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- From: steiny@hpcupt1
-
- This is a history of drug use/prohibition based on the Appendix of
- *Ceremonial Chemistry* by Thomas Szasz. The book is published
- by "Doubleday/Anchor" Garden City, New York, 1975. I included his
- references. I have added several items of interest and I have deleted
- some things I did not feel were relevant (Szasz documents the parallel
- course of relgious history). All unattributed items (no footnote)
- are from the book.
-
- There are some real jewels in this collection. The entry for 1949 is
- especially profound.
-
- Note how many times governments have banned vaious drugs. At one time
- tabacco was illegal in more than a dozen states! Fat lot of good it did.
-
- I saw Szasz speak not too long ago, he is a wonderful person, absolutely
- brilliant and very charming. The book is now in its second edition.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- c. 5000 B.C. The Sumerians use opium, suggested by the fact that
- they have an ideogram for it which has been translated
- as HUL, meaning "joy" or "rejoicing." [Alfred R. Lindensmith,
- *Addiction and Opiates.* p. 207]
-
- c. 3500 B.C. Earlist historical record of the production of alcohol:
- the description of a brewery in an an Egyptian papyrus.
- [Joel Fort, *The Pleasure Seekers*, p. 14]
-
- c. 3000 B.C. Approximate date of the supposed origin of the use of
- tea in China.
-
- c. 2500 B.C. Earlist historical evidence of the eating of poppy seeds
- among the Lake Dwellers on Switzerland. [Ashley Montagu,
- The long search for euphoria, *Refelections*, 1:62-69
- (May-June), 1966; p. 66]
-
- c. 2000 B.C. Earliest record of prohibitionist teaching, by an
- Egyptian priest, who writes to his pupil: "I, thy
- superior, forbid thee to go to the taverns. Thou
- art degraded like beasts." [W.F. Crafts *et al*.,
- *Intoxicating Drinks and Drugs*, p. 5]
-
- c. 350 B.C. Proverbs, 31:6-7: "Give strong drink to him
- who is perishing, and wine to those in bitter distress;
- let them drink and forget their poverty, and remember
- their misery no more."
-
- c. 300 B.C. Theophrastus (371-287 B.C.), Greek naturalist and philosopher,
- records what has remained as the earlies undisputed
- reference to the use of poppy juice.
-
- c. 250 B.C. Psalms, 104:14-15: "Thou dost cause grass to grow for the
- cattle and plants for man to cultivate, that he may
- bring forth food from the earth, and wine to gladden
- the heart of man.
-
- 350 A.D. Earliest mention of tea, in a Chinese dictionary.
-
- 4th century St. John Chrysostom (345-407), Bishop of Constantinople:
- "I hear man cry, 'Would there be no wine! O folly! O
- madness!' Is it wine that causes this abuse? No, for
- if you say, 'Would there were no light!' because of
- the informers, and would there were no women because
- of adultery." [Quoted in Berton Roueche, *The Neutral
- Spirit*, pp. 150-151]
-
- c. 450 Babylonian Talmud: "Wine is at the head of all medicines;
- where wine is lacking, drugs are necessary." [Quoted in
- Burton Stevenson (Ed.), *The Macmillan Book of Proverbs*,
- p. 21]
-
- c. 1000 Opium is widely used in China and the far East. [Alfred
- A. Lindensmith, *The Addict and the Law*, p. 194]
-
- 1493 The use of tobacco is introduced into Europe by
- Columbus and his crew returning from America.
-
- c. 1500 According to J.D. Rolleston, a British medical
- historian, a medieval Russian cure for drunkenness
- consisted in "taking a piece of pork, putting it
- secretly in a Jew's bed for nine days, and then giving
- it to the drunkard in a pulverized form, who will turn
- away from drinking as a Jew would from pork." [Quoted in
- Roueche, op. cit. p. 144]
-
- c. 1525 Paracelsus (1490-1541) introduces laudanum, or tincture
- of opium, into the practice of medicine.
-
- 1600 Shakespeare: "Falstaff. . . . If I had a thousand sons
- the / first human principle I would teach them should /
- be, to foreswear thin portion and to addict themselves
- to sack." ("Sack" is an obsolete term for "sweet wine"
- like sherry). [William Shakespeare, *Second Part of King
- Henry the Forth*, Act IV, Scene III, lines 133-136]
-
- 17th century The prince of the petty state of Waldeck pays ten thalers
- to anyone who denounces a coffee drinker. [Griffith Edwards,
- Psychoactive substances, *The Listener*, March 23, 1972,
- pp. 360-363; p.361]
-
- 17th century In Russia, Czar Michael Federovitch executes anyone
- on whom tobacco is found. "Czar Alexei Mikhailovitch
- rules that anyone caught with tobacco should be
- tortured until he gave up the name of the supplier."
- [Ibid.]
-
- 1613 John Rolf, the husband of the Indian princess Pocahontas,
- sends the first shipment of Virginia tobacco from
- Jamestown to England.
-
- c. 1650 The use of tobacco is prohibited in Bavaria, Saxony,
- and in Zurich, but the prohibitions are ineffective.
- Sultan Murad IV of the Ottoman Empire decrees the
- death penalty for smoking tobacco: "Whereever there
- Sultan went on his travels or on a military expedition
- his halting-places were always distinguished by a
- terrible rise in executions. Even on the battlefield
- he was fond of surprising men in the act of smoking,
- when he would punish them by beheading, hanging, quartering
- or crushing their hands and feed. . . . Nevertheless,
- in spite of all the horrors and persecution. . . the
- passion for smoking still persisted." [Edward M. Brecher
- et al., *Licit and Illicit Drugs*, p. 212]
-
- 1680 Thomas Syndenham (1625-80): "Among the remedies which it
- has pleased the Almighty God to give to man to relieve his
- sufferings, none is so universal and efficacious as opium."
