Plus: JD Vance's sleight of hand with the right's agenda, new borders drawn up in the Alps, and more.
October 3, 2024 [View in browser]( [Oshan Jarow]( is a staff writer with Voxâs Future Perfect, where he focuses on the frontiers of political economy and consciousness studies, including psychedelics. [Oshan Jarow]( is a staff writer with Voxâs Future Perfect, where he focuses on the frontiers of political economy and consciousness studies, including psychedelics. Nitrous is back. Don't laugh. [an illustration shows one happy balloon above all the sad balloons]( Eoneren Good morning, my name is Oshan Jarow and Iâm a staff writer with [Future Perfect]( at Vox. Today, Iâm [looking at the history of nitrous oxide](, a gas most of us might know from the dentistâs office. Doctors use nitrous as a mild anesthetic, sending patients off into dissociative euphorias before pulling a tooth or yanking a dislocated finger straight again. As a pressurized gas, nitrous also powers [rockets](, race cars, and whipped cream dispensers. But inhaling nitrous can also be fun. It gives us a loopy, giddy sort of high that can last up to [five minutes](. Since itâs both legal and cheap, nitrous has been used as a recreational drug for centuries â yes, centuries. More recently, itâs been everywhere from [Grateful Dead]( concerts in the â60s to[raves]( in the â90s, under a variety of names: laughing gas, galaxy gas, hippy crack, whippets, even â[the atmosphere of heaven](.â Covid lockdowns set off [a new wave]( of recreational nitrous use. âPeople on Nitrous Gasâ has its own TikTok [discovery]( tab. Celebrities from [Kanye West]( to[SZA]( are raising awareness about its use. Even the social media influencers of â[MomTok](â are [raving]( about it. And as use rises [among some teenagers](, the risks of misusing or abusing nitrous are gaining more attention, and even raising questions of [prohibition](. As someone who covers the [science of consciousness](, I tend to write a lot about [mind-altering drugs](. They often challenge the line between medicine and recreation, and raise tough conversations about how to balance risks and benefits, and even what we value as a culture. All this talk of nitrous gave me a great excuse to dig up its exceptionally strange and interesting history. In the late 1700s, poets [flocked to nitrous]( as the source of an entirely new kind of pleasure. Through the 1800s, [public theaters filled]( with volunteers huffing nitrous onstage as a form of entertainment for the crowds. Celebrated [philosophers used the gas]( in Harvardâs chemistry laboratories, searching for new insights into the nature of the mind. The history of nitrous isnât just a good story. It can also help expand our conversations around the long-standing allure of nitrous, and what the future of recreational use can, or should, look like. To that end, here are a few things worth knowing about nitrous that I learned during my reporting. [Three cartridges of nitrous oxide. To be put in chatter holder of whipping siphon.] Annick Vanderschelden Photography As with all drugs, inhaling âthe atmosphere of heavenâ definitely has some risks One big risk is vitamin B12 deficiency. Nitrous[inactivates B12]( in the body, which coupled with long-term use can lead to[nerve damage]( across the brain and[spine](. Without restoring levels of B12, that can develop into paralysis or[brain damage](. Nitrous itself[doesnât have]( a known fatal dose, but deaths from use have been known to[occur](, usually from accidents that happen while high on nitrous or from [asphyxiation](. Across the UK, which has more detailed nitrous statistics, there were just 56 deaths[attributed]( to nitrous between 2001 and 2020, including both recreational and medical settings. (To put that in some perspective, there were nearly[10,000]( deaths in the UK attributed to alcohol in 2021 alone.) And while nitrous isnât considered physically addictive in the way that opioids are (you wonât show physical symptoms of withdrawal, for example), thereâs a [renewed]( [conversation]( about whether nitrous should still be considered an addictive substance. A cheap and legal form of dissociative pleasure basically on tap does pose some habit-forming risk. Nitrous traveled a roundabout road from pleasure to medicine A young lab assistant named Humphry Davy at a medical research facility called the Pneumatic Institute in Bristol was the first to safely synthesize nitrous. A chemist had [discovered]( it in 1772, but mistakenly dismissed it as toxic. After discovering that when properly made, nitrous oxide was perfectly breathable and fun, word got out. Nitrous became something of a[party fixture](. Some thought it could replace Champagne as a nightcap at dinner parties. Crowds began gathering at lecture halls and auditoriums to watch volunteers take nitrous onstage and flail about. During a show in 1844, the American dentist Horace Wells [witnessed]( a teenager on nitrous slam into a wooden bench. The boy, Wells noticed, seemed to feel no pain, which led him to wonder whether he could give the gas to clients to numb the pain of having a tooth pulled. After a series of self experiments and public demonstrations, nitrous made its way into dentistry. [Innovations]( in the delivery mechanism â namely, figuring out how to distribute it in liquid form that would fit in canisters â began to spread dental nitrous use across the country. [Clubgoers inhale nitrous oxide (also known as laughing gas) on the dance floor during the first annual Halloween party at Studio 54, New York, New York, October 31, 1977. ] Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images The future of recreational nitrous is uncertain A chemistry student in the 1930s [figured out]( that nitrous oxide worked really well for the preservation of cream, which led to the nitrous-filled whipped cream dispensers we see in grocery stores. These âwhippets,â however, have also helped make recreational nitrous use what it is today. The history of nitrous is a history of shifting cultural attitudes about [the value]( of chemically altered states of consciousness. Today is no different. With psychedelic drugs like LSD or psilocybin mushrooms, advocates are [pushing for wider accessibility](. Nitrous is already accessible, and