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MC DAWN'S MYSTERIES, MYTHS AND FACTS ABOUT CANNABIS

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

IF WE CALL CANNABIS BY ANY OTHER NAME WOULD SMELL AS SWEET?

Cannabis is known by many names in the US and across the world. Marijuana, ganja, reefer, and more. Marijuana is probably the most common of all of them. So why do we call Cannabis, Marijuana? The indigenous people of Mexico introduced cannabis to the United

States around 1910 after the Mexican

Revolution. Ganja as it became to be known in San Francisco, appeared around 1911 due to the large immigration of Hindu people. Ganja was a part of Hindu traditions. The West Indies brought Reefer to New Orleans and much of the south.

Cannabis was spreading everywhere in the United States and the government and people of the US wanted nothing of it. The US had been fighting a war on opium and cocaine for 70 years and now comes cannabis?

It had to be stopped! Cannabis did not fit in with the social morals and mores of the time. California became the first state to outlaw cannabis (ganja) possession and its use after the spread of cannabis throughout California. Other states soon followed and developed their own laws. The Federal Bureau of

Narcotics was formed in 1925 and by 1936, the cult film, “Reefer Madness” was released to the public which instilled fear into society. Guard your children! Marijuana was fast becoming public enemy #1. Wait, backup, why is it called Marijuana and not Ganja? The US relations with Mexico were not at their best in the 1930’s.

The Mexican people who were hired in the US worked and toiled on farms as pickers, ranch hands and domestics; and were grateful for the work to feed their families. Corporate farmers loved them; they were helping their bottom line. Out of work Americans were angry at the Mexican people for taking their jobs; this was the era of the great depression that began on October 4, 1929, with the collapse of the stock market. Unemployment rose 23% during the great depression and a good amount of America was unemployed. Most Americans could not work for the same wages as the

Mexican laborers. Mexican labor may have been cheap, but it was not unionized. Labor unions were not very happy and rallied against the Mexican labor force. Racial tensions were growing. The term Marijuana was being used to describe a sub group of society. Anyone who was associated with Marijuana was either Mexican, Black, Native American, immigrants or social deviants. If you didn’t fit society’s mold of that time, then you were probably a social deviant. It didn’t matter what color you were.

TRUE OR FALSE

REEFER MADNESS, CULT FILM, 1936

When smoking cannabis your laughter is uncontrollable. The name marijuana is a slang term. Women cannot control themselves when they smoke cannabis. Smoking cannabis often ends in incurable insanity. Marijuana was touted as a new drug.

Sam Caldwell was the first person arrested and sentenced to four years in prison for selling two joints after the Marijuana Tax Stamp Act was put into law.

In 1994 there were more people in federal prison for cannabis offenses than other felonies. Queen Victoria’s (England) personal doctor prescribed cannabis to the queen for menstrual cramps. Her physician, Dr.

Russell Reynolds said,

“It is a most valuable medicine.

SOURCE: entertainment.time.com

TODAY THERE IS A PUSH IN THE CANNABIS WORLD TO STOP CALLING THIS DIVINE PLANT “MARIJUANA” AND EMBRACE THE LATIN TERM “CANNABIS. ” WORDS MATTER, ESPECIALLY IN OUR SOCIETY. WE ARE IN A TIME OF CHANGE AND REALIGNMENT. JOIN ME, IN HELPING TO CHANGE THE SOCIAL NARRATIVE DURING THIS TIME OF CANNABIS ENLIGHTENMENT.

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