Rocco Siffredi έγραψε: ↑03 Ιούλ 2021, 14:35Για την Αμερική ή για όλο τον κόσμο;Imperium έγραψε: ↑03 Ιούλ 2021, 14:28Ελάχιστη προσπάθεια να καταβάλεις να ψάξεις την γέννηση των Anti-Marijuana Laws, δεν θα αργίσεις να καταλάβεις.Rocco Siffredi έγραψε: ↑03 Ιούλ 2021, 14:07Και για τους anti marijuana laws κρύβεται Systemic racism;

Anslinger has been characterized as an early proponent of the war on drugs, as he zealously advocated for and pursued harsh drug penalties, in particular regarding marijuana.[3] As a propagandist for the war on drugs, he focused on demonizing racial and immigrant groups.[3] He persecuted jazz musicians, as he considered jazz a dangerous mongrel form of music.[4] He targeted jazz singer Billie Holiday in particular, handcuffing the singer onto her hospital bed until she died.[4]
Targeting minorities, especially black Americans, with drug charges and harassment, was part of Anslinger's strategy to justify the existence and budget of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Anslinger was considered "so racist that he was regarded as a crazy racist in the 1920s."[30] In his 1964 book, The Protectors, Anslinger included a chapter called "Jazz and Junk Don't Mix", about black jazz musicians Billie Holiday, whom he had handcuffed on her death bed due to suspicion of drug use and possession,[4])
Harry Anslinger took the scientifically unsupported idea of marijuana as a violence-inducing drug, connected it to black and Hispanic people, and created a perfect package of terror to sell to the American media and public. By emphasizing the Spanish word marihuana instead of cannabis, he created a strong association between the drug and the newly arrived Mexican immigrants who helped popularize it in the States. He also created a narrative around the idea that cannabis made black people forget their place in society. He pushed the idea that jazz was evil music created by people under the influence of marijuana.