The
drug prohibition era began through the implementation of tax and certification
regimes not with a zero tolerance mandate. Initially, it was widely accepted in
Congress and among law enforcement agencies that there were legitimate medical
uses for opiates and even stimulants.
The
Harrison Act of 1914 aimed to end the recreational market for heroin, opium,
and cocaine but was not intended to stop physicians from prescribing narcotics.
The Harrison Act was self-described as "An Act To provide for the registration of,
with collectors of internal revenue, and to impose a special tax on all persons
who produce, import, manufacture, compound, deal in, dispense, sell,
distribute, or give opium or coca leaves, their salts, derivatives, or
preparations, and for other purposes."
Although
the objective of the Harrison Act was to regulate the domestic market, the
legislation ushered the Customs Agency Service (later Customs Service and
currently divided into Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs
and Border Protection (CBP)) into drug
control in a major way for the first time -- both because the agency was
empowered to enforce the act at the border and also because this first foray in
drug-prohibition legislation led to a boom in cross-border drug smuggling.
Marijuana
was not on the radar of drug prohibition proponents at the time the Harrison
Act became the law of the land. By the 1930s, however, drug prohibition
advocates had succeeded in instituting marijuana bans in several states. But
the U.S. government didn’t see marijuana as the threat to public health, public
safety, and national security, as it currently does. At the time, community
healers and the medical sector were still exploring the medicinal and
therapeutic uses of marijuana, and U.S. businesses were legally selling hemp
fiber, oil, and seeds.
In
its Narcotics Manual of 1927, the
U.S. Customs Agency Service stated: “Neither is there any
Federal law specifically regulating the importation of Marihuana, but by
regulation under the Food and Drugs Act, Collectors of Customs are directed to
refuse delivery of all consignments of Marihuana, unless the importer shall
first execute a penal bond conditioned that the drug referred to will not be
sold or otherwise disposed of for any purpose other than in the preparation of
a medicine.”
The federal government gradually began cracking down
harder on marijuana distribution both in the domestic market and on the border. The U.S. Border Patrol was created in 1924, but it was not
until the late 1930s that the agency was given a clear mandate about marijuana
enforcement.
Congress passed the Marijuana Tax Act of 1937, which
brought cannabis into the drug control structure established the Harrison Act
for heroin, opium, and cocaine. A high tax was levied on marijuana distribution
by this 1937 drug act, whose main proponent was Harry Anslinger, the antidrug
crusader who was commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Under the
provisions of the Marijuana Tax Act, the federal government made marijuana
control its business for the first time -- through regulation of the importation,
cultivation, possession, and marketing of the cannabis plant.
Although not explicitly prohibited, the anti-narcotics
legislation put marijuana for the first time in the same regulatory framework
used to crack down against heroin, opium, and cocaine – whose principal victims
were the poor and people of color, not the predominantly middle- and
upper-class consumers.
It remained legal to import marijuana into the country,
and the U.S. Customs Agency Service did collect taxes and affix a certifying
stamp on burlap bags of marijuana that met its requirements for legal use and
sale. But the end result was that marijuana fell subject to an increasingly
restrictive regularly climate that by 1970 evolved into complete drug
prohibition.
Richard Nixon became the first drug warrior in the White
House. Under his leadership, Congress passed the Controlled Substances Act of
1970, under which marijuana was classified as a Schedule 1 substance, along with heroin, MDMA, LSD, peyote, psilocybin, and other substances.
At the time that Congress passed the Marijuana Tax Act,
the U.S. Customs Service Agency was not preoccupied with securing the border
against crossborder flows of marijuana, as the Department of Homeland Security
is today. The agency’s narcotics manual noted: “Marihuana may be cultivated or
grown wild in almost any locality. Inasmuch as this drug is so readily obtained
in the United States, it is not believed to be the subject of much organized
smuggling from other countries.”
But the federal government’s steady move away from
noninterference toward regulation, enforcement, and prohibition has resulted in
a boom in marijuana smuggling, horrific drug-war violence in producer and
transition countries, and mass criminalization and incarceration in the United
States.
Today, the Customs and Border Protection agency,
especially the Border Patrol, has made marijuana enforcement the chief
operative focus of its border security mission. One can only speculate at what
point will the federal government begin reversing its border control practices,
perhaps by once again taxing and stamping marijuana imports. Or even -- with
the advance of a medical marijuana and marijuana legalization -- end the
agency’s misguided and ineffective commitment to marijuana enforcement
entirely?
Recalling the scenario described in the narcotics manual
of the mid-1930s, we may see the future of marijuana.
It just may be possible that some day, sooner than we
think, we could see a time when marijuana is again grows throughout the United
States outside of a drug prohibition regime, thereby displacing the Mexican and
other foreign suppliers, ending the need for so much “border security”
spending, and undercutting the foreign drug warriors – both the legal and
illegal ones.
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