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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    [align=center]A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis
    In the United States[/align]

    Before the Revolution
    Cannabis was used by the natives of this continent long before the arrival
    of the white man. As one of the gifts of mother earth cannabis was used in
    religious ceremonies as well as for medicinal and practical uses.
    Early settlers to this country brought hemp seeds in their survival kit
    because of the large number of uses they had for hemp and itâ??s products. Taxes
    could be paid in hemp from 1631 to the mid 1800â??s. In Virginia colony from 1763
    to 1789, a landowner could be imprisoned for refusing to grow hemp (Cannabis)
    Aside from itâ??s value as food and fiber it was valued for itâ??s medicinal
    effects. A tea of the flowers was used to relieve numerous â??womenâ??s alimentsâ?
    from cramps to childbirth. Cannabis was also recommended for a multitude of
    other ailments from tooth ache and back pain, to melancholy
    Considering the importance of this noble weed to our founding fathers the
    current political attitude regarding the Cannabis plant is most confounding.
    The historical facts are plain; the British controlled the American colonists
    by restricting the amount of powder and ball a person could be in possession of.
    Remember this was a time of self sufficiency. If you wanted bread you grew
    wheat, if you wanted meat in the dinner you took a walk and brought something
    home. Much of what the colonists hunted was small game and birds. Salt was
    very expensive so it was impractical to preserve large quantities of meat. As a
    result of this the colonists hunted for virtually every meal. By controlling the import
    and distribution of gunpowder and musket balls the Kings forces could make sure
    the natives would not rise up. Possession of excess powder or ball could be
    punishable by death.
    The French Government aided the Colonial Founding Fathers by
    supplying; troops, gunpowder, musket balls, cannon, and cannon balls. The
    question needs to be asked; what did the founding fathers have to pay for this?
    The colonies had no minerals, no manufacturing, and the forests (Naval Supplies)
    were carefully accounted by the British.
    It was Benjamin Franklin, in his meeting with General Lafayette in Paris in
    1778, who proposed trading hemp for powder and ball to free the colonies from
    the British king. It was American hemp that was offered in trade for French
    troops.
    The French needed hemp to support their colonial expansion efforts
    around the world. Colonies exist in places where things that are not common at
    home may be found. In order for these things to have value they must be brought
    home. The transport technology of the time was the sailing ship and in order to
    control the sail you needed hemp rope.
    Many fibers had been experimented with by civilizations over the
    centuries but in the end hemp was the fiber that withstood the test of the ocean.
    At this time all of the â??worldsâ? hemp was produced in India, under the control of
    the British. The British saw this as a way to take control of French colonies
    because without supplies from home and a way to bring the goods home there
    was no way a colony could survive. The British realized this and sought to
    deprive the French of the hemp their ships needed.
    It was Benjamin Franklin with the fields of American hemp at his disposal
    who negotiated for cannon, ball and troops. The fertile soils of the plantations of
    Washington and Jefferson and other Colonial farmers produced thousands of
    bales of hemp. The British had never been able to mount an effective blockade
    and colonial long boats were able to meet French clippers almost at will. By the
    time the colonials were wining the hostilities and the British realized what had
    been happening it was too late; the French troops had landed and the colonists
    were armed and formed into efficient militia units. When the hostilities were
    ended our first export to our French allies was the hemp the colonists were
    producing.
    After the Revolution
    Hemp and Cannabis production continued through the United States,
    expanding west with the settlers. Hemp seed oil was used for lamp oil and
    cooking, the leaves bedded the animals and the stalks were made into all manner
    of textiles; from bed sheets to paper. Most paper in this country was made of
    hemp fiber until the mid 1800â??s. The flag Betsy Ross created was made of hemp
    cloth. The Declaration of Independence was inscribed on hemp linen. The finest
    paints were made with hemp oil. Grain was shipped in hemp bags because it was
    more durable.
    Laws concerning hemp and Cannabis production did not come into
    consideration until after the First World War. A time much noted for people
    legislating what was â??good for youâ?. Those are the years of Prohibition, and
    innumerable other inroads on personal freedom.
    It was 1931 when a white prohibitionist was appointed as Chairman of the
    US Bureau of Narcotics that controlling the â??devil weedâ? became a national
    priority. His testimony to Congress in the 1936 legislative session reads like some
    wild fiction. Many people are surprised that he was not struck by lightning early on
    in his testimony. At one point , after swearing on a bible that the testimony he was
    about to give was â??The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truthâ?
    Mr. Ainslinger testified to first hand knowledge of the effects of â??reefer
    addiction�.
    â??A ten year old boyâ?, he said, â??had been arrested for selling â??mugglesâ?
    (reefer) in the school yard�.
    He was arrested and brought to the Tombs in New York City. There he
    was placed in a cell with five adult criminals.
    â??After being deprived of his reefer for several hours he went crazy, pulled
    an icepick from his boot and stabbed the other inmates to death before plunging
    the icepick deep into his own brain; taking his own life.�
    Feel free to check the Congressional Record. This is only one of several
    incidents described in his testimony. As a result of this fiction and many other
    equally believable â??marihuana murdersâ? Congress enacted the â??Marihuana Tax
    Stamp act� in 1937.
    For the first time that act gave the Federal Government control over
    Cannabis and hemp production in the United States. This act was the result of a
    cabal of Industry giants who conspired to remove the competition hemp offered.
    Control of the Mexican immigrant population and money was the real reason
    hemp was criminalized, a lot of money.

