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Significant Dates: ** Opium. 1875: San FranciscoFirst anti-drug law in USBanned smoking opium, opium dens, possession of opium pipes1880: US and China agreementBanned shipping opium between countries1883 and 1887: Congress actsRaised tariff on opium imports, banned imports by Chinese, banned f
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1. Drug War History:A Snapshot
2. Significant Dates: ** Opium 1875: San Francisco
First anti-drug law in US
Banned smoking opium, opium dens, possession of opium pipes
1880: US and China agreement
Banned shipping opium between countries
1883 and 1887: Congress acts
Raised tariff on opium imports, banned imports by Chinese, banned flavored opium
1909: Opium Exclusion Act
Banned opium that could be smoked
Lesson #1 – This was NOT likely about opium but rather about who was using it (see Robinson and Scherlen, Chapter 2, p. 20)
3. Significant Dates:
4. Significant Dates: ** Patent Drugs 1906: Food and Drugs Act
In response to The Jungle and abuses of patent medicines
Required truthful and complete labeling of products (including patent drugs)
Did not ban drugs but required truthful labeling
Patent medicine led to the nation’s FIRST major drug problem (see p. 21).
5. Significant Dates: ** Patent Drugs
6. Significant Dates: ** Patent Drugs
16. Significant Dates: ** Patent Drugs
Sears and Roebuck sold hypodermic kits for morphine!
See!
Lesson #2 – Legalization may increase drug use
17. Significant Dates: ** Narcotics 1914: Harrison Narcotics Control Act
Required registration with Treasury Department for importing, manufacturing, selling, dispensing cocaine/opiates
Imposed prohibitive tax
Allowed physicians to prescribe and dispense for “legitimate medical purposes … in course of professional practice” (but not to maintain addict)
18. Significant Dates: ** Narcotics
Lesson #3 – Drug laws are often serve ulterior motives (see p. 22)
19. Significant Dates: ** Narcotics Interpreted as “prohibitory” by Treasury Department’s Narcotics Division.
1919: Treasury begins arresting doctors for opiate prescriptions for addicts
Led to three US Supreme Court cases (see p. 23)
Doctors would no longer “serve” addicts
Lesson #4 – Prohibition creates black market (see p. 23)
20. Significant Dates:
21. Significant Dates: ** Alcohol 1919: 18th Amendment prohibits alcohol
Lasted until 1933
Alcohol consumption reduced by modest amount
Great costs created (violent crime, murder, corruption, expansion of criminal justice)
Lesson #5 – Prohibition creates great costs
22. Significant Dates: ** Marijuana 1930: Bureau of Narcotics formed (Treasury Dept.)
Harry Anslinger, director
Close links to William Randolph Hearst (newspaper giant / timber guy), E.I. DuPont (paper giant), and Andrew Mellon (Sec. of Treasury and owner of Mellon Bank)
Launched campaign against the “killer weed” and “assassin of youth” marijuana
"Most marijuana smokers are Negroes, Hispanics, jazz musicians, and entertainers. Their satanic music is driven by marijuana, and marijuana smoking by white women makes them want to seek sexual relations with Negroes, entertainers, and others. It is a drug that causes insanity, criminality, and death -- the most violence-causing drug in the history of mankind."
23. Marijuana!!!
24. Marijuana!!!
25. Marijuana!!!
26. Significant Dates: ** Marijuana 1937: Marijuana Tax Act
Required tax stamp to sell ($1)
Required laborious procedures to prescribe
Very tough sentences (“life” for selling to minor)
Bureau also wrote sample bill banning pot (adopted by 40 states)
Partly inspired by racist sentiment
Lesson #6 – Many drug wars inspired by racism/ ethnocentrism (see p. 25)
27. Consider:
28. Consider:
29. Consider:
30. Every drug war seems focused ONLY on “some people’s drugs”
Alcohol (1880s / early 1900s): Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) concerned with alcohol use by non-Christian immigrants
Opium (late 1800s / early 1900s): focused on Chinese laborers who represented unwanted labor competition
Marijuana (1930s): grounded in racism against Mexican immigrants (“drug-crazed criminals”) taking jobs away from Americans
Crack (1980s): focused mostly on urban minorities, especially African Americans Consider:
31. Significant Dates: ** Marijuana Doctors NOT opposed to marijuana use
AMA urged Congress not to vote for 1937 Marijuana Tax Act
Lesson #7 – Harms of some drugs overstated for political purposes, and empirical evidence often is ignored
32. Significant Dates: 1951: Boggs Act
Quadrupled penalties for pot offenses
Mandatory death penalty for selling to minor
1956: Daniel Act
Mandatory prison sentences and no parole for heroin sales
Mandatory death penalty for selling heroin to minor
1966: Bureau of Drug Abuse Control (BADC) formed (Food and Drug Administration)
Enforced Drug Abuse Control Amendments of 1965 regulating stimulants, sedatives
33. Significant Dates: 1968: Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD) formed (Justice Dept.)
Combined Bureau of Narcotics (Treasury Dept.), Bureau of Drug Abuse Control (Health, Education, and Welfare Dept.)
