-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

from:
http://www.drugwar.com/whitehope.htm
Drug War  - Covert Money, Power & Policy
670 Page Paperback, 350 Illustrations, Sewn Binding, Not Yet PublishedClick
Here: <A HREF="http://www.drugwar.com/whitehope.htm">http://www.drugwar.com/wh
itehope.htm</A>
-----
Illustrated Summaries of Much Longer Chapters
Drug War
Covert Money, Power & Policy

White Hope

Charles B. Towns' cure, officially endorsed by the AMA, was famous throughout
the country in the teens and twenties. It almost certainly would make anyone
stop taking anything. It consisted of huge simultanous doses of foxglove,
belladonna, prickly ash bark and strong purgatives, coupled with constant
prayer. Foxglove and belladonna are two of the most famous witchcraft herbs
of Europe. Foxglove contains the cardiac stimulent digitalis, and belladonna
contains the powerfully psychoactive scopolamine and hyoscyamine.

Towns claimed his cure was effective for opium, cocaine or alcohol addiction.
His New York sanitarium charged between $200-$350 for a private room for the
five-day course, and $75 for a double occupancy, big money in those days.
Towns' theoretical and commercial partner was Dr. Alexander Lambert, chief of
the AMA's Medicolegal Bureau during the fight to pass Harrison, later head of
the AMA. Together they profitably administered the Towns-Lambert method.

Lambert's entry on cocaine addiction in Osler's prestigious 1925 medical
textbook, Modern Medicine, solemnly pronounced that "The most effective
treatment is the Towns treatment and the method is the same as in dealing
with an alcoholic, except that the cocaine should be cut off immediately.
Strychnine, with or without some form of digitalis should be given from the
beginning. The belladonna mixture and from 3 to 5 cathartic pills and 5 gr.
of blue mass should be given simultanously as the first dose. The belladonna
mixture is continued every hour of the day and night, and twelve hours after
the initial dose the patients are again given from 3 to 5 cathartic pills
followed six hours later by a saline, and at the twenty-fourth hour after the
intial dose they are again given cathartics and again at the thirty-sixth
hour. After these last cathartics the bilious stool appears, and by the
forty-fifth to forty-eighth hour castor oil is given."

That is, they pharmacologically kicked the shit out of their patients; they
"puked and purged" 'em. They divined their success ratio by counting as cured
all those who didn't return for further punishment.

Between 1893 and 1895 the Opium Royal Commission produced three twelve
hundred page volumes of expert notarized testimony concerning the use of
opium in India. It made no attempt to exclude negative witnesses. Its only
requirement was verifiable expertise on some aspect of the subject. One
English missionary, who knew of no "hardier, thriftier or more careful people
than the Punjabis," insisted regular opium use "seems to interfere neither
with their longevity nor with their health." That was the overwhelming
majority opinion of the hundreds of physicians, civil servants, merchants,
missionaries and working people recorded by the Commission.

Small amounts of opium produce a pleasant and energetic bodily lightness
conducive to work and mental activity. Opium was used as a pre-battle
stimulant by the Punjabis, and no British soldier wanted to face them. Larger
amounts of opium produce a dreamy reverie, "an aid to music composers" as one
1912 New York Times article had it.

In order to assimilate the morphine equivalent of one grain of heroin
(diacetylmorphine) injected intravenously, a smoker would have to cook 300 to
400 grains of opium, three quarters of an ounce. Smoked, all 39 of opium's
alkaloids are delivered in concert, slowly and in miniscule doses, CNS
exciters right along with the depressants. The most harm an opium smoker can
do to himself is put himself to sleep.

Morphine, on the other hand, opium's major alkaloid, is a powerful CNS
depressant, especially in conjunction with alcohol, and hypodermic injection
makes absorption immediate and irreversible. That has stopped more than one
heart - and sullied the reputation of opium sap, for those that don't know
the difference between herbs and alkaloids.

Morphine, about 5% of opium sap by weight, isolated in 1803, is medically
superior to the sap as a pain killer. And physicians are perfectly justified
in their contention that isolated alkaloids are too concentrated for
uncontrolled distribution. The human body did not evolve in relation to
isolated alkaloids.