- [Quoted in Louis Goodman and Alfred Gilman, *The
- Pharmacological Basis of Theraputics*, First Edition (1941),
- p. 186]
-
- 1690 The "Act for the Encouraging of the Distillation of Brandy
- and Spirits from Corn" is enacted in England. [Roueche, op.
- cit. p. 27]
-
- 1691 In Luneberg, Germany, the penalty for smoking (tobacco)
- is death.
-
- 1717 Liquor licenses in Middlesex (England) are granted only
- to those who "would take oaths of allegiance and of
- belief in the King's supremacy over the Church" [G.E.G.
- Catlin, *Liquor Control*, p. 14]
-
- 1736 The Gin Act (England) is enacted with the avowed object
- of making spirits "come so dear to the consumer that the
- poor will not be able to launch into excessive use of them."
- This effort results in general lawbreaking and fails to
- halt the steady rise in the consumption of even legally
- produced and sold liquor. [Ibid., p. 15]
-
- 1745 The magistrates of one London division demanded that
- "publicans and wine-merchants should swear that they
- anathematized the doctrine of Transubstantiation."
- [Ibid., p. 14]
-
- 1762 Thomas Dover, and English physician, introduces his
- prescription for a diaphoretic powder," which he
- recommends mainly for the treatment of gout. Soon
- named "Dover's powder," this compound becomes the most
- widely used opium preparation during the next 150 years.
-
- 1785 Benjamin Rush publishes his *Inquiry into the Effects
- of Ardent Spirits on the Human Body and Mind*; in it,
- he calls the intemperate use of distilled spirits a "disease," and estimates the annual rate of death
- due to alcoholism in the United States as "not less than
- 4000 people" in a population then of less than 6 million.
- [Quoted in S. S. Rosenberg (Ed.), *Alcohol and Health*,
- p. 26]
-
- 1789 The first American temperance society is formed in Litchfield,
- Connecticut. [Crafts et. al., op. cit., p. 9]
-
- 1790 Benjamin Rush persuades his associates at the Philadelphia
- College of Physicians to send an appeal to Congress to
- "impose such heavy duties upon all distilled spirits as shall
- be effective to restrain their intemperate use in the country."
- [Quoted in ibid.]
-
- 1792 The first prohibitory laws against opium in China are
- promulgated. The punishment decreed for keepers of opium
- shops is strangulation.
-
- 1792 The Whisky Rebellion, a protest by farmers in western
- Pennsylvania against a federal tax on liquor, breaks out
- and is put down by overwhelming force sent to the area
- by George Washington. Samuel Taylor Coleridge writes
- "Kubla Khan" while under the influence of opium.
-
- 1800 Napoleon's army, returning from Egypt, introduces cannibis
- (hashish, marijuana) into France. Avante-garde artists
- and writers in Paris develop their own cannabis ritual,
- leading, in 1844, to the establishment of *Le Club
- de Haschischins.* [William A. Emboden, Jr., Ritual
- Use of Cannabis Sativa L.: A historical-ethnographic
- survey, in Peter T. Furst (Ed.), *Flesh of the Gods*,
- pp. 214-236; pp. 227-228]
-
- 1801 On Jefferson's recommendation, the federal duty on liquor
- was abolished. [Catlin, op. cit., p. 113]
-
- 1804 Thomas Trotter, an Edinburgh physician, publishes *An Essay,
- Medical, Philosophical, and Chemical on Drunkenness and Its
- Effects on the Human Body*: "In medical language, I consider
- drunkenness, strictly speaking, to be a disease, produced by
- a remote cause, and giving birth to actions and movements
- in the living body that disorder the functions of health. . .
- The habit of drunkenness is a disease of the mind." [Quoted
- in Roueche, op. cit. pp. 87-88]
-
- 1805 Friedrich Wilhelm Adam Serturner, a German chemist, isolates
- and describes morphine.
-
- 1822 Thomas De Quincey's *Confessions of an English Opium
- Eater* is published. He notes that the opium habit,
- like any other habit, must be learned: "Making allowance
- for constitutional differences, I should say that *in
- less that 120 days* no habit of opium-eating could
- be formed strong enough to call for any extraordinary
- self-conquest in renouncing it, even suddenly renouncing
- it. On Saturday you are an opium eater, on Sunday no longer
- such." [Thomas De Quincey, *Confessions of an English Opium
- Eater* (1822), p. 143]
-
- 1826 The American Society for the Promotion of Temperance is
- founded in Boston. By 1833, there are 6,000 local
- Temperance societies, with more than one million members.
-
- 1839-42 The first Opium War. The British force upon China the
- trade in opium, a trade the Chinese had declared illegal..
- [Montagu, op. cit. p. 67]
-
- 1840 Benjamin Parsons, and English clergyman, declares:
- ". . . alcohol stands preeminent as a destroyer.
- . . . I never knew a person become insane who was not
- in the habit of taking a portion of alcohol every day."
- Parsons lists forty-two distinct diseases caused by
- alcohol, among them inflammation of the brain, scrofula,
- mania, dropsy, nephritis, and gout. [Quoted in Roueche,
- op. cit. pp. 87-88]
-
- 1841 Dr. Jacques Joseph Moreau uses hashish in treatment of mental
- patients at the Bicetre.
-
-
- 1842 Abraham Lincoln: "In my judgement, such of us as have never
- fallen victims, have been spared more from the absence of
- apatite, than from any mental or moral superiority over those
- who have. Indeed, I believe, if we take habitual drunkards
- as a class, their heads and their hearts will bear an
- advantageous comparison with those of any other class."
- [Abraham Lincoln, Temperance address, in Roy P. Basler
- (Ed.), *The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, Vol. 1,
- p. 258]
-
- 1844 Cocaine is isolated in its pure form.
-
- 1845 A law prohibiting the public sale of liquor is enacted
- in New York State. It is repealed in 1847.
-
- 1847 The American Medical Association is founded.
