Smoke and Mirrors: How America Misclassified a Plant is a hard-hitting investigative exposé that uncovers how a century of federal policy turned cannabis into a manufactured threat. Blending journalism with constitutional analysis, this book traces the real history behind prohibition—from the propaganda campaigns of the 1930s to the political incentives, racial disparities, and scientific suppression that shaped the modern drug war. Drawing on government records, court decisions, medical research, and state-level data, it reveals how the federal narrative survived for decades without scientific support—and how state legalization has exposed its contradictions. Crime didn’t surge. Youth use didn’t rise. Communities didn’t collapse. Instead, evidence from legal states dismantles the idea that cannabis belongs in Schedule I. This book also documents the human cost: millions of arrests, disrupted families, inequitable enforcement, and decades of medical research blocked by federal restrictions. It shows how agencies protected their authority even as their claims became unsustainable, and why today’s federal framework cannot be reconciled with modern science or constitutional limits. Clear, factual, and deeply researched, Smoke and Mirrors is the definitive guide to how America got cannabis wrong—and what it will take to correct a policy built on fear instead of truth.