In the world today, there is no state that has not made drugs illegal. In 1961, the United States used its clout as the preeminent superpower to consolidate laws against the manufacture, distribution and possession of narcotic substances in all the territories where it held influence, and the Soviet Union shared their opinions, an unusually bipartisan endeavour. For almost a whole decade, every country in the Western world took concrete and often blunt steps toward suppressing the consumption of these dangerous substances.
Why Ban Drugs? An Introduction
Why Ban Drugs? An Introduction
Why Ban Drugs? An Introduction
In the world today, there is no state that has not made drugs illegal. In 1961, the United States used its clout as the preeminent superpower to consolidate laws against the manufacture, distribution and possession of narcotic substances in all the territories where it held influence, and the Soviet Union shared their opinions, an unusually bipartisan endeavour. For almost a whole decade, every country in the Western world took concrete and often blunt steps toward suppressing the consumption of these dangerous substances.