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How Did Marijuana Become Illegal in the First Place?
#1
How Did Marijuana Become Illegal 
in the First Place?

DR. MALIK BURNETT AND 
AMANDA REIMAN, PHD, MSW


Dear Doctors,
“With so much information coming out about the medical value of marijuana, 
and that marijuana is not as dangerous as alcohol, why was it made illegal 
in the first place?”

Sincerely,
Looking for a history lesson



Dear Looking,
That is an excellent question. Now that many politicians and the public are taking a 
more objective look at marijuana, many are asking about the legal history of marijuana 
and how it ended up in the category of drugs deemed most dangerous by the 
federal government (Schedule I).

To understand how we ended up here, it is important to go back to what was happening 

in the United States in the early 1900’s just after the Mexican Revolution. At this time 
we saw an influx of immigration from Mexico into states like Texas and Louisiana. 
Not surprising, these new Americans brought with them their native language, culture 
and customs. One of these customs was the use of cannabis as a medicine and relaxant.


Mexican immigrants referred to this plant as “marihuana”. While Americans were very 
familiar with “cannabis” because it was present in almost all tinctures and medicines 
available at the time, the word “marihuana” was a foreign term. So, when the media 
began to play on the fears that the public had about these new citizens by falsely 
spreading claims about the “disruptive Mexicans” with their dangerous native 
behaviors including marihuana use, the rest of the nation did not know that this 
“marihuana” was a plant they already had in their medicine cabinets.

The demonization of the cannabis plant was an extension of the demonization of the 
Mexican immigrants. In an effort to control and keep tabs on these new citizens, 
El Paso, TX borrowed a play from San Francisco’s playbook, which had outlawed opium 
decades earlier in an effort to control Chinese immigrants. The idea was to have an 
excuse to search, detain and deport Mexican immigrants.

That excuse became marijuana.

This method of controlling people by controlling their customs was quite successful, 
so much so that it became a national strategy for keeping certain populations under the 
watch and control of the government.

During hearings on marijuana law in the 1930’s, claims were made about marijuana’s 

ability to cause men of color to become violent and solicit sex from white women. 
This imagery became the backdrop for the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 which 
effectively banned its use and sales.

While the Act was ruled unconstitutional years later, it was replaced with 
the Controlled Substances Act in the 1970’s which established Schedules for ranking 
substances according to their dangerousness and potential for addiction. Cannabis 
was placed in the most restrictive category, Schedule I, supposedly as a place holder 
while then President Nixon commissioned a report to give a final recommendation.

The Schafer Commission, as it was called, declared that marijuana should not be in 
Schedule I and even doubted its designation as an illicit substance. However, Nixon 
discounted the recommendations of the commission, and marijuana remains a 
Schedule I substance.

In 1996, California became the first state to approve the use of marijuana for medical 
purposes, ending its 59 year reign as an illicit substance with no medical value. Prior 
to 1937, cannabis had enjoyed a 5000 year history as a therapeutic agent across many 
cultures. In this context, its blip as an illicit and dangerous drug was dwarfed by its 
role as a medicine.

Opponents of medical marijuana regulations claim that there is not enough research to 
warrant medicinal use, but supporters of medical marijuana point to the 5000 years of 
history where cannabis was widely used as evidence for its medical efficacy.

Now that 23 states, plus Washington, DC, have passed medical marijuana laws, the 
public is questioning the utility of keeping marijuana under lock and key, especially in 
light of the racist and propagandized basis for making it illegal in the first place.

In just a few weeks, Florida, Oregon, Alaska and Washington DC voters will have the 
opportunity to put an additional nail in the coffin of prohibition by voting to legalize 
medical access in Florida and adult access in Oregon, Alaska and Washington DC. 
Changing the marijuana laws in these states and more to come is one of the first steps 
in dismantling the racially motivated war on drugs.

Sincerely,
The Doctors


Dr. Malik Burnett is a former surgeon and physician advocate. 
He also served as executive director of a medical marijuana 
nonprofit organization. Amanda Reiman, PhD, holds a doctorate 
in Social Welfare and teaches classes on drug policy at the 
University of California-Berkeley.

Semper Fidelis

[Image: SyAa0qj.png]

USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
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#2
What's crazy and confusing to me is even now that it is "legal" in most states and a billion dollar industry for the government it is still "against federal law."
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#3
(06-10-2020, 06:17 AM)Incogbenzo77 Wrote: What's crazy and confusing to me is even now that it is "legal" in most states and a billion dollar industry for the government it is still "against federal law."

I'm very happy that states' rights are allowed to override the federal government's scheduling of cannabis over the past 20 years. I know I said this in a previous thread, but I fully expect federal removal of cannabis from Schedule I in around 5 years, maybe 10. There are simply too many other countries making federal taxation money off of it that it would be impossible to ignore for much longer.

