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  1.     
    #1
    Senior Member

    Why was it called Marihuana?

    Curious...


    TO THE MAX!
    Maui Wowie Reviewed by Maui Wowie on . Why was it called Marihuana? Curious... TO THE MAX! Rating: 5

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  3.     
    #2
    Senior Member

    Why was it called Marihuana?

    it was an obscure mexican slang word that was taken by hoover et al in the 1930's and used to publicise how dangerous weed was - apparently it was a term coined to rubbish the industrial qualities of the hemp plant.

    I got this from here .

  4.     
    #3
    Senior Member

    Why was it called Marihuana?

    "* Henry Ford's first Model-T was built to run on hemp gasoline and the CAR ITSELF WAS CONTRUCTED FROM HEMP! On his large estate, Ford was photographed among his hemp fields. The car, 'grown from the soil,' had hemp plastic panels whose impact strength was 10 times stronger than steel; Popular Mechanics, 1941."

    Lawlipops.

  5.     
    #4
    Member

    Why was it called Marihuana?

    Fuck aye , i always thought the word Marijuana was somehoe mexican, somehow a dutchman convinced me 'marijuana' was actually a dutch coin phrase, I knjow Im wrong somehow, that paracetamol I got seeemed to do more than the Coca.

  6.     
    #5
    Senior Member

    Why was it called Marihuana?

    During world war two, when most of the men were off fighting and the women were in the factories, the U.S. was more lenient on Mexican Illegals. We needed them to work the fields and other jobs. When the war was over, and the men came back, they needed jobs...so we ran the Mexicans out again...and their marijuana use was just one excuse to get rid of them.

    Before the wars, it wasn't uncommon for men to make their own beers and ales. Most ales were stronger then....with lots of malt. But due to a shortage of malt and the fact that women were the ones working the factories...and they needed a lighter beer, an easier to drink beer arose...made with rice among other things. So, in essence, Budweiser is a ladies drink.
    Some info is copy-and-pasted below.

    But first, a song in honor of the hard working women.

    FACTORY GIRL

    Waiting for a girl who's got curlers in her hair
    Waiting for a girl she has no money anywhere
    We get buses everywhere
    Waiting for a factory girl

    Waiting for a girl and her knees are much too fat
    Waiting for a girl who wears scarves instead of hats
    Her zipper's broken down the back
    Waiting for a factory girl

    Waiting for a girl and she gets me into fights
    Waiting for a girl we get drunk on Friday night
    She's a sight for sore eyes
    Waiting for a factory girl

    Waiting for a girl and she's got stains all down her dress
    Waiting for a girl and my feet are getting wet
    She ain't come out yet
    Waiting for a factory girl

    - the Rolling Stones


    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Marijuana Timeline In The United States
    Copyright © PBS Online and WGBH/Frontline



    1600-1890s

    Domestic production of hemp encouraged

    American production of hemp was encouraged by the government in the 17th century for the production of rope, sails, and clothing. (Marijuana is the mixture of dried, shredded flowers and leaves that comes from the hemp plant.)

    In 1619 the Virginia Assembly passed legislation requiring every farmer to grow hemp. Hemp was allowed to be exchanged as legal tender in Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Maryland.

    Domestic production flourished until after the Civil War, when imports and other domestic materials replaced hemp for many purposes. In the late nineteenth century, marijuana became a popular ingredient in many medicinal products and was sold openly in public pharmacies.

    During the 19th century, hashish use became a fad in France and also, to some extent, in the U.S.



    1906

    Pure Food and Drug Act

    Required labeling of any cannabis contained in over-the-counter remedies.



    1900-20s

    Mexican immigrants introduce recreational use of marijuana leaf

    After the Mexican Revolution of 1910, Mexican immigrants flooded into the U.S., introducing to American culture the recreational use of marijuana.

    The drug became associated with the immigrants, and the fear and prejudice about the Spanish-speaking newcomers became associated with marijuana. Anti-drug campaigners warned against the encroaching Marijuana Menace, and terrible crimes were attributed to marijuana and the Mexicans who used it.



    1930s

    Fear of marijuana

    During the Great Depression, massive unemployment increased public resentment and fear of Mexican immigrants, escalating public and governmental concern about the problem of marijuana.

    This instigated a flurry of research which linked the use of marijuana with violence, crime and other socially deviant behaviors, primarily committed by racially inferior or underclass communities. By 1931, 29 states had outlawed marijuana.



    1930

    Creation of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN)

    Harry J. Anslinger was the first Commissioner of the FBN and remained in that post until 1962.



