Do you know that some scholars suggest that there is an established and lasting link between marijuana prohibition and current sentiment associated with immigration policies, or that:
The extended sequence of armed regional conflicts, more commonly referred to as the Mexican Revolution, began in 1910;
Massachusetts was the first state to criminalize marijuana with its ban on the sale of Indian hemp (1911);
Marijuana was banned in California, Indiana, Maine, and Wyoming in 1913;
Utah and Vermont banned marijuana in 1915;
The end of the Mexican Revolution coincided with the beginning of US Prohibition (1920);
Prohibition was enacted in response to pre-existing social ills, ostensibly and presumably caused by alcohol consumption;
Demand for labor in the Southwestern US resulted in an increase of legal Mexican migrants during the 1920s, and allegedly introduced the recreational use of marijuana to the US;
The Johnson-Reed Act/Immigration Act of 1924 restricted immigration from Southern and Eastern European countries, and included head taxes and literacy tests;
An increase in racial prejudice and xenophobia coincided with Prohibition and legal migration to the US;
The end of Prohibition (1933) coincided with the beginning of the criminalization of marijuana in the US (1930s);
Texas declared cannabis a narcotic, allowing up to life sentences for possession (1931); or
The Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 regulated its importation, cultivation, possession and/or distribution, imposed an annual tax of $24 on importers, and became the justification for arrest and deportation?