Jesse Ventura's Marijuana Manifesto shows how a fruitful and profitable plant like cannabis (or marijuana) was once the high-demand cash crop around the world and, suddenly, became the new source of another United States prohibition and symbol for why the U.S. incarcerates more people than any other nation.
For years, cannabis was grown and split into three different forms (hemp, CBD, and THC) throughout the world prior to its entry into the U.S. In the form of hemp, it has been used to create materials such as paper, cloth, and vehicular parts. CBD has been used in the form of medicine while THC has been used as a sensation drug to relieve stress the same way tobacco and alcohol have.
However, with domestically racist stigmas unfairly used against Mexicans and African-Americans thanks to propagandists and political figures like William Randolph Hearst, Harry Anslinger, and Richard Nixon and fear of tight competition from corporal giants like DuPont marijuana has been labeled a schedule-one narcotic, a type of drug that the government depicts as lethal for use and dangerous for abuse. Under corporal influences and flawed government priorities, the U.S. Government has fabricated studies and reports about marijuana's lethalities, potential as a gateway drug, and role in low-income minorities being depicted as the criminal addict demographic while failing to show what gateway features alcohol and tobacco can bring and who are the largest consumers of addictive drugs.
The truth is that the CDC and NIH have studies that reveal that initial users of alcohol and tobacco became more likely to use deadlier drugs like heroin and cocaine than initial users marijuana and white people use drugs at far greater rates than minorities.
Despite such revelations and past debunkings of untruthful government propaganda, the U.S. government has worsened the state of drugs by targeting low-income minorities possessing and using marijuana as shaming examples for society and the supply for 90 percent-minimum capacity, corporal for-profit prisons subsidized by taxpayers. Subsequently, due to the influence and corporal and government's abuse of Citizens United ruling's rhetoric, "corporations are people" and "unlimited campaign financing is free speech," corporations have now used marijuana users-turned-inmates as lowly paid "insourcing" labor that produces goods and items you find in your name-brand stores today.
Whole Foods Market, as of the book's publishing (2016), used "insourced" prison labor to cultivate ready-to-serve tilapia for its customers. In June 2017, Amazon purchased Whole Foods at $13.7 billion dollars while each "insourced" individual laborer earns a daily rate that nothing close to the hourly federal minimum wage.
It may be awhile before we see this prison reform that steers away from these practices that are largely linked to marijuana prohibition. However, with CBD and THC marijuana legalizations growing in numerous states there is some hope for social and governmental change. Still, we have a long way to go.
With confidence that voices like Jesse's, books such as Marijuana Manifesto, and reform-lobbying groups that the book mentions, we can have a brand new country that creates laws based on regulated capitalism, less prohibition, and, most importantly, no class and race discrimination. We need a brand new country thanks to the idiocy and bigoted views aimed at the drugs and its users, and advocates of a brand new country must never be told to leave, especially as this country's inhabitants have thrown away their abilities to become more educated and, as a result, selected poor leaders in the House, Senate, and Presidency #whitewingmajority #TrumpMustGo!