http://www.foxnews.com/health/2016/09/12/veteran-says-ecstasy-helped-him-combat-ptsd.html
>Some of the effects MDMA can have on a person include euphoria and a feeling of overwhelming
> love. Dr. Elizabeth Drew, a board-certified family physician who specializes in addiction medicine
>and is the medical director of Summit Behavior Health, told FoxNews.com that if a trained therapist
> can harness these emotions correctly, they can help the patient navigate through the trauma that
> causes their PTSD.
>James served in Afghanistan from March 2011 to March 2012
>“Working with a therapist that they feel close to and feels that they have concern about them, you
> can disconnect that fear and trauma from the actual event and you can process it and it looks like
> people are cured,” she said.
>James compared MDMA to a light in a dark cave when fighting PTSD.
>“It gives you euphoria and love. You can go into the darkness and not be afraid,” he said, referring
>to addressing the trauma of war. James said that the drug made it possible for him to confront the
>demons that were in the recesses of his brain. His relationships with his family and their dog
> evolved and improved.
If they're coming out of a fearful "everyone is the enemy" zone how is it wrong to treat
them for extreme ptsd to unwind them?
nothing? bump