The Disturbing Reason Marijuana Was Made Illegal - YouTube

Channel: Grunge

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United States is finally turning a corner.
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More and more states have legalized marijuana, and even the federal government is beginning
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to take steps toward legalization.
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But why was marijuana banned in the first place?
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In 2012, the states of Colorado and Washington became the first in the United States to legalize
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recreational marijuana, a move that started a trend that has gained momentum throughout
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the country.
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As of February 2022, 18 states, along with Washington D.C. and Guam, have legalized recreational
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use of the drug.
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Currently, U.S. Senate is making moves to finally put an end to federal pot prohibition,
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as well.
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Many studies indicate that marijuana is nowhere near as dangerous as drugs that are generally
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legal and easily available, such as alcohol and tobacco.
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Yet, reefer is classified by the federal government as a Schedule I drug.
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That鈥檚 the class of the supposedly most dangerous banned substances with no acceptable
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medical uses, such as heroin and LSD.
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Interestingly, cocaine and meth are Schedule II drugs, categorically "safer" than marijuana,
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according to the United States Drug Enforcement Agency.
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So with more and more dispensaries popping up across the country each year and the culture
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of smoking weed becoming more normalized, lots of folks might be asking how and why
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this plant was made illegal in the first place.
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Up until the end of the 19th century, Americans were encouraged to cultivate cannabis or as
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it's otherwise known, hemp.
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Though hemp and marijuana both come from the cannabis plant, hemp is bred to have a much
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lower concentration of THC, the chemical in pot that gets you high.
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It was used to make clothing, rope, and other products.
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Virginia farmers were required to grow it in the 17th century, and several colonies
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used it as legal tender.
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Hemp plantations were widespread throughout Mississippi, Georgia, California, South Carolina,
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Nebraska, New York, and Kentucky.
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Toward the end of the 19th century, cotton replaced hemp as the material of choice for
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clothing.
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Instead, hemp became a popular ingredient in medicines, and you could find it in just
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about any pharmacy in the country.
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At the same time, the recreational use of hashish spread from the salons of France to
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some quarters of the United States.
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Americans didn't have a problem with marijuana until migrant workers from Mexico began coming
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to states like Louisiana and Texas at the beginning of the 20th century.
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Americans grew antagonistic toward these immigrants, despite taking advantage of their labor.
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The Mexican workers called the plant by its Spanish name, marijuana.
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Even though most Americans had the drug in their medicine cabinets, usually listed as
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"cannabis", the plant became newly exotic and something to fear.
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By 1931, 29 states had banned marijuana, and the United States had created the Federal
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Bureau of Narcotics, the forebearer of the DEA.
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Meanwhile, Black jazz musicians began to adopt the drug as part of the "hep cat" lifestyle.
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Marijuana was even immortalized in song lyrics, such as in the Cab Calloway hit "Reefer Man."
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Though the prohibition on alcohol ended at this time, cannabis' recreational popularity
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among people of color made it an easy target.
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Unfounded and racist claims that weed made men of color violent and overtly sexual toward
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white women were presented in hearings on marijuana in the 1930s.
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The sale and use of the plant were made illegal by the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937.
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Its place in the Schedule I category was established by the Controlled Substances Act in 1971.
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But even after the drug was made illegal, its place in the culture continued to grow
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and become normalized, particularly during the counterculture of the 1960s.
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By the following decade, 11 states had decriminalized weed, and even the Nixon-appointed Shafer
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Commission recommended decriminalizing the drug federally.
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President Nixon ignored the recommendation, though President Carter openly supported nationwide
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decriminalization.
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At the very least, mandatory minimum sentences for drug possession were relaxed.
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But in 1986, President Reagan signed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, reinstating minimum sentencing
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for drug offenses.
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Marijuana was not granted much leniency.
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Possessing 100 marijuana plants got the same penalty as possessing 100 grams of heroin.
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President Clinton made the penalties even harsher, tacking on a "three strikes" rule
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in his Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994.
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Drug arrests skyrocketed.
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Though there have been tweaks over the years, the bulk of the law, including mandatory minimum
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drug sentencing, is still in place.
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"He won't get out until he's 79 for selling something that is currently legal for recreational
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use in four states."
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And all this because of an unfounded fear of the unknown.
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