The original author is unknown at this time?

William
Randolph Hearst
1898 Hearst newspapers denounce Spaniards,
Mexican-Americans, and Latinos after the seizure of 800,000 acres of
Hearst-owned prime Mexican timber land by the 'marijuana smoking army of Pancho
Villa.'
- Vigorous slander of the Mexican people continues in Hearst
and other publications for three decades. Because of Hearst's personal
prejudices against African-Americans and Hispanics and Hearst's covert
motivations to link them with the proliferation of an 'evil drug', the term
'marijuana' --- a word totally unfamiliar to the average hemp-using American
--- is used exclusively to identify hemp throughout this public
disinformation campaign.
1910 - 1920 Southern "officials" are alarmed
because "pot smoking darkie jazz musicians" are beginning to
"think that they are as good as whites."
1910 South Africa begins outlawing marijuana (for the same "Jim
Crow" reasons cited by U.S. bigots: to stop the insolence of Blacks) and
lobbies the League of Nations to have cannabis outlawed world-wide.
- Many Southern U.S. states are influenced by South Africa
and follow suit with
prohibitions.
- Black mine workers in South Africa were, however, permitted
to continue smoking the herb because it increased their productivity.
1915 As a result of
Hearst-incited hysteria over "disrespectful darkies" and "lazy
Chicanos", California and Utah pass state laws outlawing the recreational
use of marijuana.
1916 - 1935 The Hearst newspapers build and initiate a
campaign to outlaw "marijuana." Reporting is slanted to generate
reader bias.
- Readers were never told that "hemp" and
"marijuana" are exactly the same plant.
- Nor were they told that the active ingredients of the tonic
they gave their
baby to ease colic came from the marijuana/hemp plant, nor that the smoke
they
inhaled in their ever popular hashish parlors was a derivative of marijuana.
- News stories were manipulated to aggrandize and exaggerate
the
supposed "horrors" of recreational marijuana use. The story of an
auto accident
where one marijuana cigarette was found would dominate front page headlines
for
weeks while alcohol related accidents --- which outnumbered marijuana 1000
to 1
--- were briefly mentioned and buried in the back pages.
- The rape of a white woman by a "Negro,"
previously attributed by Hearst publications to cocaine use was, by these
same publications, suddenly attributed to the use of marijuana.
1930's Mechanical hemp-fiber stripping and pulp
conserving machines are invented and developed to state-of-the-art.
- Timber-based paper manufacturing industries recognize the
combined technological advances of the hemp industry as a potential threat
to their prosperity.
- DuPont patents two new chemically intense processes; one to
make plastics from oil and coal and another to make paper from pulp-wood.
1930 U.S. Government sponsors the Siler Commission
study on the effects of off-duty smoking of "marijuana" (hemp buds
& leaves) by American servicemen in Panama. The report concludes that such
recreational smoking is not a problem and recommends that no criminal
penalties apply to its use.
1930 Louis Armstrong is arrested and jailed for 10 days for smoking
marijuana cigarettes

1931 Andrew Mellon (of the powerful Mellon Bank of Pittsburgh, financier
of many DuPont projects, and long-time supporter of Hearst), serving as
President Hoover's Secretary of the Treasury, appoints his future nephew-in-law,
Harry J. Anslinger to be head of the newly reorganized Federal Narcotics Bureau.
- Anslinger begins to compile a dossier of tabloid articles
which sensationalize disinformation about marijuana use and the crimes
committed while supposedly under the influence of the drug. This collection
of newspaper clippings (most from Hearst newspapers) becomes known as the
"Gore Files".
1935 - 1937 DuPont assures Congress, during
secret testimony, that synthetic petro-chemical oils can replace hemp seed oil
in paints, varnishes, and other products.
1936 - 1938 Hearst newspapers step-up the anti-marijuana campaign and
newsreel clips at the local movie bear headlines like "Reefer Madness"
and "Marijuana --- Assassin of Youth."
1937 Walter Treadway, Assistant U.S. Surgeon General, tells the Cannabis
Advisory Subcommittee of the League of Nations that extended use of cannabis
derivatives is benign, both socially and emotionally, and that marijuana is
habit forming...in the same sense...as sugar or coffee.

