The Prohibition era (1920-33) plays a far more significant role in U.S. history than is commonly assumed. Yes, it clearly failed in its objectives. And, yes, the assumptions that led to the rapid enactment of the 18th Amendment were massively flawed. But Prohibition was, as Lisa McGirr, professor of history at Harvard, argues in her book, The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State, “one of the boldest and most radical social efforts to alter personal behavior in the nation’s history and one that would have dramatic though unintended consequences for nation-state building and for politics.” It is also, not surprisingly, inseparable from the broader history of drug prohibition and drug wars since the start of the 20th century.
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Steve Rolles on Legalizing Drugs
Charley & Shelley Wininger On Healthy Aging & Sex with MDMA
Paul Gootenberg on the Global History of Drugs
Dennis McKenna on The Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss
Neil Carrier on Khat
Bonus episode: Psychedelic Confessions - Speaking Personally
Gabor Maté on Trauma and the Myth of Normal
Chris Kilham - "The Medicine Hunter" - on Kava
Ellen Scanlon on Women & Cannabis
Bonus Episode: How to Do the Pot
Hattie Wells on Ibogaine Treatment
Martin Lee on CBD: It's a Molecule, Not a Miracle
Chelsea Handler on Drugs
Lynn Paltrow on Pregnancy and Drugs
Martin Torgoff on Jazz, Race, The Beats & Drugs
Kurt Schmoke: Profile in Courage
Boris Jordan on the Politics & Future of the Cannabis Industry
Edward Slingerland on Intoxication & Civilization
Graham Pechenik on Psychedelic Patents & Law
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