I came across the article today that brought up an interesting and very obvious good point. Many years ago mostly people used herbs for medicine, the world has a very clever way of providing for us. So its no surprise that they gave us a plant that actually heals as well as relieves pain....How perfect! Well it would be if it wasnt classed as a drug..which to be honest sounds slightly crazy. When you consider all the crap that pharmaceutical companies thrust upon us with their concoction of factory produced, chemically formed rarely safe drugs.
The politics of cannabis are exceedingly complex, and yet the truth is simple: this freely growing plant heals the human body – not to mention provides food, fuel, clothing and shelter, if only we will let it perform its birthright. In a previous article, we investigated the strange fact that the human body is in many ways pre-designed, or as it were, pre-loaded with a receptiveness to cannabis' active compounds -- cannabinoids -- thanks to its well documented endocannabinoid system.
But the medical-industrial complex in the U.S. does not want you to use these freely growing compounds. They threaten its very business model and existence. Which is why it synergizes so naturally with the burgeoning privatized prison sector, which now has the dubious title of having the highest incarceration rate in the world. The statistics don't lie:
But read this because this is more crazy!
Cannabis/marijuana is presently on the DEA's Schedule 1 list. Since 1972, cannabis has been listed on the Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, the most tightly restricted category reserved for drugs which have "no currently accepted medical use". Opioids, stimulants, psychedelics and a few antidepressants now populate this list of substances that can put you in jail for possessing without a prescription.
The notion that marijuana has no 'medicinal benefits' is preposterous, actually. Since time immemorial it has been used as a panacea ('cure-all'). In fact, as far back as 2727 B.C., cannabis was recorded in the Chinese pharmacopoeia as an effective medicine, and evidence for its use as a food, textile and presumably as a healing agent stretch back even further, to 12 BC.[1]