The traditional punishment for Cannabis Witchcraft is the death penalty. This is especially true of the Roman Catholic Church (RCC), the official religion of the majority of the U.S. Supreme Court.
A common method of carrying out the Christian death penalty against Witches was hanging.
November 18, 1441 Roger Bolingbroke was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn, England, for Witchcraft.
1574 Arnold (first name unknown) hanged at Barking, England, for Witchcraft.
1616 Agnes Berrye hanged at Enfield, England, for Witchcraft.
1631 Edmund Bull hanged at Taunton, England, for Witchcraft.
1649 Matthew Bulmer hanged at Newcastle, England, for Witchcraft.
1650 Joan Allen hanged at Old Bailey, London, England, for Witchcraft.
July 1652 Anne Ashby hanged at Maidstone, England, for Witchcraft.
July 1652 Mary Browne hanged at Maidstone, England, for Witchcraft.
1653 Anne Bodenham hanged at Salisbury, England, for Witchcraft.
1655 mother Boram (first name unknown) hung at Bury St. Edmunds, England, for Witchcraft.
1655 daughter Boram (first name unknown) hung at Bury St. Edmunds, England, for Witchcraft.
March 26, 1658 Jane Brooks hanged in England for Witchcraft.
June 10, 1692 Briget Bishop hanged at Salem, New England, for Witchcraft.
the hanging of George Burroughs
August 19, 1692 George Burroughs executed at Salem, New England, for Witchcraft.
What possible reason could the U.S. government have for such Draconian penalties for cannabis? It is because Chrsitianity has always imposed Draconian penalties for Witchcraft, including torture and the death penalty. The Controlled Substances Act imposes harsher penatlies for cannabis than for rape, murder, and torture because the Christian judges and Congresspersons consider Cannabis Witchcraft to be a more serious religious offense than violent crimes.
See also: hanged, drawn and quartered and death penalty














