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Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market Hardcover – January 1, 2003

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 212 ratings

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In Reefer Madness, the best-selling author of Fast Food Nation investigates America's black market and its far-reaching influence on our society through three of its mainstays -- pot, porn, and illegal immigrants. The underground economy is vast; it comprises perhaps 10 percent -- perhaps more -- of America's overall economy, and it's on the rise. Eric Schlosser charts this growth, and finds its roots in the nexus of ingenuity, greed, idealism, and hypocrisy that is American culture. He reveals the fascinating workings of the shadow economy by focusing on marijuana, one of the nation's largest cash crops; pornography, whose greatest beneficiaries include Fortune 100 companies; and illegal migrant workers, whose lot often resembles that of medieval serfs.
All three industries show how the black market has burgeoned over the past three decades, as America's reckless faith in the free market has combined with a deep-seated puritanism to create situations both preposterous and tragic. Through pot, porn, and migrants, Schlosser traces compelling parallels between underground and overground: how tycoons and gangsters rise and fall, how new technology shapes a market, how government intervention can reinvigorate black markets as well as mainstream ones, how big business learns -- and profits -- from the underground.
With intrepid reportage, rich history, and incisive argument, Schlosser illuminates the shadow economy and the culture that casts that shadow.

Amazon.com Review

As much as 10% of the American economy, and perhaps more, is comprised of illegal "underground" enterprises, according to author and Atlantic Monthly correspondent Eric Schlosser. And while this segment is never discussed in the newspaper business pages, Schlosser tackles it with the same in-depth analysis and compulsive readability that made his Fast Food Nation a best seller. Reefer Madness spotlights marijuana, migrant labor, and pornography, three of the most thriving black market industries, and analyzes the often-tenuous place each holds in society as a whole. While each of the three could be the subject of its own book, Schlosser keeps his scope narrow by concentrating on the lives of the participants in the underground economy, especially Mark Young, an Indiana man given a life sentence for participating in a marijuana sale, and Ohio porn magnate Reuben Sturman. At just 21 pages, the treatment of migrant laborers in the California strawberry fields is dealt with more briefly but is just as compelling thanks to the first-person narrative of Schlosser’s investigation. In telling these stories, which are both personal and universal, Schlosser deftly explores the manner in which his subjects are treated (and punished) compared to others in more above-ground ventures. Along the way, he asks hard questions as to what that treatment says about America. Schlosser writing is passionately opinionated, but this is no mere opinion piece: his perspective is amply supported by extensive research and clearly reasoned interpretation of data. His direct and forceful writing style makes the impact greater still. After reading Reefer Madness, readers are likely to be shocked, appalled, and flat-out bewildered by what’s happening in the cracks and crevices of American business. --John Moe

From Publishers Weekly

From the bestselling author of Fast Food Nation comes this captivating look at the underbelly of the American marketplace. In three sections, Schlosser, an Atlantic Monthly correspondent, examines the marijuana, migrant labor and pornography trades, offering compelling tales of crime and punishment as well as an illuminating glimpse at the inner workings of the underground economy. The book revolves around two figures: Mark Young of Indiana, who was sentenced to life in prison without parole for his relatively minor role in a marijuana deal; and Reuben Sturman, an enigmatic Ohio man who built and controlled a formidable pornography distribution empire before finally being convicted of tax evasion, after beating a string of obscenity charges. Through recounting Young's and Sturman's ordeals, and to a lesser extent, the lives of migrant strawberry pickers in California, Schlosser unravels an American society that has "become alienated and at odds with itself." Like Fast Food Nation, this is an eye-opening book, offering the same high level of reporting and research. But while Schlosser does put forth forceful and unique market-based arguments, he isn't the first to take aim at the nation's drug laws and the puritanical hypocrisy that seeks to jail pornographers while permitting indentured servitude in California's strawberry fields. Nevertheless, this is a solid-and timely-second effort from Schlosser. As world events force Americans to choose values worth fighting for, Schlosser reminds readers, "the price of freedom is often what freedom brings."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Schlosser is the author of the best-selling Fast Food Nation (2001), which was a consciousness-raising examination of the fast-food industry. He now turns his reporting acumen to American underground economic activity, which, according to him, constitutes 9 to 10 percent of this country's economy--in other words, millions and millions of dollars that "cannot be accounted for." The black market in the U.S. "is where economic activities remain off the books, where they are unrecorded, unreported, and in violation of the law." The author focuses on three major black-market arenas: marijuana, the most widely used illegal drug in the U.S.; migrant workers in California, most of them illegal immigrants; and the pornography industry. Of course, woven into his account of this trio of black-market gold mines is also an examination of their effect on all of us, for the consequences are far reaching, from employing a child-care worker to downloading pornography off the Internet. His careful research and equally careful writing style contribute to a study that is certain to garner as much attention as his previous book. Brad Hooper
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author

Eric Schlosser has been a correspondent for the Atlantic Monthly since 1996. His work has also appeared in Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair, the Nation, and The New Yorker. He has received a National Magazine Award and a Sidney Hillman Foundation Award for reporting. In 1998 Schlosser wrote an investigative piece on the fast food industry for Rolling Stone. What began as a two-part article for the magazine turned into a groundbreaking book: Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal (2001). The book helped to change the way that Americans think about what they eat. Fast Food Nation was on the New York Times bestseller list for more than two years, as well as on bestseller lists in Canada, Great Britain, and Japan. It has been translated into more than twenty languages.

Schlosser’s second book, Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs, and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market (2003), explored the nation’s growing underground economy. It also became a New York Times bestseller. In 2003, Schlosser’s first play, Americans, was produced at the Arcola Theatre in London.

Hoping to counter the enormous amount of fast food marketing aimed at children, Schlosser decided to write a book that would help young people understand where their food comes from, how it’s made, how it affects society, and how it can harm their health. Co-written with Charles Wilson, Chew on This: Everything You Don’t Want to Know About Fast Food became a New York Times bestseller in the spring of 2006. Later that year, Fox Searchlight Pictures released a major motion picture based on Fast Food Nation, directed by Richard Linklater and co-written with Schlosser. “It’s a mirror and a portrait,” the New York Times said of the film, “as necessary and nourishing as your next meal.” Schlosser is currently at work on a book about America’s prison system.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

THE UNDERGROUND
Adam Smith believed in a God that was kind and wise and all-powerful. The
great theorist of the free market believed in Providence. "The happiness of
mankind," Smith wrote, "seems to have been the original purpose intended
by the Author of nature." The workings of the Lord could be found not in the
pages of a holy book, nor in miracles, but in the daily, mundane
buying-and-selling of the marketplace. Each purchase might be driven by an
individual desire, but behind them all lay "the invisible hand" of the Divine.
This invisible hand set prices and wages. It determined supply and demand.
It represented the sum of all human wishes. Without relying on any
conscious intervention by man, the free market improved agriculture and
industry, created surplus wealth, and made sure that the things being
produced were the things people wanted to buy. Human beings lacked the
wisdom, Smith felt, to improve society deliberately or to achieve Progress
through some elaborate plan. But if every man pursued his own self-interest
and obeyed only his "passions," the invisible hand would guarantee that
everybody else benefited, too.
Published in 1776, The Wealth of Nations later had a profound
effect upon the nation born that year. The idea that "life, liberty, and the
pursuit of happiness" were unalienable rights, endowed by a Creator, fit
perfectly with the economic theories of Adam Smith. "Life, liberty and
estate" was the well-known phrase that Thomas Jefferson amended slightly
for the Declaration of Independence. The United States was the first country
to discard feudal and aristocratic traditions and replace them with a
republican devotion to marketplace ideals. More than two centuries later,
America"s leading companies—General Motors, General Electric,
ExxonMobil, Microsoft, Wal-Mart, Boeing, et al.—have annual revenues
larger than those of many sovereign states. No currency is more powerful
than the U.S. dollar, and the closing prices on Wall Street guide the financial
markets of Tokyo, London, Paris, and Frankfurt. The unsurpassed wealth of
the United States has enabled it to build a military without rival. And yet there
is more to the U.S. economy, much more, than meets the eye. In addition to
America"s famous corporations and brands, the invisible hand has also
produced a largely invisible economy, secretive and well hidden, with its own
labor demand, price structure, and set of commodities.
"Black," "shadow," "irregular," "informal," "illegal," "subterranean,"
"underground"—a variety of adjectives have been used to describe this other
economy. Although defined in numerous ways, at its simplest the American
underground is where economic activities remain off the books, where they
are unrecorded, unreported, and in violation of the law. These activities
range from the commonplace (an electrician demanding payment in cash and
failing to declare the payment as income) to the criminal (a gang member
selling methamphetamine). They include moonlighting, check kiting, and
fencing stolen goods; street vending and tax evading; employing day laborers
and child laborers; running sweatshops and chop shops; smuggling
cigarettes, guns, and illegal immigrants; selling fake Rolexes, pirating CDs.
Economists disagree about the actual size of the underground economy and
how to measure it. Some studies look at the discrepancy between the
amount of personal income declared on tax returns and the amount of money
that is actually spent. Other studies examine changes in currency supply,
the velocity of money, levels of electricity usage. Each of these
methodologies has its merits. All have produced conclusions that are
debatable. There is general agreement, however, on two points: America"s
underground economy is vast—and most of its growth occurred in the past
thirty years.
Any estimate of illegal economic activity is bound to lack
precision, since it attempts to quantify things that people have carefully
tried to hide. Nevertheless, the best estimates convey a sense of scale and
proportion. In 1997 the Austrian economist Friedrich Schneider calculated
the rise of America"s "shadow economy" by tracing changes in the demand
for currency. According to Schneider, in 1970 the size of the underground
was between 2.6 and 4.6 percent of America"s gross domestic product
(GDP). By 1994 it had reached 9.4 percent of the GDP—about $650 billion.
Using a different methodology in 1998, Charles Rossotti, the commissioner of
the Internal Revenue Service, told Congress that during the previous year
Americans had failed to pay about $200 billion of federal taxes that were
owed, an amount larger than the government"s annual spending on
Medicare. Assuming an average federal tax rate of 14 percent, that means
Americans somehow neglected to report almost $1.5 trillion in personal
income. The IRS estimate did not include undeclared earnings from criminal
activity.
Two other periods in modern American history were marked by
thriving underground economies. From 1920 to 1933, the prohibition of
alcohol led to widespread trafficking and the rise of organized crime. At the
height of Prohibition, Americans spent about $5 billion a year on alcohol
(roughly $54 billion in today"s dollars). This black market constituted about
5 percent of the U.S. gross national product at the time. When Prohibition
ended, some bootleggers became well-respected businessmen. During the
Second World War, the imposition of rationing and price controls created
even larger black markets. A system designed to distribute scarce
commodities fairly had some unanticipated effects: a burgeoning trade in
ration books and a hidden cash economy. Perhaps 5 percent of the nation"s
gasoline and 20 percent of its meat were soon bought and sold illegally.
According to one estimate, by the end of the war Americans were failing to
report as much as 15 percent of their personal income. The underground
subsided amid the prosperity of the Eisenhower era. Wages increased, tax
evasion decreased, and no illegal commodity generated the sort of profits
once supplied by bootleg alcohol. And then at some point in the mid- to late
1960s the underground economy began to grow. Conservative economists
point to high income tax rates and excessive government regulation as the
fundamental causes. Liberals contend that declining wages, unemployment,
union busting, and the business deregulation of the Reagan years were
much more responsible for shifting economic activity underground. The
explanations offered by the left and the right are not mutually exclusive. A
stagnant economy prompted Americans of every background to work off the
books. The hippie counterculture of the 1960s and the anti-tax movement of
the late 1970s shared common ground in their dislike of government,
encouraging defiance of the IRS. A new drug culture provided new
opportunities for organized crime. The expansion of America"s underground
economy over the last thirty years stemmed not only from economic
hardship and a desire for illegal profits, but also from a growing sense of
alienation, anger at authority, and disrespect for the law.
During roughly the same period similar phenomena occurred
throughout the western industrialized world. The underground economy of
the European Union may now be larger than that of the United States. Years
of high unemployment, high tax rates, illegal immigration, and widespread
disillusion with government have created enormous undergrounds.
According to Friedrich Schneider"s estimates, these shadow economies
range in size from an estimated 12.5 percent of GDP in Great Britain to an
estimated 27 percent of GDP in Italy. Countries that were once part of the
Soviet Union have even larger black markets. In Estonia the underground is
now responsible for an estimated 39 percent of GDP; in Russia, for an
estimated 45 percent; in Ukraine, for an estimated 51 percent. The
underground is sometimes the most vibrant sector of these transition
economies, the place where free enterprise has finally bloomed. But in many
ways the growth of black markets in the developed world represents a step
backward. An expanding underground economy is often associated with
increased corruption and a greater disparity in wealth. For years government
officials and members of the Communist Party secretly profited from the
Soviet Union"s "second economy," offering services and commodities
unavailable through the mainstream. The largest undergrounds are now found
in the developing world, where governments are corrupt and laws are routinely
ignored. In Bolivia the underground economy is responsible for an estimated
65 percent of GDP. In Nigeria it accounts for perhaps 76 percent.
The U.S. dollar now serves as the unofficial currency of this new
global underground. During the late 1960s and early 1970s American
economists began to notice that the amount of currency in circulation had
grown much larger than the amount ordinary citizens were likely to use in
their everyday transactions. The discovery led to the first inklings that an
underground economy was emerging in the United States. While business
publications heralded the advent of a cashless, credit-based economy, the
use of banknotes quietly soared. The $100 bill soon became the
underground favorite, not just in the United States, but overseas as well,
thanks to its high face value and the relative stability of the dollar. During the
late 1970s the outflow of currency from the United States averaged about $2
billion a year. By the 1990s, about $20 billion in U.S. currency was being
shipped to foreign countries every year. Today approximately three-quarters
of all $100 bills circulate outside the United States.
The supremacy of the dollar in the global underground has proven
a boon to the American economy. The outflow of U.S. currency now serves,
in essence, as a gigantic interest-free loan. Every time the U.S. Treasury
issues new banknotes, it purchases an equal value of interest-bearing
securities. Those securities are liquidated only when the currency is taken
out of circulation and put into a bank. In 2000 the U.S. Treasury earned an
estimated $32.7 billion in interest from its banknotes circulating overseas.
The 1996 redesign of the $100 bill was partly motivated by fears that Middle
Eastern counterfeiters had created a convincingly real $100 bill, a
"supernote" that might threaten the role of U.S. currency in unofficial
transactions. The latest threat to the $100 bill comes not from organized
crime figures, but from the central bank of the European Union. The new 500-
euro note is perfect for black market activity. It has roughly five times the
value of a $100 bill, allowing drug dealers and smugglers to lighten their
suitcases. Portugal has banned the 500-euro note for those reasons, and its
acceptance in other foreign undergrounds is not yet certain.
The three essays in this book shed light on different aspects of
the American underground—and on the ways it has changed society, for
better or worse. "Reefer Madness" looks at the legal and economic
consequences of marijuana use in the United States. Pot has become a
hugely popular black market commodity, more widely used throughout the
world than any other illegal drug. The enforcement of state and federal laws
regarding marijuana guides its production, sets the punishments for its
users, and suggests the arbitrary nature of many cultural taboos. Americans
not only smoke more marijuana but also imprison more people for marijuana
than any other western industrialized nation.
"In the Strawberry Fields" examines the plight of migrant workers
in California agriculture, who are mainly illegal immigrants. The state"s
recruitment of illegals from Mexico started a trend that has lately spread
throughout the United States. Many employers now prefer to use black
market labor. Although immigrant smuggling looms as a multi-billion-dollar
business in its own right, the growing reliance on illegals has far-reaching
implications beyond the underground, affecting wages, working conditions,
and even the practice of democracy in the rest of society.
"An Empire of the Obscene" traces the history of the pornography
industry through the career of an obscure businessman and his
successors. It describes how a commodity once traded only on the black
market recently entered the mainstream, turning behavior long thought
deviant into popular entertainment. Profits from the sale of pornography that
used to be earned by organized crime figures are now being made by some
of America"s largest corporations. The current demand for marijuana and
pornography is deeply revealing. Here are two commodities that Americans
publicly abhor, privately adore, and buy in astonishing amounts.
Linking all three essays is a belief that the underground is
inextricably linked to the mainstream. The lines separating them are fluid,
not permanently fixed. One cannot be fully understood without regard to the
other. The vastness and complexity of the underground challenge the
mathematical certainties of conventional economic thinking. Hard numbers
suddenly appear illusory. Prices on Wall Street rise or fall based on
minuscule changes in the rate of inflation, the unemployment rate, the
latest predictions about the GNP. Billions of dollars may change hands
because an economic measurement shifts by one-tenth of a percent. But
what do those statistics really mean, if 20 percent, 10 percent, or even 5
percent of a nation"s economy somehow cannot be accounted for? America"s
great economic successes of the past two decades—in software,
telecommunications, aerospace, computing—are only part of the story.
Marlboro, Camel, and Philip Morris are familiar names, and the tobacco
industry is one of the most powerful lobbies in Washington, D.C. But
Americans now spend more money on illegal drugs than on cigarettes.
The proper role of the state and the proper limits on the free
market are central themes of this book. The political system of the United
States and the economic system proposed by Adam Smith are ostensibly
dedicated to freedom. Since 1776 Americans have been willing to fight and
to die for freedom. You will search long and hard to find an American who
thinks freedom is a bad thing. The question that has been much more difficult
to answer is: Freedom for whom? Should the government be protecting the
freedom of workers or employers? Of consumers, or manufacturers? Of the
majority who live one way, or the minority who choose to live differently? In
the abstract, freedom is always easy to celebrate. But adherence to that
lofty ideal seems impossible to achieve. Despite the best of libertarian
intentions, giving unchecked freedom to one group usually means denying it
to another.
What happens in the underground economy is worth examining
because of how fortunes are made there, how lives are often ruined there,
how the vicissitudes of the law can deem one man a gangster or a chief
executive (or both). If you truly want to know a person, you need to look
beyond the public face, the jobs on the résumé, the books on the shelves,
the family pictures on the desk. You may learn more from what"s hidden in
a drawer. There is always more to us than what we will admit. If the market
does indeed embody the sum of all human wishes, then the secret ones
are just as important as the ones that are openly displayed. Like the yin and
yang, the mainstream and the underground are ultimately two sides of the
same thing. To know a country you must see it whole.

Copyright © 2003 by Eric Schlosser. Reprinted by permission of Houghton
Mifflin Company.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; First Edition (January 1, 2003)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 310 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0618334661
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0618334667
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.3 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.25 x 1 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 212 ratings

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ERIC SCHLOSSER is the author of The New York Times bestsellers Fast Food Nation and Reefer Madness. His work has appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, Rolling Stone, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and The Nation.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
212 global ratings

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