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Marijuana Law: A Brief History
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It is called The Drug War, and it has been America's longest
war.
The federal government had no role in the health and drug
trades until early this century, when labeling requirements were placed on
patent medicines. Prohibition was repeatedly ruled unconstitutional until:
- 1919 The 18th Amendment banned commerce in alcohol on a national
level. The violent and corrupt "Roaring Twenties" ensued.
- 1933 The people had had enough. The 21st Amendment repealed the
Volstead Act, ending Constitutional authority for Prohibition.
- 1937 Prohibitionists disguised the Marihuana Tax Act as a revenue
bill and banned an entire plant species through regulation enforcement. The
narcotics bureaucracy had found a gateway drug law.
- 1961 The UN adopted the Single Convention Treaty on Narcotic Drugs,
opening the way for more stringent enforcement. The CIA went into Vietnam and
heroin began to flow into America from Asia.
- 1968 The U.S. signed the Treaty. In the grips of the Vietnam War and
the "generation gap," federal policy continued to harden.
- 1969 The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Marijuana Tax Act was
unconstitutional. Drug control authority was eventually written into a
"scheduling" hoax that extended prohibition enforcement. Under this system,
drugs are not officially 'prohibited'; they're 'illicit'. But people still go to
prison for using them.
- 1970 Congressman George Bush joined the growing majority of office
holders who opposed mandatory minimum sentences "because they remove a great
deal of the court's discretion."
- 1972 President Richard Nixon appointed a National Commission on
Marihuana and Drug Abuse. The panel, known as the Shafer Commission, called for
decriminalizing marijuana and a policy of control based on medical risk, so
Nixon denounced its report and declared a"War on Drugs". Nixon's war faltered
amid a cloud of curruption when he resigned office during his second term, while
facing impeachment charges.
- 1978 President Jimmy Carter publicly advocated decriminalizing up to
an ounce of marihuana in his statement to Congress on drug policy, but behind
the scenes moved to steer the Drug War back on course.
- 1980 Drug warrior Ronald Reagan assumed office and brought the
military industrial comples into the battlefield. The CIA went to Central
America and cocaine began to flow back to our cities.
- 1984 Reagan announced: "You ain't seen nothin' yet!" and promptly
militarized the Drug War. Zero tolerance became the stepping stone to widespread
implementation of urine testing. His 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act went farther,
adding property forfeiture law under Nancy's rallying cry: "Just say no."
- Late 1980s Democrats and Republicans vied to out do each other in
criminalizing and punishing drug users. As Vice President and later as President
George Bush supported the return of Mandatory Minimum prison sentences. Physical
evidence was replaced by sentencing guidelines. No knock search warrants,
hearsay evidence, and high-tech surveillance systems extended the realm of
thought-crime into conspiracy laws.
- Early 1990s Baby Boom President Bill "I didn't inhale" Clinton
campaigned on MTV, stating "The punishment should fit the crime." Once in
office, he reversed gear and pursued yet another round of escalations in the
Drug War, including, for the first time ever, the death penalty for growing
marihuana in the 1994 Federal Crime Bill.
- 1995 The 10 millionth marijuana arrest since 1965 occurred in Ohio
when Tod McCormick, a medical marijuana patient with a Dutch prescription, was
pulled over in an illegal roadside search. A national survey found that 95% of
police officers believed the US to be losing the Drug War.
- 1996 More than 60% of federal prisoners are locked up for drug
offenses. While mandatory minimum sentences require
that drug offenders serve full term sentences, mandatory release programs put
violent felons back out on the streets to reduce prison crowding. Marijuana
arrests are at an all time high, and citizens of California and Arizona vote
overwhelmingly to legalize medical marijuana. Federal policy continues to lose
support when appointed officials threaten to arrest doctors and patients.
- 1997 Business as usual. The Clinton administration begins the year
with an all-out assault on doctors and patients for medical marijuana until a
court orders them to desist. Malicious prosecution continues. The rate of
incarceration for African American males hits a new record high, as does federal
spending on the failed drug war. A new war is beginning to be waged on tobacco
users. The National Istitute on Health reports that needle exchanges clearly
save lives, and congress instantly forbids it from relaxing the ban on clean
needles. Oregon legislators vote to recriminalize cannabis use, and a voters'
referendum is launched to block it from taking effect.
- 1998 When confronted with scientific proof that needle exchange
reduces infectuous disease without increasing drug use, Janet Reno and Drug Czar
Gen. Barry McCaffrey decide to ignore the results and continue the ban. Clinton
launches a multi-billion dollar propaganda campaign that uses federal tax money
to purchase advertising time and space for the private sector's leading advocate
of prohibition, the PDFA (Partnership for a Drug Free America). Congress takes
time from its investigations of Clinton to pass ever more repressive
legislation. Numerous new studies vindicate the medical marijuana reform
position, and voters in five states pass initiatives at the ballot box to
legalize it. Faced with an overwhelming favorable vote, Congress directly
intervenes to block the vote count in Washington DC. At the same time, Oregon
voters overturn the state legislature's attempt to reinstate criminal penalties
for marijuana, and Arizona voters vote to medicalize all controlled substances
(illegal drugs). California votes its leading drug warrior, Dan Lungren, out of
office by a huge majority. Teenage use of all drugs levels off nationally.
- 1999 Public revulsion at the hypocrisy of the federal government is at a
record high. Yet another drug warrior is elected speaker of the house, and
Congress fights in court to suppress the count of the Washington DC popular vote
to legalize marijuana for medical use.
- None of this has had a substantial effect in reducing drug use or making
the public more safe - only in reducing respect for human rights. The Drug War
is an abject failure, and it is time for America to cut its losses and change
political course to solve its problems.
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Contact:
Patrick Stiley |
Frank Cikutovich |
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