    The Reasons for Prohibition
    In 1916 the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) developed a
    new papermaking process using cannabis hemp that was more efficient and less
    expensive than the wood pulp sulfide processâ??s. USDA claimed one acre of
    cannabis hemp could produce as much paper pulp as 4.5 acres of trees.
    When the patent protection expired and that technology became widely
    available in the 1930â??s the existing paper companies were threatened. Hearst
    Newspapers owned itâ??s own paper company Kimberly Clark Company which
    could loose millions of dollars if this new technology became wide spread. That
    threat alone was enough to make Randolph Hearst declare war on hemp. He was
    aided in his action by other industrialists with an eye on profit. The DuPont
    companyâ??s had paid for licenses from the German government to make the new
    petroleum based ropes but those ropes were more expensive than hemp so sales
    were down.
    DuPontâ??s banker was a man named Andrew Mellon, who was the owner of
    the sixth largest bank in the country. Mellon had recently been appointed to be
    the US Secretary of the Treasury. It was Mellon was proposed and pushed for the
    appointment of an ex Assistant US Commissioner for Prohibition; Harry
    Ainslinger, to be the new Director of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Mellon
    knew Anislinger would do as he was told, after all they were in laws. So with
    Hearst supplying the script, DuPont the money, Harry Ainsilinger testified to the
    Congress in the finale of a campaign of yellow journalism and scare tactics,
    lacking any basis in reality; to insure the financial future of his and his friends
    empires.
    Since that misguided time most of the laws that were enacted have been
    reviewed and in many cases changed. It is no longer illegal to marry a person of a
    different color, alcohol is regulated on the local level, heterosexually challenged
    behavior is no longer a felony.
    Why have there been no honest reevaluation of cannabis laws? Could it
    be the Bush family interest in Eli Lily is threatened with the potential loss of a
    third of itâ??s market in painkillers by the legalization of cannabis? The
    Pharmaceutical industry has a great stake in the markets granted through itâ??s
    monopoly and is likewise threatened by the reexamination of Cannabis laws.

