Richmond P. Hobson is still more influential than his current name recognition would suggest. Called The Father of Prohibition, he campaigned tirelessly to ban alcohol, making up alarming statistics as he toured the country. He should also be called the father of the war on drugs. When prohibition was enacted, he began making much the same speech against opiates, at the time thought less dangerous than strong drink. He stoked fears of an army of addicts committing depraved crimes. Then addiction became the crime, sending many to jail.
Harry J. Anslinger took up Hobson's theme in the 1930s, this time against marijuana, asserting the substance turned innocents into criminals.
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