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Forbidden Medicine: 500 Years Of Drug Trading Revealed

2025-08-14 News & Politics
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David Hoffman
David Hoffman
1.4m subscribers

The Global History and Shifting Policy of Opiates and Illicit Drugs in America

Uncover the centuries-long journey of addictive substances, from ancient medicinal use to modern synthetic crises, and how US policy has swung between punitive action and public health treatment.

Short Summary

  • Trace the origins of modern drug crises back to the refinement of opium into heroin in the 19th century.
  • Analyze the shift in US legal response, moving from labeling laws (1906) to harsh mandatory sentencing (1956) and then toward treatment models (1966).
  • Understand the complex international supply chain, where poverty at the source drives the global illicit commodity market.
  • The narration highlights that enforcement alone cannot stop the flow of drugs; it requires addressing user compulsion and economic necessity at the source.

This document synthesizes historical data describing the global sourcing, refinement, and distribution networks of illicit drugs, primarily focusing on the opium derivatives that shaped US drug policy from the 1800s through the mid-20th century. It contrasts severe criminal penalties with emerging public health approaches to addiction.

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Description

The history of illegal drugs in America begins in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when substances like opium, cocaine, and cannabis were widely available in patent medicines and sold without restriction. Opium smoking was associated with Chinese immigrant communities, and cocaine was sometimes added to products like Coca-Cola. Concerns over addiction and morality led to early federal controls, starting with the 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act, which required accurate labeling of ingredients. The 1914 Harrison Narcotics Tax Act restricted opiates and cocaine, effectively criminalizing their nonmedical use. Cannabis became targeted in the 1930s, culminating in the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act, which heavily regulated and taxed its sale. After World War II, drug use was relatively low, but by the 1960s, counterculture movements popularized marijuana, LSD, and other hallucinogens, prompting new federal restrictions such as the 1970 Controlled Substances Act, which categorized drugs into schedules. The Nixon administration declared a “War on Drugs” in 1971, expanding enforcement and penalties. In the 1980s, under Presidents Reagan and Bush, crack cocaine epidemics in urban areas fueled harsher laws, mandatory minimum sentences, and intensified policing, disproportionately impacting Black and Latino communities. In the 1990s and 2000s, methamphetamine spread in rural and suburban areas, while heroin resurged in the 2010s alongside the prescription opioid crisis, which began with widespread marketing of painkillers like OxyContin in the late 1990s. By the 2020s, synthetic opioids such as fentanyl became the leading cause of overdose deaths, prompting renewed debates over public health approaches versus criminal enforcement. Throughout this history, drug policy in America has oscillated between punitive measures and harm reduction strategies, with shifting public attitudes toward substances like marijuana, now legal for recreational or medical use in many states.

Top Comments (10)

@ZodyZody 2025-08-17

My dad was born in 1918. He was arrested with an ounce of marijuana with intent to deliver. He was sent to an insane asylum for months. He said that they gave him experimental drugs while he was there and he had no idea what.

318 57 replies
@dE3Lov 2025-08-14

David, your archive of films, is a global treasure. Thank you for every upload. ❤

157 2 replies
@dreamsR4real 2025-08-15

15:10 The Prison Industrial Complex's beginning....: "2nd and 3rd offenses, and selling in any quality; even soft drug such as marijuana, brought terms up to 40 years". Crazy. And the guy rummaging thru the drugs looks questionable too. I love the quote: "The most successful and most wicked criminals wear a suit and a tie".

128 4 replies
@7Moonbeam6 2025-08-14

All walks of life, housewives,doctors,bricklayers,newsmen

56 3 replies
@FloopyNupers 2025-08-14

Amazing how you have a vast amount of footage available

42 1 replies
@SteveDarby-uy1tq 2025-10-04

The poppy has caused more problems in my life than any other plant in the world.

32 7 replies
@jameysummers1577 2025-08-16

The war on drugs ruins more lives than drugs themselves.

29 2 replies
@B_Thirty-three 2025-08-17

I live in Lexington, KY & have heard stories about FMC Lexington when it was "The Narcotic Farm" When I got out of High School in 2000, Oxy Contin got really bad around here. When it started to get harder to find, Heroin showed up & most of my friends started dying.

19 1 replies
@tomsprout3293 2025-08-17

Love these old documentaries...

13
@thehardyboys4227 2025-11-16

60’s and 70’s hardcore is now soft core compared to today’s street drugs

7

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