    1932

    Uniform State Narcotic Act

    Concern about the rising use of marijuana and research linking its use with crime and other social problems created pressure on the federal government to take action.

    Rather than promoting federal legislation, the Federal Bureau of Narcotics strongly encouraged state governments to accept responsibility for control of the problem by adopting the Uniform State Narcotic Act.



    1936

    Reefer Madness

    Propaganda film Reefer Madness was produced by the French director, Louis Gasnier.

    The Motion Pictures Association of America, composed of the major Hollywood studios, banned the showing of any narcotics in films.



    1937

    Marijuana Tax Act

    After a lurid national propaganda campaign against the evil weed, Congress passed the Marijuana Tax Act. The statute effectively criminalized marijuana, restricting possession of the drug to individuals who paid an excise tax for certain authorized medical and industrial uses.



    1944

    La Guardia Report finds marijuana less dangerous

    New York Academy of Medicine issued an extensively researched report declaring that, contrary to earlier research and popular belief, use of marijuana did not induce violence, insanity or sex crimes, or lead to addiction or other drug use.



    1940s

    Hemp for Victory

    During World War II, imports of hemp and other materials crucial for producing marine cordage, parachutes, and other military necessities became scarce.

    In response the U.S. Department of Agriculture launched its Hemp for Victory program, encouraging farmers to plant hemp by giving out seeds and granting draft deferments to those who would stay home and grow hemp. By 1943 American farmers registered in the program harvested 375,000 acres of hemp.



    1951-56

    Stricter Sentencing Laws

    Enactment of federal laws (Boggs Act, 1952; Narcotics Control Act, 1956) which set mandatory sentences for drug-related offenses, including marijuana.

    A first-offense marijuana possession carried a minimum sentence of 2-10 years with a fine of up to $20,000.



    1960s

    Marijuana use popular in counterculture

    A changing political and cultural climate was reflected in more lenient attitudes towards marijuana. Use of the drug became widespread in the white upper middle class.

    Reports commissioned by Presidents Kennedy and Johnson found that marijuana use did not induce violence nor lead to use of heavier drugs. Policy towards marijuana began to involve considerations of treatment as well as criminal penalties.



    1968

    Creation of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs

    This was a merger of FBN and the Bureau of Dangerous Drugs of the Food and Drug Administration.



    1970

    Repeal of most mandatory minimum sentences

    Congress repealed most of the mandatory penalties for drug-related offenses. It was widely acknowledged that the mandatory minimum sentences of the 1950s had done nothing to eliminate the drug culture that embraced marijuana use throughout the 60s, and that the minimum sentences imposed were often unduly harsh.

    Marijuana differentiated from other drugs

    The Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act categorized marijuana separately from other narcotics and eliminated mandatory federal sentences for possession of small amounts.

    National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) founded



    1972

    Shafer Commission

    The bipartisan Shafer Commission, appointed by President Nixon at the direction of Congress, considered laws regarding marijuana and determined that personal use of marijuana should be decriminalized.

    Nixon rejected the recommendation, but over the course of the 1970s, eleven states decriminalized marijuana and most others reduced their penalties.



    1973

    Creation of the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)

    Merger of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNND) and the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement (ODALE).



    1974

    High Times founded



    1976

    Beginning of parents' movement against marijuana

    A nationwide movement emerged of conservative parents' groups lobbying for stricter regulation of marijuana and the prevention of drug use by teenagers.

    Some of these groups became quite powerful and, with the support of the DEA and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), were instrumental in affecting public attitudes which led to the 1980s War on Drugs.



    1986

    Anti-Drug Abuse Act - Mandatory Sentences

    President Reagan signed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, instituting mandatory sentences for drug-related crimes.

    In conjunction with the Comprehensive Crime Control Act of 1984, the new law raised federal penalties for marijuana possession and dealing, basing the penalties on the amount of the drug involved. Possession of 100 marijuana plants received the same penalty as possession of 100 grams of heroin.

    A later amendment to the Anti-Drug Abuse Act established a three strikes and you're out policy, requiring life sentences for repeat drug offenders, and providing for the death penalty for drug kingpins.



    1989

    Bush's War on Drugs

    President George Bush declares a new War on Drugs in a nationally televised speech.


    1996
    Medical Use Legalized in California

    California voters passed Proposition 215 allowing for the sale and medical use of marijuana for patients with AIDS, cancer, and other serious and painful diseases. This law stands in tension with federal laws prohibiting possession of marijuana.

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