Friday, February 12, 2016

Why Is Marijuana Banned? The Real Reasons Are Worse Than You Think

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/the-influence/real-reasons-marijuana-is-banned_b_9210248.html?



In 1929, a man called Harry Anslinger was put in charge of the Department of Prohibition in Washington, D.C. But alcohol prohibition had been a disaster. Gangsters had taken over whole neighborhoods. Alcohol -- controlled by criminals -- had become even more poisonous.

So alcohol prohibition finally ended -- and Harry Anslinger was afraid. He found himself in charge of a huge government department, with nothing for it to do. Up until then, he had said that cannabis was not a problem. It doesn't harm people, he explained, and "there is no more absurd fallacy" than the idea it makes people violent.

harry anslinger
Harry J. Anslinger, commissioner of the Treasury Department's Federal Bureau of Narcotics, poses for a photo on September 24, 1930.
In 1929, a man called Harry Anslinger was put in charge of the Department of Prohibition in Washington, D.C. But alcohol prohibition had been a disaster. Gangsters had taken over whole neighborhoods. Alcohol -- controlled by criminals -- had become even more poisonous.
So alcohol prohibition finally ended -- and Harry Anslinger was afraid. He found himself in charge of a huge government department, with nothing for it to do. Up until then, he had said that cannabis was not a problem. It doesn't harm people, he explained, and "there is no more absurd fallacy" than the idea it makes people violent.
But then -- suddenly, when his department needed a new purpose -- he announced he had changed his mind.
He explained to the public what would happen if you smoked cannabis.
First, you will fall into "a delirious rage." Then you will be gripped by "dreams... of an erotic character." Then you will "lose the power of connected thought." Finally, you will reach the inevitable end-point: "Insanity."
Marijuana turns man into a "wild beast." If marijuana bumped into Frankenstein's monster on the stairs, Anslinger warned, the monster would drop dead of fright.
Harry Anslinger became obsessed with one case in particular. In Florida, a boy called Victor Licata hacked his family to death with an axe. Anslinger explained to America: This is what will happen when you smoke "the demon weed." The case became notorious. The parents of the U.S. were terrified.
What evidence did Harry Anslinger have? It turns out at this time he wrote to the 30 leading scientists on this subject, asking if cannabis was dangerous, and if there should be a ban.
Twenty-nine wrote back and said no.
Anslinger picked out the one scientist who said yes, and presented him to the world. The press -- obsessed with Victor Licata's axe -- cheered them on.
In a panic that gripped America, marijuana was banned. The U.S. told other countries they had to do the same. Many countries said it was a dumb idea, and refused to do it. For example, Mexico decided their drug policy should be run by doctors. Their medical advice was that cannabis didn't cause these problems, and they refused to ban it. The U.S. was furious. Anslinger ordered them to fall into line. 
The Mexicans held out -- until, in the end, the U.S. cut off the supply of all legal painkillers to Mexico. People started to die in agony in their hospitals. So with regret, Mexico sacked the doctor -- and launched its own drug war.
"The scientific evidence suggests cannabis is safer than alcohol. Alcohol kills 40,000 people every year in the U.S. Cannabis kills nobody."
But at home, questions were being asked. A leading American doctor called Michael Ball wrote to Harry Anslinger, puzzled. He explained he had used cannabis as a medical student, and it had only made him sleepy. Maybe cannabis does drive a small number of people crazy, he said -- but we need to fund some scientific studies to find out.
Anslinger wrote back firmly. "The marihuana evil can no longer be temporized with," he explained, and he would fund no independent science. Then, or ever.
For years, doctors kept approaching him with evidence he was wrong, and he began to snap, telling them they were "treading on dangerous ground" and should watch their mouths.
Today, most of the world is still living with the ban on cannabis that Harry Anslinger introduced, in the nation-wide panic that followed Victor Licata's killing spree.
But here's the catch. Years later, somebody went and looked at the psychiatric files for Victor Licata.
It turns out there's no evidence he ever used cannabis.
this is the kinda thing that happens when we choose the wrong people to gov't.  now we have a party that rails against gov't they hate yet they lie, steal, mislead and misinform to get in the drivers seat of that same hated gov't.  they say they want to take it back good trick when they never relinquished it.  the hate and bigotry and racism of old is still here never left it guides their agenda.

so i guess with the changes that were happening before Pres. and those since and the ones on the way they feel it was lost, note they never say it was taken or that they lost it just take it back sometimes omission says more than the stated word.  the big one is coming the one that relegates them to the permanent minority guess they are afraid we will do tro them what they have been doing to us.  paranoia is a frightening thing and the atrocities and extremes we see them doing now is proof of that.

this is where gov't fails us in the wrong hands they pick one guy to bear the brunt of the idiot who denies and decries with lies and we the people don't realize and in up victimized like so many Black people in jail because of i guess we can say this propaganda of 86 years ago, just goes to show the decisions of today can easily effect your great great great grandchildren  not sure if that's too many or not enough greats +o)