Anti-Drugs Policies in the 1960s

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Drugs have been influencing the ideas, culture, and music of America for ages. Illicit narcotics have left the Union in a state of immense debt. Anti-drug policies have been dumping billions upon billions of dollars in prevention, punishment, and rehabilitation. From the roaring twenties, to the prohibition, drugs have always been fought (Bailey). Most times, the drugs start off as medicines and end up being harmful (Morris). Perhaps, the most prominent and influential eras of drug use in America are the two decades of the 60’s and twenty years later, the 80’s. It may very well be that these two decades molded America into what it is now.
The sixties had a huge pull from conservative America of the post-war era. Vietnam veterans were returning home with heroin addictions, the counterculture was spreading their free love, and the music festivals were introducing millions of people into the new America. The sixties was the first decade that made non-alcoholic drug use popular among young people. When it first dawned that drugs were going to be a big political debate, many representatives, like Nixon, made some the first anti-drug policies since Wilson. And though LSD was created much earlier, “acid” as it was called, became widespread in specific sects of America.
The eighties had Ronald Reagan’s war on drugs, the crack epidemic in major cities, and the Columbian cartels’ emergence as a threat. Kingpin “freeway Ricky Ross” made his debut in the eighties and organized an empire solely on drugs. Ad campaigns featuring the first lady, Nancy Reagan, were launched in an attempt to have kids “just say no,” and “nope to dope” (Martin). The crack epidemic hit so hard, that many conspiracy theories stating that the CIA was sending crack...

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...ore careful as to whom they slept with and they were surer to be wearing protection in the form of condoms. Nobody knew where AIDS was coming from, but it was blamed on the gay community. It was assumed that if you were gay you had AIDS, and vice-versa. This mindset kick started the first major gay rights movements in America. These movements did not gain much traction, but they left a lasting impression that is felt today. The movements of the eighties were a stepping stone for today’s movements for gay marriage and anti discrimination laws. Cocaine has indirectly led to gay rights.
With drugs impacting America so much, it’s hard to imagine an America without them. Maybe America wouldn’t be in debt; however, the same could be achieved by not dumping billions of dollars into the DEA. America has been forever impacted by the counterculture, and the war on drugs.

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