1969: Operation Intercept
Required thorough search of vehicles crossing Mexican border
Major failure
Lesson #8 – Drug control efforts often interfere with other government priorities (see p. 26)
34. Significant Dates: ** Nixon 1970: Narcotics Treatment Administration formed (President Nixon)
Drug abuse expert, Dr. Robert Dupont, director
In part due to military addiction to heroin from Vietnam
Treatment received majority of funds
1970: Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act
“Federalization” or “nationalization” of drug control
Created 5 drug schedules through Controlled Substances Act
see p. 27
35. Significant Dates: ** Nixon 1971: Nixon declares war on drugs
Most money for treatment
Also sets up Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention, headed by Dr. Jerome Jaffe (methadone treatment expert)
1971: Operation Golden Flow
Required returning soldiers to take urine test
36. Significant Dates: ** Nixon 1972: Office of Drug Abuse & Law Enforcement (ODALE) formed (President Nixon)
Miles Ambrose, Director (former Customs Director)
Coordinated task forces to reduce drugs and crime
Shifted focus to law enforcement approach
1973: Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)
Idea of Miles Ambrose
Primary federal agency involved in drug seizures and busts
See handout
1978: Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act amended
Allowed for asset forfeiture
37. Significant Dates: ** DARE 1981: US-Colombia treaty
Allowed extradition of traffickers to US
Banned in 1991 by Colombian Constitution but reinstated later
1983: DARE founded in LA, California
Totally ineffective (see p. 29)
38. Significant Dates: ** Just Say No 1984: Comprehensive Crime Control Act
Longer sentences and increased bail amounts for drug offenders
1985: “Just Say No” (Nancy Reagan)
Totally ineffective (see p. 29)
39. Significant Dates: ** Crack Cocaine 1986: Anti-Drug Abuse Act
Mandatory sentencing and 100:1 disparities for crack versus powder
Decertification for countries (p. 30)
1988: Anti-Drug Abuse Act
Created Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) to lead war on drugs
ONDCP authorized for ONLY 5 years (see pp. 30-31)
William Bennett, Director
Lesson #9 – Drug war prior to 1988 was not clearly formulated carefully planned policy (see p. 31)
40. Significant Dates: ** Bush/Clinton 1989: President Bush re-declares war
“All of us agree that the gravest domestic threat facing our country today is drugs”
US invades Panama to get Manuel Noriega,a paid CIA operative since early 1970s (seep. 31)
1993: North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
makes thorough inspections impossible
Lesson #10 – One priority of government often interferes with another (see p. 31)
41. Significant Dates: ** Clinton 1994: Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act (President Clinton)
Death penalty for high level drug offenders
Mandatory sentences for other drug offenders
1995: US Sentencing Commission recommends reversing mandatory minimum sentences for crack
Rejected by Congress (first time ever)
1996: Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act
Conviction for drug offense means removal of welfare, food stamps assistance
42. Significant Dates: ** Oh brother! 1998: Drug-Free Media Campaign Act
National anti-drug media campaign
Massive failure (see p. 34).
And tried before:
This is your brain on drugs
OK but who cleans up the mess?
Pee Wee says: “This is crack”
Dive in!
If your dog talks …
Lazy and boring …
You used to be taller?
These are good friends!
I do whatever my friends say …
Smoking pot funds terrorism
43. Significant Dates: ** Oh brother! My favorite:
In "Pool," a toddler carries an inflatable raft to a swimming pool and places it in the water.
As she teeters on the edge, a voiceover says: "Just tell her parents you weren't watching her because you were getting stoned. They'll understand.“
FADE TO BLACK
And yes, they still do it
44. Significant Dates: ** Clinton 1998: Higher Education Act
No federal financial aid with drug conviction
2000: Plan Colombia
US military intervention in Colombia to inhibit coca cultivation
Rolled into “Andean Regional Initiative” in 2001 (Colombia, Bolivia, Brazil, Ecuador, Panama, Peru, Venezuela)
45. Significant Dates: ** W. Bush 2001: Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act
Targets raves and “drug-involved premises” for Ecstasy
Could not get out of committee so attached to Child Abduction Protect Act
2003:Illict Drug Anti-Proliferation Act
Targets “raves” using “crack house” statute
Attached as provision of Amber Alert bill
Most recent issues deal with drugs and terrorism, medical marijuana, harm reduction in states (see pp. 35-36)