06-09-2020, 05:46 PM
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.
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]](https://i.imgur.com/SyAa0qj.png)
USMC
![[Image: SyAa0qj.png]](https://i.imgur.com/SyAa0qj.png)
USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit


NoOb Sig