening up, bringing fresh air and more light.” 

To some, this was heresy (a word she traces back to the Greek for "choice"). “You know, people have sometimes called me ‘Elaine Pagan,’” she smilingly told the Christian Science Monitor. She told Stanford Magazine she identifies as Christian—“but I wouldn’t say I identify only with that.” She often speaks at events at her Episcopal parish, where, the Rev. Leslie Smith says,  “She clearly challenges a congregation that’s fairly progressive, on issues like the early church’s repression of women’s participation.”

The Gnostic Gospels won both the National Book Award in the category Religion/Inspiration and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Modern Library named it as one of the 100 best nonfiction books of the twentieth century. Pagels went on to write books like, Adam, Eve, and the Serpent: Sex and Politics in Early Christianity and Revelations: Visions, Prophecy, and Politics in the Book of Revelation.  

Re-Examining Eve

"Even the mystics of Jewish and Christian tradition who seek to find their identity in God often are careful to acknowledge the abyss that separates them from their divine Source," Pagels writes in Adam, Eve and the Serpent. When the Dominican monk Meister Eckhart (c. 1260–1328 C.E.) wrote of striving to attain “God [who] lies hidden in the soul’s core," the archbishop of Cologne obtained a papal bull condemning Eckhart’s writings as heresy.

"But gnostic interpreters share with the Hindu and with Eckhart that very conviction—that the divine being is hidden deep within human nature, as well as outside it," Pagels writes. According to Ptolemy, the story of Adam and Eve "shows that humanity 'fell' into ordinary consciousness and lost contact with its divine origin."

Pagels recaunts that many gnostics read the story of Adam and Eve as an inner battle between the psyche (ordinary consciousness) and the spirit (the potential for a higher, spiritual consciousness), and that:

The majority of the known gnostic texts depict Adam (not Eve) as representing the psyche, while Eve represents the higher principle, the spiritual self. Gnostic authors loved to tell, with many variations, the story of Eve, that elusive spiritual intelligence: how she first emerged within Adam and awakened him, the soul, to awareness of its spiritual nature; how she encountered resistance, was misunderstood, attacked, and mistaken for what she was not; and how she finally joined with Adam “in marriage,” so to speak, and so came to live in harmonious union with the soul.

According to the gnostic text called Reality of the Rulers, when Adam first recognized Eve, he saw in her not a mere marital partner but a spiritual power: 

And when he saw her, he said, “It is you who have given me life: you shall be called Mother of the Living [Eve]; for it is she who is my Mother. It is she who is the Physician, and the Woman, and She Who Has Given Birth.” 

When Adam was warned by the creator to disregard Eve's voice, he lost contact with the spirit, until she reappeared to him in the form of the serpent, who served as a the Female Instructing Principle, say the gnostic texts as interpreted by Pagels, who writes: 

The [Gnostic] Secret Book concludes as Eve, the “perfect primal intelligence,” calls out to Adam—to the psyche (and so, in effect, to you and me, the readers)—to wake up, recognize her, and so receive spiritual illumination...And whereas the orthodox often blamed Eve for the fall and pointed to women’s submission as appropriate punishment, gnostics often depicted Eve—or the feminine spiritual power she represented—as the source of spiritual awakening.

LSD and the Libraries

Discovered around the time that the Nag Hammadi texts were found are the Dead Sea Scrolls, containing the oldest Hebrew-language manuscripts of the Bible dating back to the 2nd century BCE. One of the scholars to translate and preserve the Dead Sea Scrolls was John M. Allegro, whose book The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross scandalized the research and religious communities by putting forward the theory that stories of early Christianity originated in a clandestine Essene sect centered around the use of psychedelic mushrooms.

