News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Column: How The Weed Was Won |
Title: | US CA: Column: How The Weed Was Won |
Published On: | 2010-12-30 |
Source: | Sacramento News & Review (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2011-03-09 17:47:24 |
HOW THE WEED WAS WON
This Stuff Will Make You See Hippos.
Whatever your stance on Proposition 19, the history of marijuana and
legalization has been a long, strange trip. A little while ago
Capital Public Radio aired an interview with Julie Holland, author of
the The Pot Book: A Complete Guide to Cannabis.
In the interview, Holland touched on marijuana's strange back story.
For one, she said part of the initial federal crackdown on cannabis in
1937 was related to the repeal of Prohibition in 1933. According to
Holland, after Prohibition, federal agents needed jobs. Also, the head
of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics was looking for a political
platform, and Bogarted that joint, so to speak.
So did Hollywood, making a number of hide-the-kids morality movies
about cannabis in the 1930s, notably Reefer Madness, though the movies
have the unintended effect of making one want narcotics.
As part of that anti-cannabis campaign, marijuana was also alleged to
fuel jazz-era hedonism (particularly by black jazz musicians) and to
be smoked by Mexican migrants as the supposedly crazy-making "loco
weed."
Other random marijuana facts:
Early slang for marijuana may have been a deliberate attempt to
stigmatize the drug. Holland calls the word marijuana, or marihuna, a
"slur" based on its Mexican Spanish origins. Pot is also based on a
Mexican Spanish word.
George Washington, the first-ahem-POTUS, grew hemp, probably for
agriculture, but given his bad teeth and spotting of hippos in the
Potomac, maybe he hemped himself.
Reflecting the knee-jerk fear marijuana can inspire, the word assassin
comes from the Arabic word hashshishin, or "hash smokers," a word
first recorded by Shakespeare in Macbeth. The jury is still out on
whether the Bard inhaled, though it might explain the Weird Sisters
and their line: "Fair is foul, and foul is fair: Hover through the fog
and filthy air."
Compiled from Cull-de-Sac.
This Stuff Will Make You See Hippos.
Whatever your stance on Proposition 19, the history of marijuana and
legalization has been a long, strange trip. A little while ago
Capital Public Radio aired an interview with Julie Holland, author of
the The Pot Book: A Complete Guide to Cannabis.
In the interview, Holland touched on marijuana's strange back story.
For one, she said part of the initial federal crackdown on cannabis in
1937 was related to the repeal of Prohibition in 1933. According to
Holland, after Prohibition, federal agents needed jobs. Also, the head
of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics was looking for a political
platform, and Bogarted that joint, so to speak.
So did Hollywood, making a number of hide-the-kids morality movies
about cannabis in the 1930s, notably Reefer Madness, though the movies
have the unintended effect of making one want narcotics.
As part of that anti-cannabis campaign, marijuana was also alleged to
fuel jazz-era hedonism (particularly by black jazz musicians) and to
be smoked by Mexican migrants as the supposedly crazy-making "loco
weed."
Other random marijuana facts:
Early slang for marijuana may have been a deliberate attempt to
stigmatize the drug. Holland calls the word marijuana, or marihuna, a
"slur" based on its Mexican Spanish origins. Pot is also based on a
Mexican Spanish word.
George Washington, the first-ahem-POTUS, grew hemp, probably for
agriculture, but given his bad teeth and spotting of hippos in the
Potomac, maybe he hemped himself.
Reflecting the knee-jerk fear marijuana can inspire, the word assassin
comes from the Arabic word hashshishin, or "hash smokers," a word
first recorded by Shakespeare in Macbeth. The jury is still out on
whether the Bard inhaled, though it might explain the Weird Sisters
and their line: "Fair is foul, and foul is fair: Hover through the fog
and filthy air."
Compiled from Cull-de-Sac.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...