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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Thu Jan 10, 2013, 06:32 AM Jan 2013

Retired Judge Reveals the Surprising Rationale for America's Extremist Drug Laws [View all]

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/retired-judge-reveals-surprising-rationale-americas-extremist-drug-laws



What follows is an excerpt from " Disrobed: An Inside Look at the Life and Work of a Federal Trial Judge" (Thomson Reuters Westlaw 2012), a book where the author tries to explain life on the bench and the unknown parts of our legal system.

The first anti-drug law in our country was a local law in San Francisco passed in 1875. It outlawed the smoking of opium and was directed at the Chinese because opium smoking was a peculiarly Chinese habit. It was believed that Chinese men were luring white women to have sex in opium dens. In 1909 Congress made opium smoking a federal offense by enacting the Anti-Opium Act. It reinforced Chinese racism by carving out an exception for drinking and injecting tinctures of opiates that were popular among whites.

Cocaine regulations also were triggered by racial prejudice. Cocaine use was associated with blacks just as opium use was associated with the Chinese. Newspaper articles bore racially charged headlines linking cocaine with violent, anti-social behavior by blacks. A 1914 New York Times article proclaimed: " Negro Cocaine 'Fiends' Are a New Southern Menace: Murder and Insanity Increasing Among Lower Class Blacks Because They Have Taken to 'Sniffing.'" A Literary Digest article from the same year claimed that "most of the attacks upon women in the South are the direct result of the cocaine-crazed Negro brain." It comes as no surprise that 1914 was also the year Congress passed the Harrison Tax Act, effectively outlawing opium and cocaine.

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Fascinating. So racism and anti-drug laws have gone together since 1875. tclambert Jan 2013 #1
Surprising to those who have paid no attention to the issue Fumesucker Jan 2013 #2
Cocaine use is the whole story of Porgy and Bess Demeter Jan 2013 #3
porgy and bess is one of my favs -- what voices! xchrom Jan 2013 #5
interesting article... Locrian Jan 2013 #4
it's well known that the modern "war on drugs" was a catchphrase cooked up in the Nixon Whitehouse greenman3610 Jan 2013 #6
Jello Biafra also Berlin Expat Jan 2013 #7
DURec. thanks for posting xchrom Tuesday Afternoon Jan 2013 #8
And then there's this...."Secret ties between CIA, drugs revealed"..... OldDem2012 Jan 2013 #9
i can't recommend the book "Dark Alliance" enough frylock Jan 2013 #18
You know what? I don't care. randome Jan 2013 #10
REALLY!? Less drugs goes without saying, that's not the point of the OP though uponit7771 Jan 2013 #16
Some of us can imagine how much we would benefit from less guns Fumesucker Jan 2013 #23
The same may be said of Prohibition malthaussen Jan 2013 #11
Yep, I think class also plays a part OnionPatch Jan 2013 #17
while making money on the product whether it's legal or illegal. drugs = income source, power HiPointDem Jan 2013 #22
In all honesty its not surprising or a new revelation kydo Jan 2013 #12
I believe; greiner3 Jan 2013 #13
Isn't this what Jesse Jackson pointed out with the different penalties between powder Baitball Blogger Jan 2013 #14
Not surprising at all. sadbear Jan 2013 #15
Just like Alcohol Prohibtion had racist underpinnings. MicaelS Jan 2013 #19
Andrew Sinclair makes many of the same points... malthaussen Jan 2013 #21
Anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic. Manifestor_of_Light Jan 2013 #20
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