Any "federal raids" I've read about in the news is generally related to dispensaries not following state regulations, but the actual raids fall to federal police to handle. The vast majority of dispensaries are doing fine in the states with Medical or Legal cannabis.
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#4
There is no doubt that it is always a lobby against one thing or another that leads to the indirect banning of something else....smh it's too late now to stop the movement though
Smile  Smile  Angel  Big Grin Tongue NoOb Sig
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#5
All about the $$$...
Namaste  Smile
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#6
What Will Legal Cannabis Look Like in New York?




Pot enthusiasts, rejoice: New York has officially legalized the use of recreational marijuana.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed legislation Wednesday that made New York the latest state to legalize recreational weed, positioning it to quickly become one of the largest legal cannabis markets in the nation.


Continue reading the main story

The new law ends years of failed attempts to make marijuana legal in the state. It includes provisions to reinvest millions of dollars of tax revenue from selling cannabis into minority communities that were devastated by the war on drugs.

[New York legalizes recreational marijuana, tying move to racial equity.]

Here’s what you need to know:

What is now legal
Individuals are now allowed to possess up to three ounces of cannabis for recreational use, or 24 grams of concentrated forms of the drug, like oils.

New Yorkers are permitted to smoke marijuana wherever smoking tobacco is allowed, though localities and a new state agency could restrict where it can be smoked in public. It is still illegal to smoke weed in schools, workplaces or a car, and in New York City it will be banned in parks, beaches, boardwalks, pedestrian plazas and playgrounds, all places where tobacco smoking is forbidden.

What will eventually be legal
Over the coming months, more changes will go into effect.

People will eventually be able to use marijuana at “consumption sites,” have the drug delivered to their homes and cultivate up to six plants for personal use.



Dispensaries won’t open until more than a year from now, and localities could opt out of allowing them. (The New York Post reported Wednesday that several mayors on Long Island have already said that they planned to forbid the sale of marijuana in their communities.)

Why this took so long
The Democratic Party had made legalizing marijuana an annual priority since taking control of the Legislature in 2018, but the efforts fell apart each year, usually because of disagreements with Mr. Cuomo.

But this year the governor, dogged by calls to resign from members of his party following multiple sexual harassment allegations, made several concessions to push the bill over the line and secure a policy win.

“This is a historic day in New York, one that rights the wrongs of the past by putting an end to harsh prison sentences, embraces an industry that will grow the Empire State’s economy, and prioritizes marginalized communities so those that have suffered the most will be the first to reap the benefits,” Mr. Cuomo said in a statement.

From The Times
As Cuomo Sought $4 Million Book Deal, Aides Hid Damaging Death Toll

New York Will End Long-Term Solitary Confinement in Prisons and Jails

The Push to Vaccinate 20,000 Holocaust Survivors in New York

How N.Y.C.’s Population Expert Says the City Will Bounce Back

hxxps://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/01/nyregion/marijuana-legalization-new-york.html

Many of the areas are copping out of allowing the Gov's new ruling. He screws around with this every time. Then on the day he gets the bill, he changes it. This time, the man is desperate to avoid the scandal with the elders he killed. And the women I reckon.

Knowing NY courts to some degree, and others, I just know that this looks to be much better than it will be in real practice. You still cannot watch a Game Warden Show like northwoods law, that does not have the officers immediately ask: is that mmj i smell in that car? and i have read that they are all trained to ask those questions. Without proof. I have tremendous respect for LE. But i suspect some will do just fine under this new law. Others? For them, it will be mox nix. Of little moment I fear. If u r in the eyes of LE, for whatever reasons, they are gonna find a way to keep u and search all.

And, what about all of those convicted for small possessions or small sales from years past? The Courts are jammed now. Evictions are beginning here.

People are killing each other over renting an apartment or housing. Violence is everywhere. The homeless fill the streets for months now. Including our vets.

I just don't get the vibe that saying MMJ is now legal is gonna be a high point in anyone's day. Tad bit cynic knowing what i know of law and those whom dishonor it continuously.

But it is just cuz Cuomo killed our elders. And wants to keep his job.

Taxes will be big money. However about a year and a half to maybe three ago, cuz covid has messed up my sense of time,(need to relax for awhile and keep unpacking) and i cannot say exactly when, but CA and i believe colorado were hit big time by L E. The premises were legal and were destroyed. So technically legal, yet L E went in and decimated the places of business. Why? The business owners failed to follow the lessons they should of learned from Al Capone days. If the g v t wants to take you down, they hope u don't pay your taxes. Cuz the businesses were legal allegedly just not the way they were run by failure to pay taxes and I bet keep appropriate records. Most of the people running clinics in CA and colorado, the small places, probably use product and don't keep the best of records.

Pure speculation.
Angel  It is Well with My Soul  Angel
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