-
- 1852 Susan B. Anthony establishes the Women's State Temperance
- Society of New York, the first such society formed by and
- for women. Many of the early feminists, such as Elizabeth
- Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and Abby Kelly, are also
- ardent prohibitionists. [Andrew Sinclar, *Era of Excess*,
- p. 92]
-
- 1852 The American Pharmaceutical Association is founded. The
- Association's 1856 Constitution lists one of its goals
- as: "To as much as possible restrict the dispensing and sale
- of medicines to regularly educated druggests and apothecaries.
- [Quoted in David Musto, *The American Disease*, p. 258]
-
- 1856 The Second Opium War. The British, with help from the French,
- extend their powers to distribute opium in China.
-
- 1862 Internal Revenue Act enacted imposing a license fee of twenty
- dollars on retail liquor dealers, and a tax of one dollar
- a barrel on beer and twenty cents a gallon on spirits.
- [Sinclare, op. cit. p 152]
-
- 1864 Adolf von Baeyer, a twenty-nine-year-old assistant of
- Friedrich August Kekule (the discoverer of the molecular
- structure of benzene) in Ghent, synthesizes barbituric acid,
- the first barbiturate.
-
- 1868 Dr. George Wood, a professor of the theory and practice
- of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, president
- of the American Philosophical Society, and the author
- of a leading American test, *Treatise on Therapeutics*,
- describes the pharmacological effects of opium as follows:
- "A sensation of fullness is felt in the head, soon to be
- followed by a universal feeling of delicious ease and
- comfort, with an elevation and expansion of the whole moral
- and intellectual nature, which is, I think, the most
- characteristic of its effects. . . . It seems to make
- the individual, for the time, a better and greater man. . . .
- The hallucinations, the delirious imaginations of alcoholic
- intoxication, are, in general, quite wanting. Along
- with this emotional and intellectual elevation, there is
- also increased muscular energy; and the capacity to act,
- and to bear fatigue, is greatly augmented. [Quoted in
- Musto, op. cit. pp. 71-72]
-
- 1869 The Prohibition Party is formed. Gerrit Smith, twice
- Abolitionist candidate for President, an associate
- of John Brown, and a crusading prohibitionist, declares:
- "Our involuntary slaves are set free, but our millions
- of voluntary slaves still clang their chains. The lot of
- the literal slave, of him whom others have enslaved, is indeed
- a hard one; nevertheless, it is a paradise compared
- with the lot of him who has enslaved himself to alcohol."
- [Quoted in Sinclar, op. cit. pp. 83-84]
-
- 1874 The Woman's Christian Temperance Union is founded in Cleveland.
- In 1883, Frances Willard a leader of the W.C.T.U. forms the
- World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
-
- 1882 The law in the United States, and the world, making
- "temperance education" a part of the required course in
- public schools is enacted. In 1886, Congress makes such
- education mandatory in the District of Columbia, and in
- territorial, military, and naval schools. By 1900, all the
- states have similar laws. [Crafts et. al., op. cit. p. 72]
-
- 1882 The Personal Liberty League of the United States is founded
- to oppose the increasing momentum of movements for
- compulsory abstinence from alcohol. [Catlin, op. cit. p. 114]
-
- 1883 Dr. Theodor Aschenbrandt, a German army physician, secures
- a supply of pure cocaine from the pharmaceutical firm of
- Merck, issues it to Bavarian soldiers during their
- maneuvers, and reports on the beneficial effects of the
- drug in increasing the soldiers' ability to endure fatigue.
- [Brecher et. al. op. cit. p. 272]
-
- 1884 Sigmund Freud treats his depression with cocaine, and reports
- feeling "exhilaration and lasting euphoria, which is in no
- way differs from the normal euphoria of the healthy person. . .
- You perceive an increase in self-control and possess more
- vitality and capacity for work. . . . In other words, you
- are simply more normal, and it is soon hard to believe that
- you are under the influence of a drug." [Quoted in Ernest
- Jones, *The Life and Work of Sigmund Freud, Vol. 1, p. 82]
-
- 1884 Laws are enacted to make anti-alcohol teaching compulsory
- in public schools in New York State. The following year
- similar laws are passed in Pennsylvania, with other states
- soon following suit.
-
- 1885 The Report of the Royal Commission on Opium concludes that
- opium is more like the Westerner's liquor than a substance
- to be feared and abhorred. [Quoted in Musto, op. cit. p. 29]
-
- 1889 The John Hopkins Hospital, in Baltimore, Maryland, is opened.
- One of its world-famous founders, Dr. William Stewart Halsted,
- is a morphine addict. He continues to use morphine in large
- doses throughout his phenomenally successful surgical career
- lasting until his death in 1922.
-
- 1894 The Report of the Indian Hemp Drug Comission, running to
- over three thousand pages in seven volumes, is published.
- This inquiry, commissioned by the British government,
- concluded: "There is no evidence of any weight regarding the
- mental and moral injuries from the moderate use of these
- drugs. .. . . Moderation does not lead to excess in hemp any
- more than it does in alcohol. Regular, moderate use of ganja
- or bhang produces the same effects as moderate and regular
- doses of whiskey." The commission's proposal to tax bhang
- is never put into effect, in part, perhaps, because one of
- the commissioners, an Indian, cautions that Moslem law and
- Hindu custom forbid "taxing anything that gives pleasure
- to the poor." [Quoted in Norman Taylor, The pleasant assassin:
- The story of marihuana, in David Solomon (Ed.) *The
- Marijuana Papers*, pp. 31-47, p. 41]
-
- 1894 Norman Kerr, and English physician and president of the
- British Society for the study of Inebriety, declares:
- "Drunkenness has generally been regarded as . . . a sin
- a vice, or a crime. . . [But] there is now a consensus of
- intelligent opinion that habitual and periodic drunkenness
- is often either a symptom or sequel of disease . . . . The
- victim can no more resist [alcohol] than an man with ague
- can resist shivering. [Quoted in Roueche, op. cit., pp.