But the 1909-1914 criminalization of the safe sap automatically popularized
the refined alkaloid, since it's far more profitable to smuggle. This was the
conclusion of the official USPHS study conducted by Kolb and Du Mez in 1924.
Prior to 1914 gum opium was favored by regular users, after 1914 the gum had
been almost totally replaced by heroin and morphine. As Professor Trebach
pointed out, this substitution process repeated itself after WW II when
American drug law was foisted on a supine world. Hong Kong, North Europe,
Japan, Germany, Singapore, Thailand, Borneo and Turkey all found their opium
smokers using the only available substitute - heroin. Professor McCoy
repeatedly makes the same point.

As Professor Alfred Lindesmith put it in the introduction to his 1947 classic
Addiction and Opiates: "alcohol is addicting in approximately the same sense
that heroin is...the fact that marijuana, cocaine, and heroin and other
opiate-type drugs are covered in the same anti-narcotics legislation is a
fertile source of confused thinking because it obscures the facts that the
use of marijuana is totally unlike heroin or morphine addiction and that
alcoholism...actually has very much in common with opiate addiction."

Alcohol, heroin and cocaine all show approximately the same ratio of addicts
or abusers to users, 5% or less, hardly a proportion requiring mass hysteria.
Cigarettes produce a rate of addiction higher than 50% in occassional users.

Coca leaf and opium sap would be preferred by many to cocaine and heroin,
were they available, but their legend is so terrifying, like Dracula's fangs,
the mere mention of their phantasm brings shudders of fear, as if Dracula
were real. In fact, neither opium sap nor coca leaf are a problem in their
native cultures, where they're both religious and social sacraments.

In 970 CE Su Che, in his poem "The Cultivation of the Medicinal Plant Poppy,"
sang that opium's "seeds are like autumn millet; when ground they yield a sap
like cow's milk; when boiled they become a drink fit for Buddha." In 1057, Su
Sung noted that the opium "poppy is found everywhere." Throughout China, for
more than a millenium, honored guests were greeted with drinks or pipes full
of opium.

Of course, coolies under the lash in the turn-of-the-century colonial slave
states, in intense pain, could be expected to become addicted to opium, the
most effective herbal pain killer known, especially when it was substituted
for their wages. It was literally the only escape they had. "Insufficient
food, harsh work schedules, and beatings made most of the plantations slave
labor camps with annual death rates higher than 20 percent."

The European colonialists, and the Chinese Imperial slave states, then
pointed to this large-scale addiction they themselves had fostered as
justification for their politically selective enforcement - and for their
need to monopolize the trade. Below, a British opium inspector in India,
1905. Scoring the seedcapsules in Yunnan, China, 1925.

The Chinese Opium Wars were about control of the trade, that is, control of
China. Opium smoking was demonized as treason by the Chinese monarchy, and
its American ally, only after the British cornered the global trade by
conquering opium-producing India and taking control of major Chinese ports.
Until that time, Chinese poets sang opium's praises. Under conditions of
foreign monopoly, however, to smoke imported opium was to finance the British
rape of China. It is finance and the attendant geopolitical power that
Chinese Emperors worried about, not the health of their subjects.

Before the European attack on China's sovereignty, opium was a commonly
accepted social sacrament and aid to meditation with a very long history as
the most important painkiller, soporific, anti-spasmodic and febrifugue
known. This medical respect for opium was accepted worldwide. As the 1918
U.S. Dispensatory put it: "It is at present more frequently prescribed than
perhaps any other article of the materia medica." Below, the raw sap drying
in the Persian sun, 1925. Below that, opium and sweet tea, Shiraz, Persia,
1925.


Nearly all the empirical research supports the conclusions of Dr. Marie
Nyswander, the inventor of methadone maintenance: "There is a pattern of
self-limitation or restraint in opium smoking in countries where it is
socially acceptable. It is common for natives in these countries to indulge
in opium smoking one night a week much as Americans may indulge in alcoholic
beverages at a Saturday night party....families who accept opium smoking as
part of their culture are mindful of its dangers much as we are mindful of
the dangers of overindulgence in alcohol."

Describing the high rate of opium or heroin addiction in Hong Kong in 1970,
Professor McCoy stresses that "Most of the addicts were poor wage laborers
who lived in cramped tenements and sprawling slums, which many social workers
considered ideal breeding grounds for addiction."
That is, it is the pain that causes the addiction, not the pain killer.
People who are not in intense pain are no more likely to become addicted to
opiates than to any other pain killer. But of course, to acknowledge that
politically would mean that public funds would start to flow out of police
programs and into social programs. Below, Police Commissioner Roosevelt's
friend, Jacob Riis, took this shot on New York's Lowert East Side, 1885.

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soap-boxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds�is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to