RiverStyx - Funding the Access and Preservation of Sacred Plant Medicines
Psychedelics Today
Psychedelics Today, LLC
4.6 β’ 598 Ratings
ποΈ 22 October 2019
β±οΈ 65 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
In this episode, Joe interviews Cody Swift from the Riverstyx Foundation. In the show, they talk about Peyote and the troubles for Native Americans and their church not having access and preservation of Peyote.
3 Key Points:
- RiverStyx is a small family foundation that funds projects that demonstrate the potential for healing and beauty. RiverStyx has funded the preservation of land to protect the sacred Peyote plant.
- The Portugal Model shows that decriminalization works. Portugal faced unprecedented overdoses and drug abuse, typically with heroine, and when they turned to decriminalization and treatment, overdoses and incarceration dropped significantly to almost none.
- The Native American churches have held onto their ceremonial practices very tightly, and they struggle to find legal and sustainable access to Peyote, their sacred plant medicine.
Support the show
- Patreon
- Leave us a review on iTunes
- Share us with your friends β favorite podcast, etc
- Join our Facebook group - Psychedelics Today group β Find the others and create community.
Navigating Psychedelics
Show Notes
About Cody and RiverStyx Foundation
- RiverStyx is a small family foundation
- Cody's grandfather was the CEO of UPS, and before his grandmother passed, she put a large share of the stock into a small family foundation
- Cody and his father took their quarter of the Foundation and created RiverStyx
- "How do you use a million and a half dollars a year for remarkable good?" - Cody
- He fell into philanthropy along with the burden/blessing of making decisions to change the world with a lot of money
- He started LEAD (Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion)
- It is a program that aims to help those struggling with addiction rather than punishing them with prison time
The Portugal Model
- In the early 2000's, Eric Schlosser's book, Reefer Madness Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market eluded to Portugal having decriminalized all drugs
- Portugal faced unprecedented overdoses and drug abuse, typically with heroine
- They realized that they couldn't arrest their country out of the drug addiction problem, so they turned to decriminalization and treatment
- They de-stigmatized treatment and drug users didn't have to feel ashamed and use drugs in the shadows
- This lowered HIV rates to almost nothing
- It was highly successful
- "Not everyone needs drugs, but not everyone should be at risk to go to jail if they get caught with them." - Joe
- Joe encourages psychedelically inclined folks to look deeper into harm reduction and drug decriminalization
- "Let's provide these people safe access to a clean supply where they can stabilize again" - Cody
- Joe mentions a book by Jeremy Narby, Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge, Cosmic Serpent: DNA and the Origins of Knowledge
- The drug war is causing danger to the plants
- Cody says, if cane syrup was made illegal because it is killing people, we wouldn't ban the growth of corn, because it is sacred and used for so many other things
- "Jail is one of the biggest problems for mushroom users" - Joe
- Joe mentions that he was a little frustrated that Michael Pollan was able to take mushrooms and not go to jail, but the average person could go to jail
- Cody says that he highly respects Michael Pollan and what he has done for the psychedelic revolution, and that he thinks that Pollan wouldn't want anyone to go to jail for this
- People like Michael Pollan and Tim Ferriss have done a tremendous job securing funding for Psychedelic Research
Peyote
- Native American people had always been close to Cody's heart
- As a philanthropist, he didn't know where to begin
- There is a myriad of problems facing Native American communities
- About 5 years ago, it just came into consciousness
- He got connected to Sandor of the Native American church
- He learned about ceremony and it became absolutely clear that he had to be a part of it
- It was an unclear path on how to support the community in the beginning, there was no 501C-3, there were no other philanthropists, the community is so large
- "How to support them in the continuance and empowerment of their using of a highly potent and healing substance to treat communities that have suffered so much, that was the key question" - Cody
- Looking at the threat and endangerment of the Peyote plant was the most important part of securing the preservation of this sacred plant
- Synthetic Mescaline is difficult to access and expensive
Ceremony
- It's hard to track the ancient original threats to the traditions
- The Native American churches have held onto the ceremonial practices very tightly
- It's important that white people don't just come in and tweak the ceremony
- The average life expectancy for Native Americans is only in their 50s
- They have gone through so much suffering, and they are very awake, sensitive people that are holding this culture and practice close to them
- Alcoholism is one of the largest problems in Native American communities, and Peyote has shown to be a highly tangible benefit and cure for alcoholism
Preservation
- It has taken over 4 years to begin building these alliances
- Riverstyx and Bronners have been the only sources of funding, they need more
- Through this, they purchased 605 acres of land for peyote preservation in Texas
- 600 acres may not solve the Peyote crisis, but it is a start and has opened the doors to connect with other farmers that has now led to 12,000 acres dedicated to peyote preservation
- This is to return sovereignty and control to the Native
- After the land was purchased, they had a pilgrimage with the Navajo
- Peyote is God to them, it's their connection to the spiritual realm
- Native Americans have resisted acculturation and stuck to their ways, that is their strength
Links
Email: cody@riverstyxfoundation.org
About RiverStyx

RiverStyx Foundation attempts to lessen human suffering caused by misguided social policy and stigma, while advocating enhanced opportunities for healing, growth, and transformation in such areas as drug policy, criminal justice, and end-of-life care. The Riverstyx Foundation believes in the human potential for healing, growth, and transformation. The Riverstyx Foundation works to provide a bridge to the relinquished parts of ourselves, our society, and our ecology, to ease those fears and prejudices by funding projects that demonstrate the potential for healing and beauty, when life is embraced in its fullest expression.
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | Hello everybody. Welcome back to psychedelics today. This is Joe Moore coming at you from |
| 0:16.0 | Breckenridge, Colorado. Today in the show we have an amazing guest, Cody from the River Sticks Foundation. |
| 0:23.1 | The River Sticks Foundation has been donating a whole bunch of money strategically in the |
| 0:29.7 | psychedelic world for a while now. And some of you might recall the name. Some of you probably |
| 0:35.6 | is the first time you're hearing about it but I've been aware of |
| 0:39.1 | them for a while and finally we were able to link up and have an amazing conversation |
| 0:45.5 | Cody is living in California and has a as a cool backstory and we got to talk about some |
| 0:54.0 | really fun stuff and some sensitive stuff as |
| 0:57.4 | well. So on this show, you know, trigger warning, I guess, we talk about peyote and Native American |
| 1:06.0 | groups access to peyote and how troubling that that situation is for the native american church given that |
| 1:13.3 | um their sacrament is still illegal to grow for the most part i'm sure there's a couple exceptions |
| 1:20.9 | but there's no um great federal protection for growing it currently for the Native American church. |
| 1:28.8 | So that's something that's pretty tragic and hopefully can be sorted out. |
| 1:33.4 | And the River Sticks Foundation is working with some NAC groups and hopefully moving that forward. |
| 1:40.2 | And we get into that more in detail in the show. |
| 1:42.7 | It's a pretty fun show. |
| 1:44.8 | I hope you enjoy it. |
| 1:46.0 | Go all over the map to a degree. |
| 1:48.8 | And hope you like it. |
| 1:51.2 | So if you like it, let us know. |
| 1:53.3 | Hit us up at psychedelics today email at gmail.com or leave us a review on Facebook or iTunes. |
| 1:59.9 | If you're wondering how to do it on your iPhone, |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Psychedelics Today, LLC, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Psychedelics Today, LLC and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright Β© Tapesearch 2026.





