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- Marijuana
- Marijuana originated in the middle east (Taiwan, Korea). China plays
- an important part in Marijuana's history. Hoatho, the first chinese
- physician to use Cannabis for medical purposes as a painkiller and
- anesthetic for surgery. In the Ninth Century B.C., it was used as an
- incense by the Assyrians Herbal, a Chinese book of medicine from the second
- Century B.C., was first to describe it in print. It was used as an
- anesthetic 5,000 years ago in ancient china. Many (*) ancient cultures
- such as the persians, Greeks, East Indians, Romans, and the Assyrians for
- many things. These were what they used it for: the control of muscle
- spasms, reduction of pain, and for indegestion. Imagine that if they still
- practiced this, instead of taking an Alka Seltzer after you had mom's Chili
- or Tacos, you might be sitting in the living room on the LAY-Z Boy, smoking
- a joint or however they would take it. The folk medicine of Africa and Asia
- have used it as an herbal preparation. A mythical and legendary
- pharmacist and emperor Shen Nung thought using it as a seditive was all
- right. In 2,700 B.C. that same mythical emperor said it helped female
- weakness, gout, rheumatism, malaria, beri-beri (?), contipation, and
- absentmindedness.
- In 1979 (A.D.) Carlton E. Turner visited China and found marijuana was
- not in use in formal medical places. J. D. P. Graham of the Welsh National
- School of Medicine wrote, One not need take to seriously the anecdotal use
- of it's use for many purposes in China or by the Hindus in the
- pre-Christian Millennia ...and by the Arabs! In 1890 in England's Lancet
- said cannabis extract was good for neuralgia, fits, migraine and
- psychosomatic disorders but not for rheumatic conditions. It is not easy
- to tell the dosage because of the variations in potency and the
- irregularity in absorbtion. The time delay before the onset of the
- possible effects of marijuana lowered it's popularity as a medicine as did
- the introduction of a variety of new and better medicines like aspirin,
- morpheine (habit forming), chloral, barbituates tranquilizers, and when it
- got on the list of drugs thought by the world community to require legal
- restrictions.
- Our first President, George Washington, grew cannabis on his
- plantation. The cannabis he grew was more fibrous and is better known as
- hemp. Hemp was used to make rope, twine, paper and canvas (the word
- canvas comes from Cannabis) and was an important crop in the american
- colonies. In Jamestown, Virginia it was grown for it's fiber qualities in
- 1611. (Snyder, 1985) The U.S. Pharmacopeia had it listed as a useful
- medicine from the year 1870 to 1941. A Pharmacopeia is a book of
- directions and requirements for the preparations of medicines, generally
- published by an authority; a collection or stock of drugs. This tells us
- the U.S. Pharmacopeia was an authority on the use of drugs for medical
- purposes, and said that the use of marijuana for said purposes was helpful.
- The U.S. Pharmacopeia last listed cannabis (the dried flower tops of the
- pistillate plants of cannabis sativa) in 1936.(Lovinge,1985,p434) That
- years epitome of the pharmacopeia and the national formula described the
- drug for physicians thus:a narcotic poison, producing a mild delirium.
- Used in sedative mixtures but of doubtful value. Also employed to color
- corn remedies. The next pharmacopeia released in 1942 (I gather they were
- relaesed every six years) did not have cannabis sativa in it. The 1937
- U.S. dispensatory said:Cannabis is used in medicine to relieve pain,
- encourage sleep, and to soothe restlessness. We have very little definite
- knowledge of the effects of therapeutic quantities, but in some persons it
- appears to produce a euphoria and will often relieve migrainic headaches.
- One of the great hindrances to the wider use of this drug is the great
- variability and the potency of different samples of Cannabis which renders
- it impossible to approximate the proper dose of any individual smaple
- except by clinical trial. Because of occasional unpleasant symptoms from
- unusually potent preparations, physicians have generally been overcaustious
- in the quantities administered. The only way of determining the dose of an
- individual preparation is to give it in ascending quantities until some
- effect is produced. (The Book suggested using a fluid extract - powdered
- cannabis in solution, 4/5 alcohol - three times a day, starting with two
- or three minims.)(Lovinge,1985,p434)
- Extracts, tinctures, and herbal packages of cannabis manufactured by
- many drug companies, was available in any pharmacy until 1941 when The two
- main professional directories of drugs in the United States dropped
- it.(Snnyder 1985,p38) It is still used as a medicine in the Middle East and
- Asia, and is completely legal in Amsterdam. Since the 19th Century, it has
- been recognized as as intoxicant in Europe, and an intoxicant for many
- centuries in Central and South America, and in Asia. An 1870 Book called
- The Hasheesh Eater by Fitz Hugh Hudlow, discussed the intoxicating
- properties of marijuana.(Snyder,1985,p39) Mexican farm workers emigrating
- to the United States smoked marijuana regularly, and the surrounding
- population... quickly followed.
