Marijuana in America
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Marijuana is a drug that has played a significant role in American history and culture. The drug has been used in several forms, from practical uses to recreational uses. Marijuana also once defined a generation of American people. As of today, marijuana is illegal for recreational use, with some states allowing the drug to be used for medicinal purposes only. The debate has begun in federal and state governments for decriminalizing the recreational use of marijuana, which has brought about questioning the effects that the drug has on people. Is marijuana a gateway drug that leads people to use harder, more dangerous drugs or is this theory a scare tactic to persuade people to keep from using the plant?
Marijuana began its history in the United States as a plant that was grown to produce rope, clothing and sails for boats as early as the 17th century. The plant, known as hemp, was first brought to America by the Puritans, a group of people from England that immigrated to the United States to escape religious prosecution. As the people began to create communities, leaders encouraged farmers to grow hemp. In 1619, the Virginia Assembly approved legislation that “required every farmer to grow the hemp seed because the plants large role in producing material” (Booth, 2003, p. 173). The plant was also used as legal tender in Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia to pay property taxes.
By the 18th century, marijuana was one of the most produced crops of the colonies. Even the fore fathers of the United States grew the plant. George Washington once said, “Make the most you can of the Hemp seed and sow it everywhere” (Booth, 2003, p. 195). Washingtons primary crop on his plantation was hemp as well as Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Jefferson also wrote the first two drafts of the Declaration of Independence on hemp paper. Laws were made that punished farmers that did not grow hemp during a shortage, with fines levied against those that decided not to grow the plant.
In the 1840s, medicines that contained marijuana began to be sold in pharmacies. “From 1850 to 1942, marijuana was listed in the United States Pharmacopoeia as a useful medicine for nausea, rheumatism, and labor pains and was easily obtained at the local general store or pharmacy” (Booth, 2003, p. 221). During this time, doctors would prescribe a cough suppressing syrup made of cannabis and chloroform for adults and children.
By 1906, the United States government passed the Pure Food and Drug Act, a new law that required labeling any cannabis contained in over-the-counter remedies.
Although marijuana was being used for medical and practical purposes, recreational use of the plant was not widely practiced. In 1910, after the Mexican Revolution, Mexican immigrants flooded into the United States and introduced American culture to the recreational use of marijuana. This allowed the drug to become associated with the immigrants, and the fear and prejudice about the Spanish speaking newcomers became associated with marijuana. Anti-drug campaigners warned terrible crimes were attributed to marijuana and the Mexicans who used it by saying that marijuana “aroused a lust for blood and gave its users super human strength” (Sloman, 1979, p. 96).
As fear spread over the ramifications of marijuana use, the United States government began to take steps to regulate the drug. Federal government officials created the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in 1930 to encourage state governments to control the problem with marijuana. Harry J. Anslinger was appointed as the head of the FBN. Anslinger claimed “cannabis caused people to commit violent crimes, act irrational, and act overly sexual” (Sloman, 1979, p. 158). Anslinger also helped the FBN create propaganda films, which promoted his views on marijuana and other drugs. In one anti-drug speech Anslinger exclaimed, “How many murders, suicides, robberies, criminal assaults, holdups, burglaries and deeds of maniacal insanity it causes each year, especially among the young, can only be conjecturedNo one knows, when he places a marijuana cigarette to his lips, whether he will become a joyous reveler in a musical heaven, a mad insensate, a calm philosopher, or a murderer” (Sloman, 1979, p. 161). The government continued to regulate marijuana by passing the Uniform State Narcotic Act in 1932. This act forced states to accept responsibility to control marijuana use and prosecute against it. By the middle of the 1930s, all states had some regulation of marijuana.
As states began to control and prosecute marijuana use, the federal government stepped up with punishing those that participated in consuming marijuana. Marijuana was first severely restricted as a recreational and medicinal drug in the U.S. by the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937. The law did not prohibit marijuana use but imposed such a heavy tax that legal sale and use became nearly impossible. “Annual fees for the tax were $24 ($337 adjusted for inflation) for importers, manufacturers, and cultivators of cannabis, $1 annually ($14 adjusted for inflation) for medical and research purposes, and $3 annually ($42 adjusted for inflation) for industrial uses” (Booth, 2003, p. 335). The arrests began in October of that year, with Samuel Caldwell being the first person to be arrested for selling marijuana without paying the mandated tax.
Even with the passage of laws, which banned marijuana on a federal level, people continued to consume marijuana, reaching an all-time high in the 1960s. A change in political and cultural climate brought about a more lenient attitude toward marijuana use. More people began to focus on the rise of Communism, the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement, with drug regulation becoming an afterthought in peoples minds. Middle-class Americans began to use marijuana more frequently and the drug identified with the counterculture or hippie movement.
The attitude on marijuana began to change with the news of reports the Presidents Kennedy and Johnson commissioned during the 1960s. The reports found that marijuana “did not induce violence, nor lead to the use of heavier drugs” (Booth, 2003, p. 503). Although these reports suggested that marijuana was not dangerous, laws did not change to allow the drug to be legal. Instead, the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control merged within the Justice Department to create the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. With this merger, policies including marijuana began to involve considerations of treatment as well as