Crime Columbia professor, 54, says he is a PROUD heroin user and claims can be 'as rational as alcohol use' and helps him maintain his 'work-life balance'

Columbia professor, 54, says he is a PROUD heroin user and claims can be 'as rational as alcohol use' and helps him maintain his 'work-life balance'​

By Adam Schrader For Dailymail.Com 18:32 EST 19 Feb 2021 , updated 06:24 EST 20 Feb 2021
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  • Carl Hart, 54, studies the effects of psychoactive drugs on humans
  • He has detailed his drug use in a new book titled 'Drug Use for Grown-ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear'
  • Hart, who is currently on a sabbatical until July, is the chair of the prestigious university's psych department
  • He hopes that coming clean about his drug use will help lead to the decriminalization of illegal drugs
  • Hart says he first tried heroin six or seven years ago when he was already a tenured professor in his late 40s
A Columbia University professor of psychology and neuroscience says he snorts heroin and takes other drugs to feel 'refreshed' and 'prepared to face another day.'

Carl Hart, 54, studies the effects of recreational psychoactive drugs on humans and is the chair of the prestigious university's psych department.

Hart, a neuroscience Ph.D. who is on a sabbatical until July, details his drug use in his new book 'Drug Use for Grown-ups: Chasing Liberty in the Land of Fear.'

In his book, he says he has particular attachment to heroin scholastically and as a substance for personal use.

'There aren't many things in life that I enjoy more than a few lines by the fireplace at the end of the day,' he writes.

He says the use of heroin can be 'as rational as my alcohol use. Like vacation, sex and the arts, heroin is one of the tools that I use to maintain my work-life balance.

Carl Hart, left, studies the effects of recreational psychoactive drugs on humans

Carl Hart, left, studies the effects of recreational psychoactive drugs on humans
Hart is the chair of the prestigious university's psych department

Hart is the chair of the prestigious university's psych department
Hart has admitted to using heroin in a new book, pictured, titled 'Drug Use For Grown Ups'

Hart has admitted to using heroin in a new book, pictured, titled 'Drug Use For Grown Ups'
In the book, Hart claims he has snorted small amounts of heroin for as many as 10 days in a row and enjoys it even when he experiences mild withdrawal symptoms '12 to 16 hours after the last dose.'

Hart hopes that coming clean about his drug use will help lead to the decriminalization of illegal drugs.

'He draws on decades of research and his own personal experience to argue definitively that the criminalization and demonization of drug use - not drugs themselves - have been a tremendous scourge on America, not least in reinforcing this country's enduring structural racism,' according to publisher notes.

The professor argues that 'when used responsibly, drugs can enrich and enhance our lives,' according to the publisher.

Hart told Insider that he wants President Joe Biden to federally decriminalize drug possession and hopes the country moves toward the federal regulation and licensing of the use of substances.

'You could have a massive public-service-announcement campaign that says "If you're going to use opioids, don't use alcohol as a background or other sedatives in combination, because it increases the likelihood of respiratory depression and death",' Hart said, according to the outlet.

Earlier this week, Biden promised to end jail time for drug offenses while urging against defunding police in a town hall in Milwaukee.

'Nobody should go to jail for a drug offense. No one should go to jail for the use of a drug. They should go to drug rehabilitation,' Biden said.

Hart argues that many of the fears surrounding drug use began as a direct result of racism.

He told GQ in an interview: 'We don't think of these drugs in rational terms. We think of these particular drugs as producing unique effects and it's just not true. But when you do that, when you think of these drugs as producing these unique effects, the response is not rational. When we think about when these drugs were banned, we can see this even more clearly.

'When we think about cocaine, for example, we banned it for irrational reasons, for reasons of American racism. Same thing with opioids. We paired these drugs with the behavior of groups we didn't like, and behavior that we exaggerated, like crime, like Black men being with white women.

'So the drugs became more about these other issues that were sadly exaggerated. And so we're still doing that today.'

Hart says he first tried heroin six or seven years ago when he was already a tenured professor in his late 40s.

He says he did a 'short, thin line' with a friend and felt 'a dreamy light sedation, free of stress,' adding that the two talked and laughed, 'called it an evening, and went home.'

Hart, who is married and has three children, told Insider that his family supports his recreational heroin use.

'The most important thing we have emphasized as parents is: Just try and live like the person that you think you are — a moral, compassionate, global citizen,' he told the outlet.

'My family would expect me to stand up on behalf of the people who have been castigated [for using drugs].'