- 107-108]
-
- 1898 Diacetylmorphine (heroin) is synthesized in Germany.
- It is widely lauded as a "safe preparation free from
- addiction-forming properties." [Montagu, op. cit. p. 68]
-
- 1900 In an address to the Ecumenical Missionary Conference, Rev.
- Wilbur F. Crafts declares: "No Christian celebration of the
- completion of nineteen Christian centuries has yet been
- arranged. Could there be a fitter one than the general
- adoption, by separate and joint action of the great nations
- of the world, of the new policy of civilization, in which
- Great Britian is leading, the policy of prohibition for the
- native races, in the interest of commerce as well as
- conscience, since the liquor traffic among child races,
- even more manifestly than in civilized lands, injures all
- other trades by producing poverty, disease, and death.
- Our object, more profoundly viewed, is to create a more
- favorable environment for the child races that civilized
- nations are essaying to civilize and Christianize."
- [Quoted in Crafts, et. al., op. cit., p. 14]
-
- 1900 James R. L. Daly, writing in the *Boston Medical and Surgical
- Journal*, declares: "It [heroin] possesses many advantages
- over morphine. . . . It is not hypnotic; and there is no
- danger of acquiring the habit. . . ." [Quoted in Henry
- H. Lennard et. al. Methadone treatment (letters),
- *Science*, 179:1078-1079 (March 16), 1973; p. 1079]
-
- 1901 The Senate adopts a resolution, introduced by Henry Cabot
- Lodge, to forbid the sale by American traders of opium
- and alcohol "to aboriginal tribes and uncivilized races."
- Theses provisions are later extended to include "uncivilized
- elements in America itself and in its territories, such as
- Indians, Alaskans, the inhabitants of Hawaii, railroad workers,
- and immigrants at ports of entry." [Sinclar, op. cit. p. 33]
-
- 1902 The Committee on the Acquirement of the Drug Habit of the
- American Pharmaceutical Association declares: "If the
- Chinaman cannot get along without his 'dope,' we can get
- along without him." [Quoted in ibid, p. 17]
-
- 1902 George E. Petty, writing in the *Alabama Medical Journal*,
- observes: "Many articles have appeared in the medical
- literature during the last two years lauding this new agent
- . . . . When we consider the fact that heroin is a morphine
- derivative . . . it does not seem reasonable that such a
- claim could be well founded. It is strange that such a claim
- should mislead anyone or that there should be found among
- the members of our profession those who would reiterate
- and accentuate it without first subjecting it to the most
- critical tests, but such is the fact." [Quoted in Lennard
- et. al., op. cit. p. 1079]
-
- 1903 The composition of Coca-Cola is changed, caffeine replacing
- the cocaine it contained until this time. {Musto, op. cit.
- p. 43]
-
- 1904 Charles Lyman, president of the International Reform Bureau,
- petitions the President of the United States "to induce
- Great Britain to release China from the enforced opium
- traffic. . . .We need not recall in detail that China
- prohibited the sale of opium except as a medicine, until
- the sale was forced upon that country by Great Britian
- in the opium war of 1840." [Quoted in Crafts et al., op.
- cit. p. 230]
-
- 1905 Senator Henry W. Blair, in a letter to Rev. Wilbur F.
- Crafts, Superintendent of the International Reform
- Bureau: "The temperance movement must include all poisonous
- substances which create unnatural appetite, and international
- prohibition is the goal." [Quoted in ibid.]
-
- 1906 The first Pure Food and Drug Act becomes law; until its
- enactment, it was possible to buy, in stores or by mail order
- medicines containing morphine, cocaine, or heroin, and without
- their being so labeled.
-
- 1906 *Squibb's Materia Medical* lists heroin as "a remedy of much
- value . . . is is also used as a mild anodyne and as a
- substitute for morphine in combatting the morphine habit.
- [Quoted in Lennard et al., op. cit. p. 1079]
-
- 1909 The United States prohibits the importation of smoking
- opium. [Lawrence Kolb, *Drug Addiction*, pp. 145-146]
-
- 1910 Dr. Hamilton Wright, considered by some the father of U.S.
- anti-narcotics laws, reports that American contractors give
- cocaine to their Negro employees to get more work out of
- them. [Musto, op. cit. p. 180]
-
- 1912 A writer in *Century* magazine proclaims: "The relation
- of tobacco, especially in the form of cigarettes, and
- alcohol and opium is a very close one. . . . Morphine is
- the legitimate consequence of alcohol, and alcohol is the
- legitimate consequence of tobacco. Cigarettes, drink,
- opium, is the logical and regular series." And a physician
- warns: "[There is] no energy more destructive of soul, mind,
- and body, or more subversive of good morals than the
- cigarette. The fight against the cigarette is a fight for
- civilization." [Sinclar, op. cit., p. 180]
-
- 1912 The first international Opium Convention meets at the
- Hague, and recommends various measures for the international
- control of the trade in opium. Supsequent Opium Conventions
- are held in 1913 and 1914.
-
- 1912 Phenobarbital is introduced into therapeutics under the trade
- name of Luminal.
-
- 1913 The Sixteenth Amendment, creating the legal authority for
- federal income tax, is enacted. Between 1870 and 1915,
- the tax on liquor provides from one-half to two-thirds
- of the whole of the internal revenue of the United States,
- amounting, after the turn of the century, to about $200
- million annually. The Sixteenth Amendment thus makes possible,
- just seven years later, the Eighteenth Amendment.
-
- 1914 Dr. Edward H Williams cites Dr. Christopher Kochs "Most
- of the attack upon white women of the South are the
- direct result of the cocaine crazed Negro brain."
- Dr. Williams concluded that " . . Negro cocaine fiends
- are now a known Southern menace."
- [New York Times, Feb. 8, 1914]
-
-
- 1914 The Harrison Narcotic Act is enacted, controlling the
- sale of opium and opium derivatives, and cocaine.
