Police States: Prohibition Through The Ages
Many of us can see today that we are moving quickly towards a completely controlled ‘police state’ all over the globe. More and more restrictions and less and less freedom for everyone, sometimes it seems we are taking a step towards it nearly every day. With things like the Patriot Act, the SPP, NAFTA, and the troop exchange deals it’s easy to see the plan for a centralized one world government coming to fruition.
One of the main tools of any police state is prohibition. The prohibition of substances creates a victimless crime which can be used to control populations. Prohibition has been used through the ages to create criminals out of otherwise law abiding people and to take freedom from the people and give power to the state. Here is a time-line of how police states have used prohibition through the ages.
This information was extracted from Jack Herer’s excellent book “The Emperor Wears No Clothes: The Authoritative Historical Record of Cannabis and the Conspiracy Against Marijuana” and is courtesy of the Cato Institute.
- 16th century
Coffee banned in Egypt and supplies of coffee burned – use spreads rapidly. - 17th century
The czar of Russia executes tobacco users. - c.1650
Tobacco prohibited in Bavaria, Saxony, Zurich; the Ottoman sultan zealously executes smokers to no avail. - 1736
The Gin Act fails to halt consumption in England. - 1792
The penalty for opium selling in China is strangulation. - 1845
New York bans the public sale of liquor – repeals law two years later. - 1875 – 1914
27 states and cities ban opium smoking – opium smoking increases sevenfold. - 1914
Passage of Harrison Narcotics Act controlling opium and cocoa derivitaves. - 1914
Czar bans alcohol – Bolsheviks lift ban in 1924. - 1914-1970
Congress passes 55 laws to strengthen Harrison Act. - 1918
Special Committee studies Harrison Act effects – widespread smuggling and increased use of narcotics – and calls for stricter enforcement. - 1919
Eighteenth Amendment banning alcohol is passed – repealed in 1933. - 1919 – 1933
Use of marijuana, ether, and coffee increases. - 1921
Cigarettes are illegal in 14 states. - 1924
Congress bans heroin completely – after law passed, heroin replaces morphine in black market. - 1937
First federal law against marijuana. - 1949
Law enforcement crackdown on non-prescription barbiturates – use increases 800% 1942-1969. - 1955
Shah of Iran bans opium – ban partially repealed in 1969. - 1956
U.S. Narcotic Drug Control Act provides for death penalty for selling heroin to minors. - 1958
Soviet premier Khruschchev raises alcohol prices 21% to reduce consumption – he later deems the program a failure. - 1959
Campaign against glue-sniffing begins – causes “a boom in cocaine smuggling” by 1969. - 1962
FDA halts legal production of LSD – LSD use skyrockets by 1970. - 1965
Amphetamine enforcement intensifies – causes “a boom in cocaine smuggling” by 1969. - 1968
Campaign against marijuana use among U.S. troops in Vietnam – soldiers switch to heroin. - 1969
New York City increases drug arrests by 9000 – no impact on drug availability noted. - 1971
All-out campaign against heroin use in Vietnam fails. - 1971
900 pounds of heroin seized in New York City – no increase in price occurs. - 1971
President Nixon declares drugs “America’s public enemy No. 1.” - 1972
The House passes a $1 Billion anti-drug bill. - 1972
President Nixon declares drugs “America’s public enemy No. 1.” – again. - 1973
Rockefeller’s tough drug bill is passed in New York. - 1973
President Nixon announces, “We have turned the corner on drug addition in America.” - 1975
Malaysia enacts death penalty for drug trafficking. - 1975
Singapore enacts death penalty for drug trafficking – a few years later, a drug official says, “Heroin seems to be more widely used than ever.” - 1977
Bar Association committee concludes that Rockefeller drug law had no effect on heroin use. - 1980
300,000 youths in Malausia are using illegal drugs. - 1983
Malaysia toughens death penalty for drug trafficking.
Soviets crack down on alcohol consumption. - 1986
Moscow officials lower taxes on alcohol. - 1987
Soviets increase penalties against moonshining. - 1987
Malaysia’s 12 foot high, double barbed wire security fence protecting 32 miles of border with Thailand fails to halt drug traffic. - 1987
Legal alcohol production down 50% in Soviet Union; hard liquor moonshining up 40%; homemade wine production up 300%; 200,000 prosecuted for illegal home brewing. - 1987
Soviets launch “Operation Black Poppy” to stop opium use – 2000 poppy fields destroyed. - 1987
The Russian city of Murmansk bans sale of men’s cologne (containing alcohol) until 2pm, when liquor stores open. - 1987
Glue-sniffing doubles among high school students in Soviet Union. - 1988
Title of Tamba Tribune feature article: “The Joke Among Federal Agents: ‘We’ve Turned the Corner on Drugs.’ “ - 1989
President Reagan declares victory in War on Drugs as being a major achievement of his administration. - 1989
Secretary of State James A. Baker III reports that the global war on narcotics production “is clearly not being won.”
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