"America's public enemy number one," President Richard Nixon proclaimed in a press conference, "is drug abuse. In order to ...
Minnesota lobbyist Kurtis Hanna listened to hours of taped conversations from the Nixon White House. In one, the former ...
Well, well, well, so the guy who rubber stamped the so called 'War on Drugs' in 1971, did not think weed was a bad drug. Not ...
More specifically, I want to talk about the story of how series star Billy West came up with his legendary impression of ...
Former President Richard Nixon privately questioned his administration’s tough stance on marijuana and acknowledged that the ...
President Richard Nixon’s remarks were captured on his secret White House recording system but had eluded the notice of ...
John Ehrlichman, Nixon’s top advisor said in 1994, 'Did we know we were lying about the drugs? Of course, we did.' Two years ...
Former President Richard Nixon, who launched the war on drugs in 1971, admitted he knew pot was 'not particularly dangerous' ...
The Nixon pardon of Sept. 8, 1974, caused a political and legal earthquake that still reverberates in the age of Trump.
As Trump tries to cow Democrats and the media into silence about his attacks on democracy, a historian of the presidency ...
Two years after launching the war on drugs, President Richard Nixon made a startling admission during a meeting in the Oval ...
Vice President Richard M. Nixon and U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy​ met for the first ever televised presidential debate in Studio ...