-
- 1914 Congressman Richard P. Hobson of Alabama, urging a prohibition
- amendment to the Constitution, asserts: "Liquor will actually
- make a brute out of a Negro, causing him to commit unnatural
- crimes. The effect is the same on the white man, though
- the white man being further evolved it takes longer time
- to reduce him to the same level." Negro leaders join
- the crusade against alcohol. [Ibid., p. 29]
-
- 1916 The *Pharmacopoeia of the United States* drops whiskey and
- brandy from its list of drugs. Four years later, American
- physicians begin prescribing these "drugs" in quantities
- never before prescribed by doctors.
-
- 1917 The president of the American Medical Association endorses
- national prohibition. The House of Delegates of the
- Association passes a resolution stating: "Resolved, The
- American Medical Association opposes the use of alcohol
- as a beverage; and be it further Resolved, That the use
- of alcohol as a therapeutic agent should be discourages."
- By 1928, physicians make an estimated $40,000,000 annually
- by writing prescriptions for whiskey." [Ibid. p. 61]
-
- 1917 The American Medical Association passes a resolution declaring
- that "sexual continence is compatible with health and is
- the best prevention of venereal infections," and one of
- the methods for controlling syphilis is by controlling alcohol.
- Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels prohibits the practice
- of distributing contraceptives to sailors bound on shore
- leave, and Congress passes laws setting up "dry and decent
- zones" around military camps. "Many barkeepers are fined
- for selling liquor to men in uniform. Only at Coney Island
- could soldiers and sailors change into the grateful anonymity
- of bathing suits and drink without molestation from patriotic
- passers-by." [Ibid. pp. 117-118]
-
- 1918 The Anti-Saloon League calls the "liquor traffic" "un-American,"
- pro-German, crime-producing, food-wasting, youth-corrupting,
- home-wrecking, [and] treasonable." [Quoted in ibid. p. 121]
-
- 1919 The Eighteenth (Prohibition) Amendment is added to the U.S.
- Constitution. It is repealed in 1933.
-
- 1920 The U.S. Department of Agriculture publishes a pamphlet
- urging Americans to grow cannabis (marijuana) as a profitable
- undertaking. [David F. Musto, An historical perspective on
- legal and medical responses to substance abuse, *Villanova
- Law Review*, 18:808-817 (May), 1973; p. 816]
-
- 1920-1933 The use of alcohol is prohibited in the United States.
- In 1932 alone, approximately 45,000 persons receive jail
- sentences for alcohol offenses. During the first eleven
- years of the Volstead Act, 17,971 persons are appointed
- to the Prohibition Bureau. 11,982 are terminated "without
- prejudice," and 1,604 are dismissed for bribery, extortion,
- theft, falsification of records, conspiracy, forgery, and
- perjury. [Fort, op. cit. p. 69]
-
- 1921 The U.S. Treasury Departmen issues regulations outlining
- the treatment of addiction permitted under the Harrison
- Act. In Syracuse, New York, the narcotics clinic doctors
- report curing 90 per cent of their addicts. [Lindensmith,
- *The Addict and the Law*, p. 141]
-
- 1921 Thomas S. Blair, M.D., chief of the Bureau of Drug Control
- of the Pennsylvania Department of Health, publishes a paper
- in the *Journal of the American Medical Association* in which
- he characterizes the Indian peyote religion a "habit
- indulgence in certain cactaceous plants," calls the belief
- system "superstition" and those who sell peyote "dope vendors,"
- and urges the passage of a bill in Congress that would prohibit
- the use of peyote among the Indian tribes of the Southwest.
- He concludes with this revealing plea for abolition: "The
- great difficulty in suppressing this habit among the Indians
- arises from the fact that the commercial interests involved
- in the peyote traffic are strongly entrenched, and they
- exploit the Indian. . . . Added to this is the superstition
- of the Indian who believes in the Peyote Church. As soon
- as an effort is made to suppress peyote, the cry is raised
- that it is unconstitutional to do so and is an invasion of
- religious liberty. Suppose the Negros of the South had
- Cocaine Church!" [Thomas S. Blair, Habit indulgence in
- certain cactaceous plants among the Indians, *Journal
- of the American Medical Association*, 76:1033-1034 (April
- 9), 1921; p. 1034]
-
- 1921 Cigarettes are illegal in fourteen states, and ninety-two
- anti-cigarette bills are pending in twenty-eight states.
- Young women are expelled from college for smoking cigarettes.
- [Brecher et al., op. cit. p. 492]
-
- 1921 The Council of the American Medical Association refuses
- to confirm the Associations 1917 Resolution on alcohol.
- In the first six months after the enactment of the Volstead
- Act, more than 15,000 physicians and 57,000 druggests and
- drug manufacturers apply for licenses to prescribe and sell
- liquor. [Sinclair, op. cit., p. 492]
-
- 1921 Alfred C. Prentice, M.D. a member of the Committee on
- Narcotic Drugs of the American Medical Association, declares
- "Public opinion regarding the vice of drug addiction has
- been deliberately and consistently corrupted through
- propaganda in both the medical and lay press. . . . The
- shallow pretense that drug addiction is a 'disease'. . . .
- has been asserted and urged in volumes of 'literature'
- by self-styled 'specialists.'" [Alfred C Prentice, The
- Problem of the narcotic drug addict, *Journal of the
- American Medical Association*, 76:1551-1556; p. 1553]
-
- 1924 The manufacture of heroin is prohibited in the United
- States.
-
- 1925 Robert A. Schless: "I believe that most drug addiction today
- is due directly to the Harrison Anti-Narcotic Act, which
- forbids the sale of narcotics without a physician's
- prescription. . . . Addicts who are broke act as *agent
- provocateurs* for the peddlers, being rewarded by gifts
- of heroin or credit for supplies. The Harrison Act made
- the drug peddler, and the drug peddler makes drug addicts."
