Electronic cool - aid test as a literary work influenced by drug - influenced drugs and art influenced by Takin 'drugs are faced with unique challenges from their mainstream. Mature cultural judges tend to overlook drug-related arts and artists as if they are drugs. This kind of confrontation is not so intense, but it is also in us today, building the foundation in the 1960s. In Beatnik, hippies and psychedelic movements are increasingly attracting the public's attention, and the influence of drugs on culture will no longer be ignored by the mainstream.
In any case, artists influenced by drugs do not know the prejudice of drugs in mainstream society. The term "direct" is used by drug users to explain the general closure of mainstream culture to a very low degree. In the Electric Cool Aid Acid Test, Tom Wolf contains an excerpt from some of Ken Kesey's letters explaining the recognition of the general public of his career. "What is this," he said. "In this short period of time, can we give men a high commitment to such a low state, friends, just a very easy-to-use syllable: dope!" (5). Artists suffering from drugs like Casey do not doubt know what the mainstream society thinks about them, and in many cases try to change their ideas.
In 1970, Congress put LSD into a drug war. After 10 years of Timothy Leary, "Electric Kool - Aid Acid Test", and terrible homicide coverage, the federal government announced that these drugs have no medical use - and the possibility of abuse is high. The chairman of the New Jersey State drug research committee said the LSD is "the greatest threat faced by the country today." . . It is more dangerous than the Vietnam War. "But over the past decade some scientists are beginning to challenge this conclusion and they discovered that psychedelic agents are far from harmful and can help patients.LSD is more healthy You can also make it healthy.