    The Lie as Truth
    Websters dictionary defines drug as â??any substance used as or in a
    medicineâ?. The list of medicines derived from cannabis in the 1930â??s was so
    significant that the AMA (American Medical Association) testified against the
    original legislation. Even today the natural extracts of cannabis hemp have
    proven far superior to the pharmaceutical industryâ??s attempts at synthesizing
    similar compounds. Without further impartial scientific research how can we hope
    to know what else may be available from those plants?
    Every argument offered by Politicians over the years to maintain the
    prohibition, from gateway drug to increased crime has been knocked down by
    facts and still the Federal Government continues to repeat long discredited
    studies as justification to impose itâ??s will on the states and their people. In
    Northern California and seventeen other jurisdictions where the people have
    voiced a desire to change an ill considered law, the Federal government has
    ignored the will of those people.
    To dissuade those local populations from further persueing their will the
    Federal authorities have responded with increasing armed force in an effort to
    impose an unwanted and resisted intrusion into peoples lives. The practice of
    placing the burden of proof on the accused in drug cases allows the Federal
    Authorities to confiscate millions of dollars in currency and property, while
    ignoring the principal concept of our judicial system: Innocent until Proven Guilty.
    Enron doesnâ??t have to prove that it did not steal billions of dollars, federal
    prosecutors have to prove they did. Why do small businesses persons in the
    cannabis industry have to prove they are not thieves?
    The Real Drug Industry
    The federal governmentâ??s continued subsidy of a product that if used as
    directed will cause major illness and death illustrates the hypocrisy of cannabis
    and drug laws in general. Cannabis is not, despite the protests to the contrary, a
    public health issue. It is a political and economic issue. There is an immense
    industry devoted to maintaining the current â??drug lawsâ?, and the special interests
    (large contributors) reign supreme in influencing Federal policy. Many profitable
    companies from tobacco and alcohol companies, to the pharmaceutical monopoly
    and private for profit prisons have a significant stake in maintaining the hysterical
    response currently applied to cannabis decriminalization efforts. Those industries
    continue to support, financially and politically; lobbyists who will continue the
    scare tactics. From the millions of dollars spent for celebrity endorsement to the
    billions spent on special courts and cops, the anti drug industry is very profitable
    for a few people. The greatest political motivation to maintaining the status quo is
    the tens of thousands of jobs that depend on persecuting a significant percentage
    of the population.
    Cannabis Laws: Cost Vs Benefit
    When you examine why countries that have liberalized cannabis laws did
    so, it is the economic reasons that held the most sway. The Dutch for example,
    by observing a difference between soft and hard drugs have been able to better
    fund domestic programs, like national health care. Not only were significant funds
    freed from unpopular enforcement, but additional income was realized by the
    licensing procedures. Try to imagine the economic effect in this country.
    Hundreds of billions of dollars would no longer be required to fund the DEA,
    blocks of court rooms could be converted to public housing or some other useful
    application. The cost of housing 735,000 people (FBI 2000) every
    year(@$35,000/per person/per year minimum) in prisons and the maintenance
    (welfare / public assistance) of their families would be eliminated. Not enough
    economic savings yet? OK sell permits to grow a dozen plants for medical use,
    charge $100 per year. If only half the smokers in America who would benefit
    bought permits that would put 2.85 billion dollars ($2,850,000,000) into the federal
    coffers. At least fifteen million people would pay without a qualm. Thatâ??s a billion
    and a half ($1,500,000,000) dollars of NEW income to the Federal government
    for the cost of printing ink and paper (both can be hemp based). Permits for
    Amsterdam style â??Coffee Shopsâ? could bring hundreds of thousands of dollars per
    permit per year. The estimated income from one permit per state alone is $5
    billion per year. In Amsterdam each coffee shop generates 20 jobs. If the
    735,000 American small businessmen that were imprisoned in 2000 were allowed
    to establish coffee shops they could employ 14.7 million (14,700,000) fellow
    Americans. At a minimum wage of $6.50 an hour those jobs could generate
    $198.74 billion dollars in personal income alone. Is that a economic stimulus
    package or what? In Amsterdam those coffee shops generate income at the rate
    of ten times the employee cost. Those 14.7 million American could be generating
    1.9 trillion dollars a year. Add that number to the savings from not having to
    persecute a significant portion of the American population and we are talking real
    money. And not just for one year, this income could be generated every year from
    now on.
    Even a federal bureaucrat should be able to recognize that kind of money.
    25.725 billion dollars in reduced prison expenses; and if only a third of those
    inmates are head of household then welfare / public assistance could take
    another 25 million dollars off itâ??s books. 5 to 7 billion dollars in licensing fees, 1.9
    trillion dollars in additional revenues, thatâ??s some serious revenue. Are the
    financial implications obvious yet?
    To review cannabis laws in the United States and allow individual States to
    decide if they want to be â??Dryâ? or â??Wetâ?, in the alcohol vernacular, has the
    potential to put trillions of dollars into other sectors of the economy. That is a real
    stimulus package. Promises of future tax breaks cannot compare to the
    immediate benefits that would result from correcting this erroneous political
    decision that has been perpetuated on the American People for the past seventy
    years.
    [align=center]REGISTER
    PARTICIPATE
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    After all itâ??s just YOUR freedom[/align]
    doctor G Reviewed by doctor G on . A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis In the United States Before the Revolution Cannabis was used by the natives of this continent long before the arrival of the white man. As one of the gifts of mother earth cannabis was used in religious ceremonies as well as for medicinal and practical uses. Early settlers to this country brought hemp seeds in their survival kit because of the large number of uses they had for hemp and itâ??s products. Taxes could be paid in hemp from Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Before you ask, I have throughly researched this subject and all statements contained herein are TRUE and backed by DOCUMENTATION. Copies of said documentation are available on request. Some stuff is harder to get than others, the records from George Washington's farm are not available for copy, but when you visit you can read them for your self. If you like what I say here you are welcome to distribute this article for reprint or public viewing at will. My only request is please give credit to Doctor G. After all I've spent more than a little time on this one. thanks Peace, Love, Good Vibes to All Doctor G

