| NIDA: Themes in Chemical Prohibition, William L. White, 1979 http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/History/ticp.html
 
2. The Drug is Identified as
Solely Responsible for Many Problems in the Culture, i.e.,
Crime, Violence, Insanity. 
 
| 
|   |  | ''Hopelessly and incurably insane, 
a condition caused by the drug 
marihuana'' -
 Reefer Madness |  | The attributing of crimes of violence, sexual assault, 
insanity, moral decay, etc. have been an integral part of
efforts to prohibit the currently illicit drugs. A key element
in this theme is the arbitrary designation of
"good" and "evil" drugs with 
evil drugs possessing powers that can overwhelm all efforts at 
human control. 
"The
 Devil made him do it" 
is changed 
to "the drug made him do it." This aspect of 
prohibitionist philosophy is so often reported, there is no need 
to belabor the point. A few illustrative examples will be 
outlined. |    A prohibitionist movement, which was short lived but quite 
capable of attributing the evils of the world and the 
devastation of human beings to its particular despised chemical,
gave wide circulation to a statement by Sir Clifford Allbut,
M.D. and Walter Dixon, M.D. which appeared in A System of
Medicine in 1909. At the time Sir Clifford was a professor of
internal medicine at the University of Cambridge in England and 
Dr. Dixon was a professor of pharmacology at Kings College in 
London. An excerpt follows:
 The substance referred to is 
coffee,
and the statement was 
circulated for a short time in an attempt to garner support for
the prohibition of coffee. The anti-tobacco forces were much better organized (with 
cigarettes still illegal in 14 states in 192121, and their
pronouncements received wide distribution. The following
statements are representative of those used by the anti-tobacco
forces from 1920 to 1935, Louis Lewin, an eminent authority on 
pharmacology, wrote the following in 1924 which received wide 
distribution:
 | The juvenile female flower of the nation, the 'Emancipata 
    femans vulgaris' (Lewin's term for the feminists of his day) 
    who should bear fruit in time to come. . frequently fails to
    do so because the foolish consumption of cigarettes has
    impregnated the sexual organs with smoke and nicotine and
    keeps them in a state of irritation and inflammation. 
    22 | 
 |  Few today remember the anti-tobacco campaigns of the Nazis
 | 
 A 1930 issue of the National Advocate reported a doctor's 
opinion that "Sixty percent of all babies born of mothers 
who are habitual smokers die before they are two years 
old."23 An anti-tobacco publication of 
1931 included the following:
 | Fifty percent of our insanity is inherited from parents 
    who were users of tobacco; sometimes the victim is a smoker
    himself, which hastens it on. Thirty percent of insanity
    cases are caused directly from cigarette smoking and the use
    of tobacco. . . 24 | 
 Several anti-tobacco publications of the 1920's quoted New 
York City Magistrate to illustrate the crime producing
properties of tobacco:
 | Ninety-nine out of a hundred boys between the ages of 10 
    and 17 who came before me charged with a crime have their 
    fingers disfigured by yellow cigarette stains. 25,26 | 
 Tobacco was also reported to be the hidden cause of increased
suicides in the early 1900's: If we 
look
at the few years preceding passage of the Marijuana Tax Act in 1937,
we see equally vociferous statements
on the evils and destructiveness of marihuana. An advertisement
distributed by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics in 1935 read as
follows:
  Beware! Young and Old -- People in All Walks of Life! This
    (picture of a marijuana cigarette) may be handed to you by
    the friendly stranger. It contains the Killer Drug
    'Marijuana' - a powerful narcotic in which lurks Murder!
    Insanity! Death! 28 In 1936 the International Narcotic Education Association in 
conjunction with the Federal Narcotics Bureau published
Marihuana or Indian Hemp and Its Preparations which included
statements such as:
Prolonged use of marihuana frequently develops a delirious 
    rage which. . . sometimes leads to high crimes such as 
    assault and murder. Hence marihuana has been called the 
    'killer drug.' The habitual use of this narcotic poison 
    always causes a very marked deterioration and sometimes
    produces insanity. Hence marihuana is frequently called
    'loco weed.' . . Marihuana often gives man the lust to kill
    unreasonably without motive. Many cases of assault, rape,
    robbery, and murder are traced to the use of marihuana.
    29
    [see also] Such reports were not limited to the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics. An article in the 1936 March issue of Scientific
American included the following:
 | Marijuana produces a wide variety of symptoms in the user, 
    including hilarity, swooning, sexual excitement. Combined
    with intoxicants, it often makes the smoker vicious, with a
    desire to fight and kill. 30 | 
 
|   |  |   Modern prohibitionist propaganda employs
time-tested technique and imagery.
In this 2006 ad, parents are informed that marijuana kills.
Compare with similar scenes from "Reefer Madness", 1936.
[government anti-drug PSA, "Rewind", Mediacampaign.org 
Real Movie, 
AVI
]
 |  
|   |  |   Scenes from "Reefer Madness", 1936.
A puff of marijuana leads to the death of the young and innocent Mary Lane.
 |  | 
 
 | U.S. Congressman Mark Souder insists that marijuana kills, 2007: |  | 
Tucker Carlson: ... and how many people died from marijuana overdoses last year?
 
Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN):
If you count the amount of crime associated with marijuana...
 
Carlson: No, no, just marijuana overdoses. Just the drug itself, which you said is like cocaine now. How many people died from it?
 
Souder: I don't... 65 percent of emergency room admissions for drug abuse are marijuana.
 
Carlson: But did anyone die that you know of?
 
Souder: Presumably so, thousands have died, the only question is, you said "overdose" --that isn't even most of the deaths related to prescription drug or to cocaine or heroin -- there's a whole range of drug crimes and so on. I don't know the number of overdoses.
Marijuana is often managed, with meth -- no drug user is a single drug user so marijuana is often in the mix of most deaths so it would be very hard to separate what's what. A marijuana user is very seldom just a casual marijuana user (except in the early stages). They're often go[ing to be] 
polydrug [abusers].
 
[source: Drug WarRant, Feb. 2007]
 | 
 |  Up until the end of prohibition of alcohol in 1933, there was 
a great deal of overlap between those participating in various 
prohibitionist movements. All of these persons and groups shared 
an anti-hedonistic ethic which provided a united front 
politically in their efforts to legally prohibit all 
pleasure-producing chemicals as well as other pleasurable 
nonchemical pastimes of humans, i.e., 
dancing, 
jazz
music,  
gambling, 
etc. The years following the end of alcohol 
prohibition saw the beginning distinctions between good drugs 
and evil drugs. Those drugs within the experience of the 
majority of Americans were considered good; those drugs which 
tended to be used by minority and fringe groups tended to be 
defined as evil. Thus alcohol, nicotine, and caffeine (coffee) 
began to become increasingly integrated into the very fabric of 
American life, whereas cocaine, opium, heroin, and subsequently 
marihuana and the hallucinogens continued to be defined as evil 
- physically, emotionally, and morally devastating to the 
individual and unquestionably destructive to the culture. This 
definition of certain chemicals as innately good or evil was to 
germinate from 1933 into the 1960's where we would witness a 
giant eruption of this issue as adult America was forced 
to attempt to articulate to their own children the culturally 
inherited
distinction between good drugs (alcohol) and evil
drugs (marihuana, etc.).
 |