Most drug-related overdose deaths in the United States come from illicitly manufactured fentanyl and other street drugs, which often cut with other chemicals like antihistamines.

Hart, center, hopes that coming clean about his drug use will help lead to the decriminalization of illegal drugs

Hart, center, hopes that coming clean about his drug use will help lead to the decriminalization of illegal drugs
Hart, a professor at Columbia University, pictured, is on a sabbatical until July 2021

Hart, a professor at Columbia University, pictured, is on a sabbatical until July 2021
Hart believes that many drug overdose deaths could be eliminated with a cleaner supply and better education, Insider reported.

'Our founding document guarantees us at least three birthrights: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,' he told the outlet.

'Those ideals are profound. It means that you can live your life as you choose. And it's nobody's business, as long as you do not interfere with anybody else doing the same.'

Hart said he hopes a system can be created where people submit samples of drugs they have purchased that can be tested to reveal what they contain.

He writes in his book: 'Here’s the bottom line: over my more than twenty-five-year career, I have discovered that most drug-use scenarios cause little or no harm and that some responsible drug-use scenarios are actually beneficial for human health and functioning.'

The professor also admitted he has taken other drugs, including meth, and has rolled on MDMA - which is often referred to by its street names like Molly and ecstasy.

Hart described taking MDMA as an 'intense feelings of pleasure, gratitude and energy.'

'When I’m rolling, I just want to breathe deeply and enjoy it. The simple act of breathing can be extremely pleasurable,' he said.

He even found pleasure in snorting a version of so-called bath salts, a synthetic cathinone that’s been linked to disturbing behavior from barking to breaking into homes. Hart’s assessment: “unequivocally wonderful.”

In his book, Hart recounts taking a version of 'bath salts' which he called 'unequivocally wonderful.'

Hart, however, appears frustrated about current trends of micro-dosing psychedelics - claiming in his book that they are perceived as a special class of drugs and not simply the chemicals of choice for white, recreational drug users.

The professor and his son, Malakai, have often taken public stances on racial inequality.

In 2019, The Riverdale Press in the Bronx revealed that Malakai Hart and his family had filed a lawsuit alleging a student at the Ethical Culture Fieldston School had called him a derogatory racial slur in a video that circulated the school.

Malakai claimed that four years before the video was made, the same student said Eric Garner 'deserved to die' at the hands of NYPD officer Daniel Pantaleo for his alleged crime of selling untaxed cigarettes.

The Hart family hired the Cochran Firm to sue Fieldston, accusing the prestigious school of systematic racial discrimination against black students and their families.

Last June, the father-and-son duopenned an op-ed titled 'When Justice for Black People Begins, the Looting Will Stop.'

In the article, the Harts wrote that the 'repulsive killings' of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd 'have forced many individuals and institutions to self-examine their roles in perpetuating centuries of anti-Black racism.'

Floyd, who died on May 25, was killed by former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, whose trial is expected to start on March 8.

'Undoubtedly, in the months leading up to the trial, we can expect Mr. Chauvin’s supporters to deflect blame from his brutal act onto the drugs found in Mr. Floyd’s body at the time of his death,' wrote Carl and Malakai, who is now a student at Columbia.

The Harts noted that Floyd’s toxicology report revealed that, in his system, he had 19 nanograms per milliliter of methamphetamine and 2.9 nanograms per milliliter of tetrahydrocannabinol, the drug present in marijuana.

'These amounts are negligibly small and suggests he hadn’t used drugs in at least several hours, maybe 24 hours, and could not have contributed to his death,' the article reads.

Dr. Hart's son Malakai Z. Hart, pictured, previously filed a lawsuit against his high school alleging racial discrimination

Dr. Hart's son Malakai Z. Hart, pictured, previously filed a lawsuit against his high school alleging racial discrimination
'He also had 11 nanograms of fentanyl in his system. But that number alone can’t tell us anything about Mr. Floyd’s level of intoxication before his death, because the concentration of fentanyl in the blood increases significantly after a person dies.'

The Harts argued that Floyd's behavior immediately before his death should be used a baromoter of his impartment because 'the same dose of fentanyl that produces blissfulness in a tolerant user can lead to an overdose in a naïve user.'

'But, if history is any indication, this information won’t stop Chauvin’s supporters from touting the “drug-crazed negro” defense,' the Harts wrote.

'The mere suggestion that Mr. Floyd’s drug use contributed to his death is a tried-and-true ruse used to create sufficient reasonable doubt, so that authorities and juries can find white police not culpable in the killing of Black people.'

Hart's new book has received high-praise with reviewers calling it a 'must-read.'