panic over the risks is pushing policy in the other direction, as with the UKâs recreational nitrous [ban]( last year. But nitrous offers us an opportunity today. Since it has relatively few risks[when used responsibly and occasionally](, we could focus on [public education]( that promotes [responsible]( forms of use. Building the institutions and know-how to get that process right wonât only help mitigate the tragedies that result from nitrous abuse. It would help build the necessary infrastructure to support rising legal access to other mind-altering drugs, too. Through the centuries, people have found everything from God to the true meaning of the enigmatic philosophy of Hegel while on nitrous. Iâm not saying nitrous actually reveals God, or the correct interpretation of Hegelâs notoriously dense work. But clearly, thereâs more at play here than a numbing agent for tooth-pulling and whipped cream dispensing. Public education that helps to safely explore those wider, stranger potentials of nitrous would make a great next chapter for this curious substance that has long straddled the line between medicine and recreation. [Listen]( Mr. Veep Vox's Andrew Prokop says the vice-presidential debate between Tim Walz and JD Vance was about policy, but in a weird way. Professor and pollster Dan Cassino explains how these two men represent the future of American masculinity. [Listen now](
[Smoke after an Israeli airstrike targeted the village of Khiam in southern Lebanon on September 30, 2024.] Rabih Daher/AFP via Getty Images Israel has invaded Lebanon. Hereâs what could come next: Israel has begun what it is calling a âlimitedâ military invasion of Lebanon. More than 1,000 Lebanese people have been killed and 6,000 have been wounded, and as many as a million people have been displaced. [Hereâs what we know about the dangerous new phase in the long conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.]( The dock workersâ strike, explained: 45,000 dock workers have walked off the job on the East and Gulf Coasts, affecting ports that handle 50 percent of the imports and exports to the US. Itâs unclear how long the strike might last, but [hereâs what we know about the strike and the industries that might be affected by the work stoppage.]( How Vance made the right-wing agenda sound moderate: At the vice presidential debate Tuesday night, former President Donald Trumpâs running mate JD Vance represented his ticket as one interested in common-sense conservatism that wants to protect liberal democracy. However, [he downplayed the true radicalism of Trumpâs agenda by conveying a false impression of their positions]( â making his most radical ideas seem palatable. Speaking of false facts: X owner Elon Musk has been elevating false right-wing talking points about immigration, claiming that Democrats have fast-tracked citizenship applications to rig elections. Former President Donald Trump has also been perpetuating this idea in his own rhetoric. These lies could have extreme consequences, [sowing serious doubt about the legitimacy of the election results come November.]( How Helene put the worldâs chip supply at risk: The high-silicon, low-contaminant nature of quartz in Spruce Pine, found in a series of mines in the Appalachian Mountains, makes it integral to advanced microchip manufacturing. However,[the mines are now closed indefinitely]( due to the effects of Hurricane Helene, which dumped 2 feet of water on Spruce Pine and devastated the area. And elsewhere ... Breast cancer on the rise: While the vast majority of breast cancer cases and deaths still occur among older women, a new study from the American Cancer Society found that rates of breast cancer rose by 1 percent a year from 2012 to 2021, and even more sharply among women under the age of 50. [[The New York Times](] Setting new boundaries: Due to the effects of climate change, Switzerland and Italy are redrawing their borders near the Alps. Clarifying the borders will help both countries determine who is responsible for upkeep in specific natural areas as glaciers continue to melt over time. [[BBC](] [The Col du Midi, part of the accumulation zone that contributes ice to the Mer de Glace, Europe's fourth biggest glacier.] Sean Gallup/Getty Images 1.5 million That's the number of people who die annually from cardiovascular diseases caused by lead poisoning, imposing a global cost of about $6 trillion a year. A study found that about half of children in poor countries are exposed to very high levels of lead, but despite that, charities and nongovernmental organizations are generally spending less than two cents per child poisoned by lead to solve the problem. To combat the crisis, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and UNICEF launched the Partnership for a Lead-Free Future initiative. [Hereâs how this endeavor could shift this neglected issue to the forefront of the global health conversation.]( [A worker removes lead slag with a scoop, without any safety protection, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, in 2013] Jonathan Raa / NurPhoto/Corbis via Getty Images Are you enjoying the Today, Explained newsletter? Forward it to a friend; they can [sign up for it right here](.
And as always, we want to know what you think. Specifically: If there is a topic you want us to explain or a story youâre curious to learn more about, let us know [by filling out this form]( or just replying to this email. Todayâs edition was produced and edited by senior editor Lavanya Ramanathan, with contributions from staff editor Melinda Fakuade. We'll see you tomorrow! [Become a Vox Member]( Support our journalism â become a Vox Member and youâll get exclusive access to the newsroom with members-only perks including newsletters, bonus podcasts and videos, and more. [Join our community]( Ad [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( [Instagram]( [TikTok]( [WhatsApp]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. Manage your [email preferences]( [unsubscribe](param=sentences). If you value Voxâs unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Notice]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1701 Rhode Island. NW, Washington, DC 20036.
Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.