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Smoke Marijuana Seeds Marijuana Growing Kits might be useful for propaganda
purposes—to say that users are a highly "criminal" population, if that is true, in order to
cast doubt on them, as well as on the use of marijuana—but not if we are trying to
understand the nature of society and what makes it work as it does. At the very least, we
would have to separate out the various kinds of crimes which we are interested in.
* I would like to thank Professor John Kaplan for giving me the idea for writing this
chapter, which is heavily indebted to his "Marijuana and Aggression," a chapter in
Marijuana: The New Prohibition, forthcoming. (back)
N O T E S
1. Earle Albert Rowell and Robert Rowell, On the Trail of Marihuana: The Weed of
Madness (Mountain View, Calif.: Pacific Press Publishing Association, 1939), pp. 13,
46,48, 67. (back)
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The Marijuana Smokers - Chapter 9
2. We must keep in mind the fact that possession of marijuana is itself a crime, so that
by definition any marijuana user is a "criminal." Obviously, we must exclude marijuana
use from our concept of crime, otherwise our discussion would be a tautology—it would
be true by definition. Thus, when we refer to crime, we assume that it means
nonmarijuana crimes. (back)
3. The federal position may in flux. Under Henry L. Giordano, Harry Anslinger's handpicked
successor, the Bureau of Narcotics took the position that marijuana caused crime.
The present director, John E. Ingersoll, appears to be in the process of re-evaluating the
Bureau's past policies. In a recent speech to the National Academy of Science, he said that
"established positions, where no longer valid, will no longer be maintained." It is too early
to discern what direction this policy will take. However, the fact that Ingersoll has asked
Congress recently to lower the federal penalties on marijuana possession may very well
indicate that the Bureau's position on the criminogenics of marijuana has softened
considerably. (back)
4. Henry L. Giordano, "Marihuana—A Calling Card to Narcotic Addiction," FBI Law
Enforcement Bulletin 37, no. 1l (November 1968): 2. (back)
5. New York State Department of Health, "Violence Direct Result of Marijuana, Says
Bellizzi, State Health Official Cites 27 Murders by Drug Users, New York State
Department of Health Weekly Bulletin 20, no. 26 (June 26, 1967): 101. (back)
6. Thorvald T. Brown, The Enigma of Drug Addiction (Springfield, III.: Charles C
Thomas, 1961), pp. 61, 62. (back)
7. Edward R. Bloomquist, Marijuana (Beverly Hills, Calif.: Glencoe Press, 1968), p 97
(back)
8. Louria The Drug Scene, (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1968), p. 110. (back)
9. Rosweil D. Johnson, "Medico-Social Aspects of Marijuana, The Rhode Island
Medical Journal 51 (March 1968): 176, 177. (back)
10. Thomas Ciesla, Testimony, in Hearings on Marijuana Laws Before the California
Public Health and Safety Committee (Los Angeles, October 18, 1967, morning session),
transcript, pp. 110-l l 1. (back)
11. Bloomq Smoke Marijuana Seeds Marijuana Growing Kits
This interaction
retards the formation of compound 16 and also increases the propensity
of 14 to undergo cleavage, probably by forcing a larger contribution of transdiaxial
conformation of the cyclohexene ring substituents Smoke Marijuana Seeds Marijuana Growing Kits