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UltimateGamingTechie OP t1_j6m8mu0 wrote

> Despite this long history, charas was made illegal in India under pressure from the United States in 1985...

Way to ruin the fun, eh?

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_thankyoucomeagain_ t1_j6m8wcg wrote

Ya, sure. Of all the problems going on between India and u.s..... that the one the u.s. said no to.

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neverfarts t1_j6mae23 wrote

Yet, it grows wild everywhere. In the villages where charas is produced they have lookouts, and when the local police come to do a burnout, they will give them some money to go away. Only when the federalos come it is an issue. Honestly, I dont know what is the issue. There are sadhus smoking chillum everywhere on the street and as long as you are not an idiot about it, charas is widely available.

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BrokenEye3 t1_j6mcd0x wrote

Why? What does the US get out of exactly one other country not getting high (legally)?

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Say10sadvocate t1_j6melkn wrote

It's fucking crazy how countries which outlawed cannabis because of pressure from the US, still have it prohibited despite much of America legalising.

Yet another situation where the US should have minded it's own fucking business.

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LovelyBeats t1_j6msmdz wrote

The sheer amount of wealth they extracted from india is insane, it's why they built the railroads, to get it out if the country.

The British Raj and their impact on Indian society is a very fascinating topic

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SaltNo3123 t1_j6mszk3 wrote

America has been pressuring other countries under the guise of drugs for over 100 years.

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Shooter2970 t1_j6mszuf wrote

Population would be the #1 factor for India being the way it is. Oh and it has been 70+ years since the Brits left. So I should have said "decades ago." 70 years of running themselves. They can take credit for their country.

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kibufox t1_j6mt5qb wrote

Part of the issue with it wasn't the concentrate itself, but the sheer number of people being arrested for trafficking by trying to bring it back into the country.

One of the things people tend to forget is that even when something is decriminalized on a state level, it remains illegal on a federal level unless Congress passes a law that over rules the previous law.

The laws which govern customs, which handles importing of goods into the US, is federal law, not state or local. It also covers things like tobacco, and food. Meaning yes, you can also get arrested for bringing too many cigarettes into the country, but I digress.

The problem that the US noticed, was that US citizens were going to India, buying charas, and then trying to return to the US with it. When they would pass through customs, those people were getting found out and were being arrested on smuggling or trafficking charges. Since these were federal charges, this was happening in places where cannabis use was technically legal, and it was creating a severe backlog in the federal legal system.

To help curtail this, the US State department reached out to other nations where this drug originated, and requested that they do something about the sales of it in and around where major international airports were. The reasoning there being that it would prevent US citizens from getting it and bringing it back; while at the same time it would help cut back the number of native Indian smugglers, since drug mules rarely operate too far from points of embarkation due to how the internal (inside their body) smuggling is performed. Meaning there's a short time frame between ingestion of the smuggling packets, and when the mule boards a plane.

For India, there were concessions also made, as things like this are never so one sided as they're presented on places like Reddit or Facebook. These concessions were a relaxation on import and export tariffs (basically taxes), which would allow legal importation of other goods at a higher rate, since companies wouldn't need to pay as much to do so. Given how high tariffs are to begin with, when offered a chance to lower them and only needing to make a simple concession to prevent sales of something around major airports, well it's no surprise that the Indian government agreed to the decision.

Oh, and something that may interest you. Going back to the point I made about federal charges, LAX (Los Angels Airport) has clear warnings that while you may legally have cannabis on your person inside the non secure areas of the airport, attempting to go through TSA with it will result in your arrest for smuggling charges.

Edit: One final note. TSA and Customs are not the same thing. Customs officers, those who search the bags of returning passengers, are federal officers. TSA are employed by the airport themselves, or in some cases by the state.

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kibufox t1_j6mtqka wrote

Nope.

India didn't even outlaw it. All they did was, in exchange for lower import tariffs on other goods, stop sales of it around major airports into and out of the nation.

The problem wasn't the charas itself, it was people trying to bring it back to the US. The main issue here being Customs (the guys that search your bags when you return from an overseas flight), are federal officers. So they follow federal laws. Whether something is 'legal' on a state level, really doesn't matter when you're talking about federal laws. So people were getting arrested for smuggling and trafficking in states where marijuana use had been decriminalized. Since these were federal charges, and not state level charges, there wasn't anything that could be done about those charges, regardless of how 'legal' cannabis was in them.

