Introduction
When the nation was founded, hemp was a regular crop that the Founding Fathers all harvested. Cannabis was literally part of the fabric of the American Way: hemp was used for a variety of functions, from tea to textiles. As Robert Deitch notes, “we know colonial Americans were aware of the medicinal properties of cannabis. It was one of the few medicines they had, and they used it as commonly as we use aspirin today” (25). If cannabis was good enough for the first Americans, surely it stands some much warranted consideration—particularly in the light of the recent opioid epidemic that has claimed the lives of so many young in today’s day and age (Nelson, Juurlink, Perrone). People looking for a little relief are chasing after dangerous drugs that can kill. Marijuana, however, has never really been associated with overdosing and death. Just as the early Americans found, cannabis has the ability to take away the pain and give a little peace of mind—and for that reason, legalizing weed is something all good Americans should support.
Famous Presidents Smoked It
According to Deitch, many of America’s first U.S. presidents smoked weed and valued cannabis for its calming and pain-killing effects. This list of presidents includes Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson, Taylor, Pierce and even Lincoln (Deitch). Marijuana was just accepted as natural and no one questioned its usage. It was the perfect crop as it had so many different uses. It was perfectly legal to farm and grow and use however one wanted. If the Founding Fathers were able to harvest weed, smoke it and still lay the foundations for the greatest country in the world, maybe weed really is not all that bad after all?
So why is marijuana still considered a schedule 1 narcotic along with heroin and other hard drugs that can seriously destroy lives? The fact is simply this: Big Pharma wanted to ban the competition and the Plastics Industry wanted to outlaw hemp so it could get into the textiles business. Marijuana and hemp have been outlawed in the U.S. because America is a business and in this country, the businesses that get their people into the U.S. government are the ones who succeed. Numerous states had banned marijuana in the early 1900s and FDR finally did away with it at...
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