Clif from our new NORML of Waco called to tell me I just had to see this new article on the cover of the Texas Monthly magazine. When Texas is calling for legalization, you know we’re winning!
(Texas Monthly) In the early years of the twentieth century, as they poured across the border into Texas, Mexican immigrants brought with them a familiar and cheap intoxicant: cannabis, which they called marihuana (in those days, it was spelled with an h instead of a j). Perhaps because they were young, predominantly male, and away from home—strong correlates of troublesome behavior—they were seen as lacking appropriate inhibition, especially when they came to town on weekends. Cerveza may have been more culpable, but cannabis made an easier target. In 1914, after a melee allegedly involving a marijuana smoker, the El Paso city government passed what is believed to have been the first law banning a drug that had been legally and widely used for at least five thousand years. Other cities and states quickly followed suit. Before long, marijuana was forbidden everywhere, and its use was often harshly punished.
It’s ironic, then, that nearly a century after it fired the first shot in the war on weed, the Sun City has been flirting with a cease-fire. In January, besieged by drug wars in Mexico that killed more than 5,600 people in 2008, almost a third in neighboring Ciudad Juárez alone, the El Paso City Council unanimously approved city representative Beto O’Rourke’s motion that the federal government hold an open and honest debate about legalizing all narcotics in the United States. Mayor John Cook vetoed that recommendation. “We would be the laughingstock of the country for having something like this on the books,” he said.
The incident drew national attention and some criticism, but it sparked the kind of serious conversation O’Rourke was seeking. “No one is laughing about it,” he says. “It’s not funny that sixteen hundred people died in our sister city in the course of one year in the most brutal fashion imaginable. We’ve had waves of violence before, but it took events of this magnitude to convince everyone that something is deeply wrong here, that we are part of the problem and we can do something to fix it. It’s the demand that’s fueling this war. If our drug laws were different, I will absolutely guarantee you that our body count would be different.”
See also the concurrent article, “Weed all about it“, where prominent conservative Texas Republicans are calling for an end to adult marijuana prohibition. Yes, my friends, the tide is turning.
Topics: El Paso, Texas, Texas Monthly













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Politicians and city officials need to grow a pair!
This is excellent news! It is a dream of many that we will no longer be seen as criminals for enjoying something a natural as this. It is truly a gift of the earth. The winds of change are blowing. Until this mess is over with, may we all remain safe while in pursuit of our little bit of happiness. Peace.
YES!
It’s about damn time. Texas Monthly is everywhere down here. Lots of people will see this. Lots of people who probably wouldn’t have been informed, otherwise. This is good news.
“…where prominent conservative Texas Republicans are calling for an end to adult marijuana prohibition. Yes, my friends, the tide is turning.”
I’m one of those that now recognized the sin of Prohibition. For this and other specific reasons I no longer call myself a Republican. And my conservative-in-everything stance is changing.
For the past 20 years I have given no thought to the problem of Prohibition because it didn’t affect me in the least – I don’t consume the herb.
My advice to all is to keep blogging and keep talking to others in your world that have not yet woken up with regards to the horrors of Prohibition. I’m working on my friends – we all are conservative and all Christians! A challenge to say the least.
Prohibition will end in my lifetime. Maybe I’ll join you afterwords :)