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Cocaine And Opiates Essay

520 Words3 Pages

Currently in America, 80 million people have tried marijuana at least once. The same amount as those that tried marijuana in the 1960s but back, then, marijuana was a trend and drug use were accepted. The world was a different place backed in the 19th century but how much did the drug world change throughout history? Form cocaine and opiates as legal common ingredient in medication, Laws that were passed to stopped drug trafficking, marijuana use in becoming popular in the 1960s and how this war on drugs impact us. Here is the drug history from the past, and the influences drug culture has on us today. In the early nineteenth century cocaine and opiates were big factors. They were considered as general medications that were used for cramps, hay fever, diarrhea, and even to treat depression. Opiates though are very effective pain killers that are highly addictive and often used by men that return from war, they became addicted to this pain killer. The growing addicts brought concerns to the government as they were pressured to fix it. So, in 1906 the government passed the Pure Food and Drug Act, the Act required medicine labels to outline …show more content…

However, marijuana- that was still legal at the time, became popular, and the government noticed. Mexico and America relationship was defined due to the drugs transportation to America from Mexico, as Sara Miller Llana and Sara Shahriari said, “Latin America remains the world's No. 1 supplier of cocaine,” American governments were afraid that Mexicans would immigrate to America and cause more drug crimes. The Marijuana Tax Act was passed in 1937, the purpose of the Act was to keep track on the selling and transportation of marijuana but due to the few stamps that were documented, meaning the rest of the dealers were under the table selling, marijuana was made

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