CANNABIS CULTURE   January 23, 2012 marks the 100th birthday of the first international drug control treaty, the International Opium Convention, signed at the Hague in 1912.

The treaty called on signatories to prohibit the non-medical sales of opium, morphine, cocaine and to strictly regulate their distribution and production. The Hague convention would lay the foundation for an edifice of further treaties committing the United States and rest of the world to a century of prohibition, drug wars, and concomitant crime and violence.

Dr. Hamilton Wright, the first drug czar of the United States.Dr. Hamilton Wright, the first drug czar of the United States.The driving force behind the treaty was the U.S. government, then as now a worldwide leader in drug prohibition. The U.S. initiative was a product of Progressive Era enthusiasm for government regulation and the rising temperance movement, which would culminate in the disaster of alcohol prohibition. It started when Protestant missionaries in Asia petitioned President Theodore Roosevelt to suppress the opium traffic. The State Department was supportive, seeing this as a useful way of currying favor with China, which was bridling at the unfettered British opium trade from India. Roosevelt agreed, and appointed the brash and energetic Dr. Hamilton Wright (pictured left) to serve as the nation's first drug czar in the State Department. Under Wright's leadership, the U.S. called an international conference in Shanghai, where it prevailed upon the British to join a resolution to suppress the smoking opium trade. A follow-up conference was called in the Hague to pursue a binding international treaty.

The US pursued an aggressive prohibitionist policy at the Hague against the more moderate, cautious views of the British and other nations. The US delegation was led by Wright, a vociferous and overbearing advocate of tough prohibitionist controls. He was joined by the more suave and diplomatic Bishop Charles Henry Brent (pictured right), who had led the crusade against opium smoking in Asia. Brent was disappointed that other nations failed to accept the Bishop Charles Henry BrentBishop Charles Henry Brentthen-novel, American notion that non-medical use of opium was inherently immoral. The third member of the U.S. delegation was Henry J. Finger of the California Board of Pharmacy, who had engineered that state's pioneering anti-drug campaign, outlawing and busting opium dens and dope-dealing pharmacists. Finger advanced the novel proposal that cannabis be included in the treaty, an idea that won Wright's support but failed to evoke interest from other nations at that time.

The Hague Convention, signed by the U.S., China, the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Portugal, Persia, Russia, Siam and the Netherlands, committed its signatories to "use their best endeavours to control, or to cause to be controlled, all persons manufacturing, importing, selling, distributing, and exporting morphine, cocaine, and their respective salts, as well as the buildings in which these persons carry such an industry or trade."

The treaty provided the justification for Congress to pass the first comprehensive federal narcotics control law, the Harrison Act, in 1914. The act set the U.S. on a fateful prohibitionist path of ever-expanding federal laws, controls and regulations aimed at restricting Americans' use and freedom of choice in drugs.

In the meantime, the Hague Convention was followed by a succession of further treaties, eventually culminating in the Single Convention Treaty (1961), the Convention on Psychotropic Substances (1971), and theConvention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop..., which commits the world's nations to criminalize personal possession of cannabis and other illegal drugs.

The baleful consequences of the Hague Treaty and the subsequent world-wide war on drugs remain with us today: prohibition-fueled drug crime and violence, half a million Americans in prison for offenses that were unknown a century ago; murderous drug wars in Afghanistan, Colombia, and Mexico that have left thousands dead, and pervasive denial of personal freedom and civil liberties. Despite this, the rate of drug abuse is no lower than a century ago when drugs were still legal. Judged by the evidence, the time is overdue to end the Hundred Years War on Drugs.

Views: 43

"Destroying the New World Order"

TOP CONTENT THIS WEEK

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING THE SITE!

mobile page

12160.info/m

12160 Administrators

 

Latest Activity

tjdavis posted a video

Free (Acoustic Version)

Provided to YouTube by Legacy RecordingsFree (Acoustic Version) · PrinceFree℗ 2025 NPG Records, LLC, under exclusive license to Legacy RecordingsReleased on:...
54 minutes ago
Burbia posted a video

Why Does Israel Suddenly Want President Trump Dead?

Please help me counter injustices in Muslim world by supporting my journalism and CJWS here: ▶️ https://www.patreon.com/c/cjwerlemanor via YouTube here: ▶️ h...
8 hours ago
Doc Vega posted blog posts
yesterday
Burbia favorited tjdavis's photo
yesterday
FREEDOMROX's blog post was featured
yesterday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's blog post WHY YOU MUST UNDERSTAND AMYLOIDOSIS AND AMYLOID PLAQUES June 13, 2022
Saturday
FREEDOMROX posted a blog post
Friday
Doc Vega commented on Doc Vega's blog post The Many Keys to Deadly Secrecy in our Government
"cheeki kea, thanks so much for your support."
Friday
FREEDOMROX posted a blog post
Thursday
cheeki kea favorited Doc Vega's blog post The Many Keys to Deadly Secrecy in our Government
Thursday
cheeki kea commented on cheeki kea's photo
Thursday
cheeki kea posted a photo
Wednesday
cheeki kea replied to cheeki kea's discussion Tartaria
"Greetings to you John, You're right and it didn't take long for those manuals to totally…"
Wednesday
Doc Vega posted a blog post

The Many Keys to Deadly Secrecy in our Government

We now know thanks to the legislation of FOIA access to federal documents and evidence and the…See More
Wednesday
Less Prone favorited tjdavis's photo
Wednesday
Less Prone favorited rlionhearted_3's photo
Wednesday
John Miller commented on rlionhearted_3's photo
Thumbnail

Another incredibly Stupid!! What, no mirrors?

"Brutal post... not sure it’s helping anyone though."
Tuesday
John Miller replied to cheeki kea's discussion Tartaria
"Tartaria: the empire that built half the world's cathedrals, then vanished because someone…"
Tuesday
Burbia commented on rlionhearted_3's photo
Thumbnail

Another incredibly Stupid!! What, no mirrors?

"This movie portrayed plastic surgery as absurd. I guess the numbers in the real world are growing."
Tuesday
Burbia commented on tjdavis's photo
Thumbnail

Redux

"Ah yes, General Jussitri Smolletkov. Good tongzhi. Good tongzhi."
Jun 3

© 2025   Created by truth.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service

content and site copyright 12160.info 2007-2019 - all rights reserved. unless otherwise noted