'When it comes to the legacy of this country’s war on drugs, we should all share his outrage,' according to The New York Times Book Review.

The Wall Street Journal called it 'provocative and enlightening' while a Kirkus Reviews hailed it as a 'valuable tool for mounting arguments in defense of free choice.'
 
Heard this guy on Joe Rogans podcast. There are some truths to what he says (like most people who try heroin do not go on to be heroin addicts) but I think he is a moron and being dangerously irresponsible for promoting casual hard drug use.

Also, just because doc first used heroin 7 years ago and hasn't had any issues yet doesn't mean he won't later. Let's see how he's doing in 20 years.
 
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Heard this guy on Joe Rogans podcast. There are some truths to what he says (like most people who have try heroin do not go on to be heroin addicts) but I think he is a moron and being dangerously irresponsible for promoting casual hard drug use.

Also, just because doc first used heroin 7 years ago and hasn't had any issues yet doesn't mean you won't later. Let's see how he's doing in 20 years.
Just a bit of bad luck or hard times will send him careening off a cliff into total destruction. Opiate abusers can be stable as long as everything around them is stable, but they shatter when struck.
 
Heroin doesn't make people violent. Nobody is doing heroin and then beating their kids.
Not while they are on heroin, but if they don't have any when they need it -- that's a different story. That's the real problem with addiction. As long as you've got a steady supply of it, you can probably stay somewhat functional. The moment you run out of money (your habit gets out of control or you lose your job in a pandemic), you're going to be selling everything you own, stealing, and sucking dick to get enough money to buy your next fix.

PL, but I've got a relative who is a recovering heroin addict (though he just had a relapse during the pandemic and almost died because he got a bad batch of it, according the doctors who saw a lot of people coming in the ER because of it). When he is off the stuff, he replaces it with alcohol. So, while being an alcoholic is also terrible, I can tell you that the family would much rather him be an alcoholic than a heroin junkie. He doesn't steal stuff from everyone to get booze. He didn't get Hep C from a vodka bottle. He's killing himself, slowly, but at least he's not overdosing and almost dying when he's drinking (though, yes, alcohol poisoning is a thing -- he's never had a close call with alcohol). Anyone who says that it is no worse than alcohol is a fucking liar.

Also, I'm not sending my kid to a college where the professor is the one encouraging them to do drugs. WTF. Is he trying to be the black Timothy Leary? Though, Leary was against mind numbing drugs, if I recall correctly.
 
Just a bit of bad luck or hard times will send him careening off a cliff into total destruction. Opiate abusers can be stable as long as everything around them is stable, but they shatter when struck.
This. You can, technically, in theory, live a long healthy life doing heroin, as long as you never escalate and never need to stop. Bit of constipation, at most. The problem is that the number of people who can use it like that is so low as to be almost zero. One little bump in the road gets you needing more. One tainted batch will be capable of offing you. If you start using needles you end up with hepatitis. Having your supply cut off will do very bad things to you. Opiates are extremely addictive, and create tolerance fast. That theoretical long term stable use situation is purely theoretical.
I would be very interested in his background. I’d put money on addiction in the past amd I’d put money on a downward spiral in the future.
Other than that, pretty much every larger employer has an alcohol and rug policy and turning up under the influence of anything is enough to get you fired.
 
The way that regular heroin use completely rewrites your pleasure and reward centers is permanent and terrifying. Anyone who thinks that heroin dependency is just an alternative lifestyle choice is not rationally thinking. The heroin is thinking that for them and to that extent they are functionally insane.
 
The way that regular heroin use completely rewrites your pleasure and reward centers is permanent and terrifying. Anyone who thinks that heroin dependency is just an alternative lifestyle choice is not rationally thinking. The heroin is thinking that for them and to that extent they are functionally insane.
Black science man addicted to heroin says it's cool to give him more heroin.

This is literally no different to a smoker saying 'I can quit any time I want'.
 
Where you lost me: "Hart, however, appears frustrated about current trends of micro-dosing psychedelics - claiming in his book that they are perceived as a special class of drugs and not simply the chemicals of choice for white, recreational drug users."

This guy doesn't know what he's talking about. Given his conduct and racism I honestly believe, due to the nature of his post at that university, he should be removed. It is irresponsible to let this man continue in the faculty. He is a danger to the public. I wouldn't call psychedelics a 'special class' of drugs, but I would call it distinct and that distinction is there for more of a reason then race. If he doesn't know that he's too ignorant to be commenting on the subject at hand.
 