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kaizokuuuu t1_j6mumod wrote

No not for that, India and Nepal were a haven for the hippies during late 1900s, it was banned in Nepal in 1985 as well. Before that, a lot of young people from the US would just come and chill in Nepal and India. This was a big problem for the US because they were losing able bodied people who they could send to Vietnam and middle east to die. So they forced the countries to ban all types of grass. I have seen pictures of old shops in Freak Street Kathmandu with sign boards advertising marijuana. Guess how the street got its name.

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-6-6-6- t1_j6muo3n wrote

Not nearly the same, actually. Making the comparison means you're looking for baseless justifications for your bigotry. While you're at it, you should ask the Irish how much they took from them.

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-6-6-6- t1_j6mv6d8 wrote

People don't shit in the streets on China. Obviously population has nothing to do with it. You've never been to India; and only circlejerk or perpetuate racist memes on the internet about the country. Nor have you apparently been to certain cities in America; both the deep south and those big "liberul" cities that the news is always droning on about, because the same shit happens there. The only difference is scale; and you're right in the sense that the scale of population and levels of poverty are far different. Reason being?

Colonization. Let's take a look at the dissolvement of the Ottoman Empire after WW1 and how the borders were drawn between the French and the British with a complete and utter disregard for the ethnic make-up and historical constituency of the Levant and Middle-East. Because of their mistakes; the middle-east exists and will probably exist in constant turmoil. India is similar; in the sense that the population was kept under such a level of poverty that 70 years alone isn't anywhere near enough to cover it. Ontop of that; a rapid growing population. Population isn't the reason people shit in the streets though.

Funny enough; the only two countries who have had that much development in 50 years is China and the USSR. Weird how that works right? Look at them now, sadly.

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rumblemania t1_j6myjze wrote

The United States deserves everything it’s currently getting

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rash-head t1_j6n32f4 wrote

India was the richest country in the world before colonization. You don’t have to wonder what happened. There’s plenty of research on how British Raj ruled India to enrich the homeland.

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hassh t1_j6n90bu wrote

Your comment does not make sense because the substance was outlawed in India in 1985, decades before legalization began in the United States at the state level

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mrarmyant t1_j6o0vbo wrote

Not when comparing number of Americans getting food poisoning in America compared to the percentage of Americans that get it while in India. You think Dehli Belly for a reason. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-4507376/Delhi-belly-food-poisoning-says-expert.html but you might just be someone who doesn't venture out of Goa or the Himalayas. Mumbai and Bangalore over 10 trips treated me far worse than 30 to Mexico.

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SirRedRising t1_j6o8qz6 wrote

And much like Vietnam, or Iraq, or Afghanistan, the United States government largely refuses to admit defeat and some pockets will try to keep it going indefinitely (most likely because they personally stand to profit from the continuation of whichever "war" we happen to be talking about)

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Train-Robbery t1_j6oessx wrote

It is legal for Sadhus to use Ganja and Charas , you can consume it too if they give it to you. But possession still is a crime, can easily bribe your way out of it.

I know places that sell weed openly in Delhi, especially in Subash Nagar. Proper Shop with a glass top mahogany office table and a leather chair with a guy dressed well sitting there with packets of weed through the table. Not a slight threat of police , it's in Subash Nagar C Block. The shop is on GPS as well

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Train-Robbery t1_j6off5f wrote

You should not buy bhang in large quantities, it's not nearly a good thing to do more than once a month.

Only for Holi when we play with water and colors it feels great, other days it is not good. If you are just sitting around doing nothing then it is of no use

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Say10sadvocate t1_j6or11t wrote

Here in the UK my theory is the unhealthy connection between politics and media.

The newspapers, to back up the government position, convinced a generation it was evil. That generation still votes, so being "tough on drugs" is a vote winning position. 🤷🏽‍♂️

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HalLundy t1_j6os6k8 wrote

so regular cannabis is still fine tho?

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Laxjudgement t1_j6p6krz wrote

You are ignorant. The people you are referring to as “the united states” are a small number of wealthy shitbags and they aren’t suffering at all. Regular folks in the us don’t deserve the shit they are getting.

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Rethious t1_j6p7ltm wrote

The US did not force India to ban it. I checked the article wikipedia cites for details, and in a 1961 UN treaty, India agreed to ban consuming certain parts of the cannabis plant while permitting others. There’s no suggestion of any coercion; UN treaties aren’t the most forceful things on Earth.

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rumblemania t1_j6pdh9h wrote

Regular folks have done nothing, boomers stole everyone else’s future. Your all tools who export your problems to every other county just to destabilise them and to keep your hegemony. The ending of the hegemony is a good thing that can’t happen soon enough

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KellosaurusGrows t1_j6ph47i wrote

charas are insanely gross, idk about you, but i’d rather not smoke some random persons skin and whatever else they had on their hands

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