- California and Utah were the first to call it a narcotic and outlawed
- it completely except for mecial purposes. From 1914 to 1931, 29 States, 17
- of them West of the Mississippi made it a criminal offense to possess or
- use it.(Snyder,1985,p40) An army report from 1925 concerning the Panama
- Canal Zone said it wasnt habit forming and no steps should be taken to keep
- it from being sold or used. The Uniform States Narcotic Act said all
- states should control drug distribution. By 1937 marijuana use was
- restricted by law (Snyder,1985,p42) and the Marijuana Tax Act was signed
- by President Roosevelt. This act was made to collect more taxes and locate
- people selling marijuana. You had to pay $1 for medical use and $100 for
- recreational use as tax. This was a large factor why doctors quit using it
- as a medicine. The Narcotics Drug Control Act of 1965 increased the
- existing penalties for selling and distribution of marijuana and heroin...
- (Snyder,1985,p46) The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana
- Laws (NORML) was founded in 1970.
- Just the facts Ma'am: It is illegal to own or sell marijuana. It is a
- misdemeanor not a felony. Penalties vary widely in each state, for
- growing and selling it is almost always a felony. It can cause cancer in
- the lungs and the throat IF smoked. Among the reasons to suspect
- potentially injurious effect of cannabis use on the lungs, pointed out it
- the almost ubiquitous occurrennce of throat discomfort and irritation
- associated with marihuana smoking (Lovinge,1985,p15)but the same
- carinogens are present in tobacco smoke. Marijuana takes away the
- discomfort and nausea associated with chemotherapy taken to stop the
- growth of cancer. It also helps people with glaucoma and it keeps them
- from going blind. It doesn't lessen feelings and pain, it heightens them.
- Users say they hear things better, and they see details they have never
- seen before. If made legal, it could be regulated by the U.S. government
- (Food and Drug Administration?) as to how potent it would be. Or there
- could be a government monopoly on it controlling the cultivation,
- importation, manufacture, wholesale distribution, and retail sales.
- Controls could also be placed on the quantity, potency,, amount, price,
- time and place of sale, and age of buyers. This would do away with black
- market activity, cost of law enforcement and tax
- revenue.(Snyder,1985,p89) It would also keep alot of people out of
- jail/prison and save the government money.
- Interview with a marijuana user.
- Q: Do you think Marijuana has had any long lasting effects on you?
- A: None besides the effects regular cigarrette smoke does to your lungs.
- Scientific facts prove there are none except the carcinogens produced by
- the smoke. It doesn't cause brain damage like your teachers tell you.
- Q: How do you take it?
- A: Smoke it. I use pipes, bongs, & papers.
- Q: How often? A: Quarter ounce a week, 15-18 joints a month.
- Q: How much does it cost? A: $200 an ounce, $2,500 lb...and thats minimum quality.
- Q: How can you tell quality?
- A: Smoke it.
- Q: How are Thai Sticks?
- A: Better than average. $65 1/4 ounce
- Q: Where do you think most marijuana is grown?
- A: 80% of all (in US) marijuana is grown in the US. 20% from Mexico &
- Jamaica In Alaska & Utahyou can have up to an ouce legally. The
- biggest growinng states are the Carolinas, & Texas. It grows wild
- in some places. And cows wont eat it.
- Q: Do you grow any?
- A: Yes
- Q: How many at 1 time (the most)?
- A: 12...check them once a week.
- Q: Are you in NORML?
- A: Yes, South Florida chapter. I'm the secretary.
- Q: Whats the highest price you've ever seen?
- A: $150 1/4 ounce.
- Q: Is sinsimilia good?
- A: Yes $100-125 ounce. thats usually imported.
- Q: can you use a plant more than once?
- A: no. you kill the male plants as soon as you find their sex,
- and harvest the females.
- Q: What kind do you grow?
- A: Average weed.
- Q: How do you get the seeds or what you need to grow them?
- A: They are in the stuff I buy.
- Q: Whats the best kind?
- A: Depends on how it's grown.
- Q: Do you think alot of people smoke weed?
- A: If it was legal & sold for the same price as tobacco (since when
- does tobacco cost $200 an ounce?!?!) it would make 2.1
- BILLION! Tobacco makes 3.1 billion, and alcohol make 1.6 billion.
- (I have NO idea how much 1 ounce of tobacco costs, but it can't
- be more than $10. Marijuana sells for 20 times that much! That
- would be OVER 40 BILLION!)
- Q: Would it be better if legalized?
- A: Yes, another taxable income for the government. Prices would go down.
- The crime factor would be gone. It would take the money out of the
- hands of criminal and put it in the hands of the government. It's not
- addictive, you can't overdose unlike alcohol, but the smoke does cause
- cancer.
- Q: Would less people use it if legalized?
- A: no.
- Q: How much is caught by the government?
- A: 2% of total in U.S. Basically thats the government admittinng
- that they are losing the war on drugs.
- Q: How does it smell?
- A: Usually good, sometimes bitter. a sweet smell.
- Q: THC makes you high right? A: yes, they have found it
- causes no long lasting effects. Water Pipes/bongs remove 80% of the
- smoke
- Q: Do you eat it?
- A: No, eating uses up more. That way isn't cost effective.
- (end of interview)
- Marijuana doesn't cause brain damage. The smoke does cause cancer, but
- so does tobacco. The smoke can be reduced by up to 80% with special
- paraphenalia. We used to have limited knowledge on the subject, now our
- knowledge is increasing. Marijuana doesn't lead to sexual promiscuity all
- the time, but a
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