Mr. DuPont
- The DuPont Company issues its Annual Report to stockholders
which anticipates "radical changes" and the conversion of the
Federal government's revenue raising power 'into an instrument for forcing
acceptance of sudden new ideas of industrial and social reorganization.' In
other words, government would no longer tax citizens solely to raise money
but to enforce the adoption (or extinction) of selected social 'norms'.
April 14, 1937 The Marijuana Tax
Law is introduced to the House Ways and Means Committee of Congress, chaired by
Robert L. Doughton, a key DuPont ally.
- In subsequent committee hearings, Dr. James Woodward,
speaking for the American Medical Association (AMA), testifies against the
proposed legislation stating that the plant Congress intends to outlaw is a
perfectly safe substance used to treat scores of illnesses for over 100
years in America and that the ignorance of the proposed prohibition will
deny the world access to potential medical breakthroughs. Dr Wodward is
denounced by Anslinger and the congressional committee, then curtly excused.
- Ralph Lorenz, head of the general council of the National
Oil Seeds Institute (which represents the interests of high quality machine
lubrication producers and paint manufacturers) also lobbies against the
proposed legislation, eloquently citing the key importance of the hemp plant
to American industry and reviewing the thousands of years of benign use of
hemp by millions of people world-wide.
- After receiving testimony from Anslinger who cites
marijuana as "the most violence causing drug in the history of
mankind," reviewing Anslinger's "Gore Files" (which were
later debunked by evidentiary scholars), and hearing a false, dishonest and
intentionally misleading report from the Ways and Means Committee that the
AMA is in "complete agreement" with the proposed marijuana
legislation, the Marijuana Tax Act is adopted by Congress.
- The legislation is carefully worded so that the great
majority of American people, including many of the members of congress who
voted to pass the law, have no idea that the agricultural hemp industry is
being legislated into extinction. Popularity of DuPont's "plastic
fibers" (like nylon) begins to dramatically increase.
1944 The "LaGuardia Marijuana Report,"
compiled between 1938 and 1944 by the New York Academy of Medicine at the
request of Mayor Fiorella LaGuardia, is released to refute Anslinger's negative
claims about marijuana. It reports that marijuana use has caused no violence at
all and cites numerous instances of beneficial effects.
- Anslinger denounces the Mayor, the report, and the Academy,
proclaiming that the involved doctors will never again do marijuana research
without his personal permission, or they will be sent to jail.
1945 With Anslinger's coercive manipulation the AMA
conducted what has since been labeled a "gutter science" study to
refute the LaGuardia Report. Using biased techniques which predetermined the
outcome of the research, this prejudicial study, conducted with enlisted
Army men, concluded that 34 Negro males who smoked marijuana were
"disrespectful" of white soldiers and officers.
1948 - 1950 Anslinger has a sudden change of heart about the violence
inducing properties of marijuana and, in a complete about-face from his previous
position, testifies before a strongly anti-Communist Congress that marijuana
causes users to become so peaceful and pacifistic that use of the herb by
soldiers will weaken their will to fight 'The Great Red Communist Plague.'
1950's - 1960's The U.S. Army sponsors numerous tests to determine the
effects of cannabis smoking on soldiers. The first study showed no loss of
motivation or performance after two years of continual "heavy"
smoking. This study is replicated six more times by independent universities,
always with the same basic findings.
1961 - 1962 Anslinger is forced to retire as head of the Federal
Narcotics Bureau (now the DEA) by President Kennedy after trying to censor the
publications and blackmail and harass the publishers of Professor Alfred
Lindsmith of Indiana University who wrote, among other works, "The Addict
and the Law" (Washington Post, 1961).
- U.S. Medical research in to the beneficial properties of
cannabis resumes after nearly 3 decades of Anslinger's prohibition.
- Credible sources report that President Kennedy routinely
uses marijuana to
relieve his back pain and plans to have the drug legalized. These plans are
terminated by his assassination.
1964 The Himalayan region of Bangladesh (from
"bhang" cannabis, "la" land, and "desh" people)
signs an anti-drug pact with the U.S., agreeing not to grow hemp.
- Since that time there has been only light moss covering the
steep slopes of this flash-flood region which once were lush with hardy
hemp. Millions of acres of topsoil have been washed away and native peoples
of the country have suffered disease, starvation, and decimation due to
unrestrained flooding.
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