At one of the first conferences I attended on LSD—probably the 50th anniversary of "Bicycle Day" when chemist Albert Hoffman first tripped on acid—speakers opined that the substance's discovery could be God's antidote to the nuclear bomb; a powerful tool to reconnect us with our inner spirit, and wake us up to the conscious needed to prevent planetary disaster. It could be no mistake that the Nag Hammadi library and the Dead Sea Scroll were unearthed just after the 1943 discovery of the chemical that Pagels ingested just before making them readable to us all. 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Bread and Roses, and Mayor Mamdani


AOC and Letitia James spoke, and Bernie Sanders swore the new mayor in, just after Lucy Dacus and Sarah Goldstone performed "Bread and Roses" today at NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani's Inauguration Ceremony

As we come marching, marching, in the beauty of the day, 
A million darkened kitchens, a thousand mill-lofts gray 
Are touched with all the radiance that a sudden sun discloses, 
For the people hear us singing, "Bread and Roses, Bread and Roses." 

As we go marching, marching, we battle, too, for men— 
For they are women's children and we mother them again. 
Our days shall not be sweated from birth until life closes— 
Hearts starve as well as bodies: Give us Bread, but give us Roses. 

As we come marching, marching, unnumbered women dead 
Go crying through our singing their ancient call for Bread; 
Small art and love and beauty their trudging spirits knew— 
Yes, it is Bread we fight for—but we fight for Roses, too. 

As we come marching, marching, we bring the Greater Days— 
The rising of the women means the rising of the race. 
No more the drudge and idler—ten that toil where one reposes— 
But a sharing of life's glories: Bread and Roses, Bread and Roses.

Helen Todd and her colleagues campaign for women's suffrage. Todd, as a factory inspector, discussed how the right to vote would gain for working women and society "Bread and Roses"

The song is based on a poem written in 1911 by James Oppenheim, inspired by a speech given by suffragist and labor activist Helen Todd. "No words can better express the soul of the woman’s movement, lying back of the practical cry of 'Votes for Women,' better than this sentence....‘Bread for all, and Roses, too,'" Todd said. "Woman is the mothering element in the world and her vote will go toward helping forward the time when life’s Bread, which is home, shelter and security, and the Roses of life, music, education, nature and books, shall be the heritage of every child that is born in the country, in the government of which she has a voice.”

Todd went to California to help lead the suffrage movement in the state and campaign in the state's fall election for Proposition 4, which secured the right for women to vote on October 10, 1911. During the California campaign, the suffragettes carried "Bread for all, and Roses, too!" banners, and the phrase spread throughout the country. In July 1913, for instance, during a suffrage parade in Maryland, a float with the theme "Bread for all, and roses, too" participated. The float "bore ... a boy with a basket of bread and two girls with a basket of roses."

Folksinger Mimi Fariña set the poem to music in 1974; hear her singing "Bread and Roses" with her sister Joan Baez.  Fariña founded the nonprofit organization Bread and Roses that brings free live music to sick and imprisoned people. Dacus and her supergroup boygenius performed at a benefit concert for the organization in 2021, and Mamdani made a surprise appearance at her All Things Go festival in Queens in September. 


St. Elizabeth of Hungary: Miracle of the roses by 
Karl von Blaas, 1839.

The background of the motif "Bread and Roses" is thought to be the miracle of the roses in the legend of Elisabeth of Hungary, a saint closely related to charity and care for the poor. The legend tells the story of Elisabeth smuggling bread to the poor, against the will of her husband. When she was caught in the act, she had to uncover her basket - but only roses were found in it. The Castilian rose has become entwined with the legends of Our Lady of Guadalupe and Saint Thérèse of Lisieux, the "Little Flower."

The phrase can be traced back to Roman physician and philosopher Galen of Pergamon, who said something like, "If thou hast two loaves of bread, sell one and buy flowers, for bread is food for the body, but flowers are food for the mind." Edward Lane, in the notes of his 1838 translation of One Thousand and One Nights, states that, according to 15th-century writer Shems-ed-Deen Moḥammad en-Nowwájee, Galen said, "He who has two cakes of bread, let him dispose of one of them for some flowers of narcissus; for bread is the food of the body, and the narcissus is the food of the soul." [There is a long history of the use of narcissus (aka daffodil) to induce trance-like states and hallucinations. Sophocles referred to the narcissus as the "Chaplet of the infernal Gods."]

Dacus and Goldstone's beautiful performance today lead into a tape of Bob Dylan's "The Times They Are a Changing." Let's hope so, and work for that change.