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Fantastic. Everyone mail this to your senators and reps.

  5.     
    #4
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Thats great and all, but i just dont think anythings ever gonna change. There are just too many ignorant people in this country.

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Excellant, thank you.

  7.     
    #6
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Great history hear, one question tho. In regards to the calculations you provided for economic consideration dont seem to take in account that If made legal to trade the price of MJ will drop locally and nationally.

    Do any of those end numbers account for a drop in actual revenue generated by the legalisation of said cannabis?

    It should never have been made illegal, and the men who made it illegal are even dumber for not simply produceing the hemp themselves.

  8.     
    #7
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    I don't think it would matter Marlboroman. True, that if marijuana was made legel then definitely the price would have to drop due to capitalism. "Company Skunk" would endeavour to make a valued product but at a cheaper retail price than "Company Dro". That still means that due to consumer advertising and mass media, the profits would still techically be justified after every quarterly sales review
    \"You know...it\'d be really swell if you could just shut the fuck up for a change\"


    Force is your only friend, fear is your only weapon and ignorance your only shield.~hempity (cannabis.com)

  9.     
    #8
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Quote Originally Posted by rysk8er420
    Thats great and all, but i just dont think anythings ever gonna change. There are just too many ignorant people in this country.
    Don't just give up like that man, you have to maintain a positive attitude and believe that one day the truth will set us free. Once everyone sees the hard facts that pot isn't bad like they've all been told, then we will see some drastic change.
    Information truly is power.
    Still today, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look west, and with the right kind of eyes you can just make out the high water mark, that place where the wave finally broke, and rolled back.

    - Hunter S. Tompson

  10.     
    #9
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Good work Dr. G!
    It's people like you who do the most good for the smokers cause.
    Still today, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look west, and with the right kind of eyes you can just make out the high water mark, that place where the wave finally broke, and rolled back.

    - Hunter S. Tompson

  11.     
    #10
    Senior Member

    A Brief History of the Politics of Cannabis

    Thank you all
    Marlboroman: None of those numbers include the sale price of the herb it self. Those numbers are explained in the article. The number of arrests come from FBI statistics, the cost of imprisonment is from US Justice department (WWW.USGOV.US) the value of income is simple math from the number of jobs times a minimum wage of $6.50/hr with a 40 hour week. I have not included the value of the increased sales of hydroponic supplies or as I said the actual cost of the weed. The Dutch Growers union can provide similar stastistics. The Dutch system will be covered in future articles, but to avoid corperate weed the Dutch system allows a maximum of 20 plants per registered grower. Each registered grower must have a set market ( coffee shop) before he can be licensed. To sell outside that market will result in arrests and revocation of license. more later
    Peace Love and Good Vibes and thanks for reading the whole thing, there is a lot there.
    Doctor G

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