The Prohibition (MARIJUANA TAX ACT) was passed by the U.S. Congress in 1937 after a brief deliberation of less than 50 minutes. Usually, Congress first hears experts before deciding on the new legislation. These hearings can take hours, days, months or even years until sufficient information has become available.
In the case of the Marijuana Tax Act, that was not considered necessary. Harry Anslinger was examined as an expert witness and stated that Marijuana encourages criminal behaviour and ultimately leads to the user’s death. In 1937, everyone agreed that this dangerous drug should be banned immediately. After all, you could read in the newspaper daily what misery this killer drug caused.
Under Anslinger’s leadership, the Bureau of Narcotics grew into the current DEA, the Drug Enforcement Agency. The Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, intended to eliminate industrial hemp for producing energy, paper and plastics, steered humanity towards a polluting economy based on petroleum and eventually culminated in the WAR ON DRUGS.
There is a clear link between cannabis prohibition and racism in the US, England, and other European countries. In 1937, African Americans and Mexicans published false statistics about crime and its relationship to marijuana. Over the generations, weed continues to be associated with it and thus stigmatised.
During the Second World War, the ban was temporarily lifted for fibre production because sisal from Asia was unavailable. Hemp was a strategically important crop for the military. She made sails, ropes for ships, clothes, tarps, tents, hammocks and duffel bags.