Heard this guy on Joe Rogans podcast. There are some truths to what he says (like most people who try heroin do not go on to be heroin addicts) but I think he is a moron and being dangerously irresponsible for promoting casual hard drug use.

Also, just because doc first used heroin 7 years ago and hasn't had any issues yet doesn't mean he won't later. Let's see how he's doing in 20 years.
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Anyways, the guy is probably still on meth and will probably be bankrupt on about a decade or so.

In that time he will probably have embezzled from the University multiple times, gotten caught, get a slap on the wrist, and finally fired when it goes too far.

Around that time he might become a sex worker and bring HIV into his house which will cause his family to leave him. About 15 years from now he will die of pneumocystis pneumonia brought on by HIV and exacerbated by drug use. His death will get a short blurb but no real mention of why he died.
 
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This is not actually the first time someone has made this arguement. There's a man out there named David Poses who wrote an autobiography called Heroin Story. In it he chronicles his struggle with addiction, quitting heroin, and eventually why he chose to get back on heroin and continue using it. At the time of the book's writing he maintains a job that makes him a fair amount of money and generally doesn't live live like a junkie.

Perhaps most disturbing about his book is how often he repeats the phrase "Heroin is a painkiller; it kills the pain." as the reason for why he takes heroin. The book goes into exstensive detail about his miserable early life and childhood and generally paints a picture of a man so chronically depressed that only hardcore painkillers can make him functional. This point of view isn't just his own narcissistic justification for his abuse either; studies support that an easy majority of heroin users already have something wrong with them from the start that drives their eventual descent into addiction.

Personally I think the point of view these people represent has extremely disturbing implications about society, and in general the human race's inability to deal with mental illness. People are inclined to dismiss them as lunatics, but if they were to be correct it would essentially invalidate everything people know about addiction and expose the human race as hopelessly dependent on the chemicals their bodies manufacture. It would also pretty neatly do away with the concept of free will in short order, since theoretically the right amount of chemicals added to or removed from the nervous system could make a person do or say anything. We're probably fucked if people as mainstream as university professors are already talking about it.
 
I mean, nearly all college professors are on something. Often depends on their subject.
STEM professors are all on amphetamines and cocaine.
Anthropology professors are all hard drinkers and experiment with mushrooms and herbs.
Medical professors are all on oxy.
Liberal arts profs cars all smell like weed and underage sex.

At least this guy can admit it.
 
If I had gotten a bad grade in his class, I would complain to the department that this dipshit was getting fucked up every evening instead of working on class materials.

Tenure isn't bulletproof.
 
Heroin doesn't make people violent. Nobody is doing heroin and then beating their kids.

Except heroin is a lot more fatal and a lot easier to get addicted to than booze. You can get chemically addicted to alcohol and OD on it, but it takes a lot more effort to pull that off. Most of the people who die of alcohol poisoning tend to be lifelong severe alcoholics or first=timers who drink a truly Herculean amount in one night.

I've met plenty of people who only drink socially or at the very most will tie one on and get buzzed during a very slow summer weekend.

I've never met anyone who did heroin recreationally that wasn't a total sleeper or quickly on their way to becoming one.

Not while they are on heroin, but if they don't have any when they need it -- that's a different story. That's the real problem with addiction. As long as you've got a steady supply of it, you can probably stay somewhat functional. The moment you run out of money (your habit gets out of control or you lose your job in a pandemic), you're going to be selling everything you own, stealing, and sucking dick to get enough money to buy your next fix.

PL, but I've got a relative who is a recovering heroin addict (though he just had a relapse during the pandemic and almost died because he got a bad batch of it, according the doctors who saw a lot of people coming in the ER because of it). When he is off the stuff, he replaces it with alcohol. So, while being an alcoholic is also terrible, I can tell you that the family would much rather him be an alcoholic than a heroin junkie. He doesn't steal stuff from everyone to get booze. He didn't get Hep C from a vodka bottle. He's killing himself, slowly, but at least he's not overdosing and almost dying when he's drinking (though, yes, alcohol poisoning is a thing -- he's never had a close call with alcohol). Anyone who says that it is no worse than alcohol is a fucking liar.

Also, I'm not sending my kid to a college where the professor is the one encouraging them to do drugs. WTF. Is he trying to be the black Timothy Leary? Though, Leary was against mind numbing drugs, if I recall correctly.

Timothy Leary began advocating LSD because he thought it had therapeutic uses, at least at first. Later on, he became a full-on acid tripping hippie.

IIRC, LSD was initially developed for psychiatric purposes back in the 1930's but it eventually proved to be medically worthless.
 
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