We often think of the War on Drugs as beginning some time during the Twentieth Century, either with Harry Anslinger in the 1920s, or Richard Nixon in the 1970s. But the first war against drugs was a war against opium, and it started in the 1700s, turning into a political war between China and England, then again, later, between China and a number of aligned countries, including England.
In this episode I talk about the roots of the original war on drugs, the Opium Wars, and what they can teach us about the current ongoing war on drugs.
All music from Pixabay
Support the Show.
146: Life in Guy Debord's Society of the Spectacle (pt 2)
#145: Addiction, Ideology & the Society of the Spectacle
Episode 144: C. Dreams Free at Last (Dr. Christina Perez)
#143: Cults, Drugs & The 12-Step Success Story
#142: Where's my Adderall, Ritalin & Opioids?
#141: The Panopticon
#140: Captured Words/Free Thoughts, 20th Anniversary
#139: We Couldn't Build it Worse if we Tried
#138: Drugs and Addiction in a Neoliberal Oligarchy
#137: Foucault on Drugs
#136: Heroin with Adorno, Marx, Marcuse & Nietzsche
#135: Capitalism and the War on Drugs (Benjamin Fong)
#134: What's Wrong with Prison? (Christie Donner)
#133: Attachment, Authenticity & Addiction (Dr. Erin Boyce)
#132: Prisons on TV and the Spectacle of Punishment
#131: The US War on Drugs 1970-2020
#130: The US War on Drugs 1920-1970
#129: The US War on Drugs 1870-1920
#128: What Prison Should Be Like (Dr. Ashley Hamilton)
#127: Poetry from Prison—Captured Words/Free Thoughts 19
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Navigating Life After 40
Teaching Learning Leading K-12
Regenerative Skills
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast