| Question 1: A major campaign against hashish-eating Sufis was conducted in ________ in the 11th and 12th centuries resulting among other things in the burning of fields of cannabis. | |||
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| Question 2: Prosecutors argued that possessing drugs was a ________ violation, as no legal licenses to sell drugs were in existence; hence, a person possessing drugs must have purchased them from an unlicensed source. | |||
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| Question 3: In ________, the Protestants were also responsible for passing drug laws motivated by religious intolerance, according to Stephen Harrod Buhner. | |||
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| Question 4: However, to protect this trade, the British declared war on China (________). | |||
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| Question 5: In August 2005, Australian model ________ was arrested with two Ecstasy pills. | |||
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| Question 6: In late Qing Imperial China, opium imported by the ________ was vastly consumed by all social classes in Southern China. | |||
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| Question 7: The United States, Finland, and ________ banned alcohol in the early part of the 20th century; this was called Prohibition. | |||
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| Question 8: Perhaps the earliest recorded example is the prohibition of the use of alcohol under Islamic law (________), which is usually attributed to passages in the Qur'an dating from the 7th century. | |||
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| Question 9: In response to rising drug use among young people and the ________ movement, government efforts to enforce prohibition were strengthened in many countries from the 1960s onward. | |||
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| Question 10: gruit), hops cause sedation and reduce ________. | |||
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