- [Robert A. Schless, The drug addict, *American Mercury*,
- 4:196-199 (Feb.), 1925; p. 198]
-
- 1928 In a nationwide radio broadcast entitled "The Struggle
- of Mankind Against Its Deadlist Foe," celebrating the
- second annual Narcotic Education Week, Richmond P. Hobson,
- prohibition crusader and anti-narcotics propagandist,
- declares: "Suppose it were announced that there were more
- than a million lepers among our people. Think what a shock
- the announcement would produce! Yet drug addiction is far
- more incurable than leprosy, far more tragic to its victims,
- and is spreading like a moral and physical scourge. . . .
- Most of the daylight robberies, daring holdups, cruel murders
- and similar crimes of violence are now known to be committed
- chiefly by drug addicts, who constitute the primary cause
- of our alarming crime wave. Drug addiction is more
- communicable and less curable that leprosy. . . .
- Upon the issue hangs the perpetuation of civilization,
- the destiny of the world, and the future of the human
- race." [Quoted in Musto, *The American Disease*, p. 191]
-
- 1928 It is estimated that in Germany one out of every hundred
- physicians is a morphine addict, consuming 0.1 grams of
- the alkaloid or more per day. [Eric Hesse, *Narcotics and
- Drug Addiction*, p. 41]
-
- 1929 About one gallon of denatured industrial in ten is
- diverted into bootleg liquor. About forty Americans
- per million die each year from drinking illegal alcohol,
- mainly as a result of methyl (wood) alcohol poisoning.
- [Sinclare, op. cit. p. 201]
-
- 1930 The Federal Bureau of Narcotics is formed. Many of its
- agents, including its first commissioner, Harry J. Anslinger,
- are former prohibition agents.
-
- 1935 The American Medical Association passes a resolution declaring
- that "alcoholics are valid patients." [Quoted in Neil Kessel
- and Henry Walton, *Alcoholism*, p. 21]
-
- 1936 The Pan-American Coffee Burreau is organized to promote
- coffee use in the U.S. Between 1938 and 1941 coffee
- consumption increased 20%. From 1914 to 1938 consumption
- had increased 20%. [Coffee, *Encyclopedia Britannica* (1949),
- Vol. 5, p. 975A]
-
- 1937 Shortly before the Marijuana Tax Act, Commissioner Harry
- J. Anslinger writes: "How many murders, suicides, robberies,
- criminal assaults, hold-ups, burglaries, and deeds of
- maniacal insanity it [marijuana] causes each year, especially
- among the young, can only be conjectured." [Quoted in
- John Kaplan, *Marijuana*, p. 92]
-
- 1937 The Marijuana Tax Act is enacted.
-
- 1938 Since the enactment of the Harrison Act in 1914, 25,000
- physicians have been arraigned on narcotics charges, and
- 3,000 have served penitentiary sentences. [Kolb, op. cit.
- p. 146]
-
- 1938 Dr. Albert Hoffman, a chemist at Sandoz Laboratories in
- Basle, Switzerland, synthesizes LSD. Five years later he
- inadvertently ingests a small amount of it, and observes and
- reports effects on himself.
-
- 1941 Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek orders the complete suppression
- of the poppy; laws are enacted providing the death penalty
- for anyone guilty of cultivating the poppy, manufacturing
- opium, or offering it for sale. [Lindensmith, *The Addict
- and the Law*, 198]
-
- 1943 Colonel J.M. Phalen, editor of the *Military Surgeon*,
- declares in an editorial entitled "The Marijuana Bugaboo":
- "The smoking of the leaves, flowers, and seeds of Cannibis
- sativa is no more harmful than the smoking of tobacco. . . .
- It is hoped that no witch hunt will be instituted in the
- military service over a problem that does not exist."
- [Quoted in ibid. p. 234]
-
- 1946 According to some estimates there are 40,000,000 opium smokers
- in China. [Hesse, op. cit. p. 24]
-
-
- 1949 Ludwig von Mises, leading modern free-market economist
- and social philosopher: "Opium and morphine are certainly
- dangerous, habit-forming drugs. But once the principle
- is admitted that is the duty of government to protect
- the individual against his own foolishness, no serious
- objections can be advanced against further encroachments.
- A good case could be made out in favor of the prohibition
- of alcohol and nicotine. And why limit the governments
- benevolent providence to the protection of the individual's
- body only? Is is not the harm a man can inflect on his
- mind and soul even more disastrous than any bodily
- evils? Why not prevent him from reading bad books and
- seeing bad plays, from looking at bad paintings and statues
- and listening to bad music? The mischief done by bad
- ideologies, surely, is much more pernicious, both for
- the individual and for the whole society, than that
- done by narcotic drugs." [Ludwig von Mises, *Human Action*,
- pp. 728-729]
-
- 1951 According to United Nations estimates, there are approximately
- 200 million marijuana users in the world, the major places
- being India, Egypt, North Africa, Mexico, and the United
- States. [Jock Young, *The Drug Takers*, p. 11]
-
- 1951 Twenty thousand pound of opium, three hundred pounds of
- heroin, and various opium-smoking devices are publicly
- burned in Canton China. Thirty-seven opium addicts
- are executed in the southwest of China. [Margulies,
- China has no drug problem--why? *Parade*, 0ct. 15 1972,
- p. 22]
-
- 1954 Four-fifths of the French people questioned about wine
- assert that wine is "good for one's health," and one quarter
- hold that it is "indispensable." It is estimated that a
- third of the electorate in France receives all or part of
- its income from the production or sale of alcoholic
- beverages; and that there is one outlet for every forty-
- five inhabitants. [Kessel and Walton, op. cit. pp. 45, 73]
-
- 1955 The Prasidium des Deutschen Arztetages declares: "Treatment
- of the drug addict should be effected in the closed sector
- of a psychiatric institution. Ambulatory treatment is useless
- and in conflict, moreover, with principles of medical
- ethics." The view is quoted approvingly, as representative
- of the opinion of "most of the authors recommending
- commitment to an institution," by the World Health
- Organization in 1962. [World Health Organization,
- *The Treatment of Drug Addicts*, p. 5]
-
- 1955 The Shah of Iran prohibits the cultivation and use of opium,
- used in the country for thousands of years; the prohibition
- creates a flourishing illicit market in opium. In 1969
- the prohibition is lifted, opium growing is resumed under
- state inspection, and more than 110,000 persons receive
- opium from physicians and pharmacies as "registered addicts."
- [Henry Kamm, They shoot opium smugglers in Iran, but . . ."
- *The New York Times Magazine*, Feb. 11, 1973, pp. 42-45]
-
- 1956 The Narcotics Control Act in enacted; it provides the death
- penalty, if recommended by the jury, for the sale of heroin
- to a person under eighteen by one over eighteen. [Lindesmith,
- *The Addict and the Law*, p. 26]
-
- 1958 Ten percent of the arable land in Italy is under viticulture;
- two million people earn their living wholly or partly from
- the production or sale of wine. [Kessel and Walton, op. cit.,
- p. 46]
-
- 1960 The United States report to the United Nations Commission on
- Narcotic Drugs for 1960 states: "There were 44,906 addicts
- in the United States on December 31, 1960 . . ." [Lindesmith,
- *The Addict and The Law*, p. 100]
-
- 1961 The United Nations' "Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs
- of 10 March 1961" is ratified. Among the obligations of
- the signatory states are the following: "Art. 42. Know
- users of drugs and persons charges with an offense under
- this Law may be committed by an examining magistrate
- to a nursing home. . . . Rules shall be also laid down
- for the treatment in such nursing homes of unconvicted
- drug addicts and dangerous alcoholics." [Charles Vaille,
- A model law for the application of the Single Convention
- on Narcotic Drugs, 1961, *United Nations Bulletin on
- Narcotics*, 21:1-12 (April-June), 1961]
-
- 1963 Tobacco sales total $8.08 billion, of which $3.3 billion go
- to federal, state, and local taxes. A news release from
- the tobacco industry proudly states: "Tobacco products
- pass across sales counters more frequently than anything
- else--except money." [Tobacco: After publicity surge
- Surgeon General's Report seems to have little enduring
- effect, *Science*, 145:1021-1022 (Sept. 4), 1964; p. 1021]
-
- 1964 The British Medical Association, in a Memorandum of Evidence
- to the Standing Medical Advisory Committee's Special Sub-
- committee on Alcoholism, declares: "We feel that in some very
- bad cases, compulsory detention in hospital offer the only
- hope of successful treatment. . . . We believe that some
- alcoholics would welcome compulsory removal and detention
- in hospital until treatment is completed." [Quoted in
- Kessel and Walton, op. cit. p. 126]
-
- 1964 An editorial in *The New York Times* calls attention
- to the fact that "the Government continues to be the tobacco
- industry's biggest booster. The Department of Agriculture
- lost $16 million in supporting the price of tobacco in the
- last fiscal year, and stands to loose even more because it
- has just raised the subsidy that tobacco growers will get
- on their 1964 crop. At the same time, the Food for Peace
- program is getting rid of surplus stocks of tobacco abroad."
- [Editorial, Bigger agricultural subsidies. . .even more for
- tobacco, *The New York Times*, Feb. 1, 1964, p. 22]
-
- 1966 Sen. Warren G. Magnuson makes public a program, sponsored by
- the Agriculture Department, to subsidize "attempts to increase
- cigarette consumption abroad. . . . The Department is paying
- to stimulate cigarette smoking in a travelogue for $210,000
- to subsidize cigarette commercials in Japan, Thailand,
- and Austria." An Agriculture Department spokesman
- corroborates that "the two programs were prepared under
- a congressional authorization to expand overseas markets
- for U.S. farm commodities." [Edwin B. Haakinsom, Senator
- shocked at U.S. try to hike cigarette use abroad,
- *Syracuse Herald-American*, Jan. 9, 1966, p. 2]
-
- 1966 Congress enacts the "Narcotics Addict Rehabilitation Act,
- inaugurating a federal civil commitment program for addicts.
-
-
- 1966 C. W. Sandman, Jr. chairman of the New Jersey Narcotic Drug
- Study Commission, declares that LSD is "the greatest threat
- facing the country today . . . more dangerous than the
- Vietnam War." [Quoted in Brecher et al., op. cit. p. 369]
-
- 1967 New York State's "Narcotics Addiction Control Program"
- goes into effect. It is estimated to cost $400 million
- in three years, and is hailed by Government Rockefeller
- as the "start of an unending war . . ." Under the new
- law, judges are empowered to commit addicts for compulsory
- treatment for up to five years. [Murray Schumach, Plan for
- addicts will open today: Governor hails start, *The New
- York Times*, April 1, 1967]
-
- 1967 The tobacco industry in the United States spends an estimated
- $250 million on advertising smoking. [Editorial, It
- depends on you, *Health News* (New York State), 45:1
- (March), 1968]
-
- 1968 The U.S. tobacco industry has gross sales of $8 billion.
- Americans smoke 544 billion cigarettes. [Fort, op. cit.
- p. 21]
-
- 1968 Canadians buy almost 3 billion aspirin tablets and approximately
- 56 million standard does of amphetamines. About 556 standard
- doses of barbituates are also produced or imported for
- consumption in Canada. [Canadian Government's Commission
- of Inquiry, *The Non-Medical Uses of Drugs*, p. 184
-
- 1968 Six to seven percent of all prescriptions written under the
- British National Health Service are for barbituates; it is
- estimated that about 500,000 British are regular users.
- [Young, op. cit. p. 25]
-
- 1968 Brooklyn councilman Julius S. Moskowitz charges that the
- work of New York City's Addiction Services Agency, under
- its retiring Commissioner, Dr. Efren Ramierez, was a
- "fraud," and that "not a single addict has been cured."
- [Charles G. Bennett, Addiction agency called a "fraud,"
- *New York Times*, Dec. 11, 1968, p. 47]
-
- 1969 U.S. production and value of some medical chemicals:
- barbituates: 800,000 pounds, $2.5 million; aspirin
- (exclusive of salicylic acid) 37 milliion pounds,
- value "withheld to avoid disclosing figures for
- individual producers"; salicylic acid: 13 million
- pounds, $13 million; tranquilizers: 1.5 million
- pounds, $7 million. [*Statistical Abstracts of the
- United States*, 1971 92nd Annual Edition, p. 75]
-
- 1969 The parents of 6,000 secondary-level students in
- Clifton, New Jersey, are sent letters by the Board
- of Education asking permission to conduct saliva tests
- on their children to determine whether or not they use
- marijuana. [Saliva tests asked for Jersey youths on
- marijuana use, *New York Times*, Apr. 11, 1969, p. 12]
-
- 1970 Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Nobel Laureate in Medicine and
- Physiology, in reply to being asked what he would do if
- he were twenty today: "I would share with my classmates
- rejection of the whole world as it is--all of it. Is there
- any point in studying and work? Fornication--at least that
- is something good. What else is there to do? Fornicate
- and take drugs against the terrible strain of idiots who
- govern the world." [Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, in *The New
- York Times*, Feb. 20, 1970, quoted in Mary Breastead, *Oh!
- Sex Education!*, p. 359]
-
- 1971 President Nixon declares that "America's Public Enemy
- No. 1 is drug abuse." In a message to Congress, the President
- calls for the creation of a Special Action Office of Drug
- Abuse Prevention. [The New Public Enemy No. 1, *Time*,
- June 28, 1971, p. 18]
-
- 1971 On June 30, 1971, President Cvedet Sunay of Turkey decrees
- that all poppy cultivation and opium production will be
- forbidden beginning in the fall of 1972. [Patricia M Wald
- et al. (Eds.), *Dealing with Drug Abuse*, p. 257]
-
- 1972 Myles J. Ambrose, Special Assistant Attorney General of
- the United States: "As of 1960, the Bureau of Narcotics
- estimated that we had somewhere in the neighborhood
- of 55,000 addicts . . . they estimate now the figure is
- 560,000. [Quoted in *U.S. News and World Report*, April
- 3, 1972, p. 38]
-
- 1972 The Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs proposes
- restricting the use of barbituates on the ground that they
- "are more dangerous than heroin." [Restrictions proposed
- on barbituate sales, *Syracuse Herald-Journal*, Mar 16,
- 1972, p. 32]
-
- 1972 The house votes 366 to 0 to authorize "a $1 billion,
- three-year federal attack on drug abuse." [$1 billion
- voted for drug fight, *Syracuse Herald-Journal*, March
- 16, 1972, p. 32]
-
- 1972 At the Bronx house of corrections, out of a total of 780
- inmates, approximately 400 are given tranquilizers such
- as Valium, Elavil, Thorazine, and Librium. "'I think they
- [the inmates] would be doing better without some of the
- medication,' said Capt. Robert Brown, a correctional officer.
- He said that in a way the medications made his job harder
- . . . rather than becoming calm, he said, an inmate who
- had become addicted to his medication 'will do anything
- when he can't get it.'" [Ronald Smothers, Muslims: What's
- behind the violence, *The New York Times*, Dec. 26, 1972,
- p. 18]
-
- 1972 In England, the pharmacy cost of heroin is $.04 per grain
- (60 mg.), or $.00067 per mg. In the United States, the
- street price is $30 to $90 per grain, or $.50 or $1.50
- per mg. [Wald et al. (Eds.) op. cit. p. 28]
-
- 1973 A nationwide Gallop poll reveals that 67 percent
- of the adults interviewed "support the proposal of New York
- Governer Nelson Rockefeller that all sellers of hard drugs
- be given life imprisonment without possibility of parole."
- [George Gallup, Life for pushers, *Syracuse Herald-American*,
- Feb. 11, 1973]
-
- 1973 Michael R. Sonnenreich, Executive Director of the National
- Commission on Marijuana and Drug Abuse, declares: "About
- four years ago we spent a total of $66.4 million for the
- entire federal effort in the drug abuse area. . . .
- This year we have spent $796.3 million and the budget
- estimates that have been submitted indicate that we will
- exceed the $1 billion mark. When we do so, we become,
- for want of a better term, a drug abuse industrial
- complex.: [Michael R. Sonnenreich, Discussion of the
- Final Report of the National Commission on Marijuana
- and Drug Abuse, *Villanova Law Review*, 18:817-827 (May),
- 1973; p. 818]
-
- 197? Operation Intercept. All vehicles returning from Mexico
- are checked by Nixon's order. Long lines occur and, as
- usual no dent is made in drug traffic.
-
- 1981 Congress ammends the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act, which
- forbids the armed forces to enforce civil law, so that
- the military could provide surveillance planes and ships
- for interdiction purposes.
-
- 1984 U.S. busts 10,000 pounds of marijuana on farms in Mexico.
- The seizures, made on five farms in an isolated section of
- Chihuahua state, suggest a 70 percent increase in estimates
- that total U.S. consumption was 13,000 to 14,000 tons in 1982.
- Furthermore, the seizures add up to nearly eight times the
- 1300 tons that officials had calculated Mexico produced
- in 1983. [the San Francisco Chronicle, Saturday,
- November 24, 1984]
-
- 1985 Pentagon spends $40 million on interdiction.
-
- 1986 The Communist Party boss, Boris Yeltsin said that the
- Moscow school system is rife with drug addiction,
- drunkenness and principles that take bribes. He
- said that drug addiction has become such a problem
- that there are 3700 registered addicts in Moscow. [The
- San Francisco Chronicle, Sept. 22, 1986, p. 12]
-
-
-