Having read 'Fast Food Nation' (FFN) when it first came out and enjoyed knowing all about what is wrong with the fast food industry I knew 'Reefer Madness' was a very similar book just from reading its back cover.
There are three totally self-contained chapters on the subjects of the commerce and consumption of marijuana, migrant and immigrant workers in California's fruit picking industry and the production and consumption of pornography.
And I was not disappointed. 'Reefer Madness' succintly exposes some idiosyncrasies in American society with the same coolness, wit and depth of FFN. Each chapter traces out a short history of the subject, which in the case of Marijuana goes back to just after the independence, in 1776. Schlosser keeps a very cool head and includes the odd fun fact that will make you laugh inside. He doesn't come out explicitly for one side of the discussion (which inevitably there is) until the very last chapter, where he wraps everything up. Until then, the only clue about Schlosser's opinion lies in the fact that he sometimes uses irony (but never sarchasm) to describe the actions of someone he either feels sorry for or totally disagrees with and that he always treats extremely fairly the people and views that he seems to be supporting. Which is more than understanding.
If your political background is more on the right/conservative side you will be relieved to hear that the author, although siding with the left side of the spectrum on these same issues, writes in a very impartial, reasoned and informed way. So please don't dismiss the author and the book as 'something written by a leftie': besides being out of fashion these days, that kind of thinking will only lead you to closing up your eyes to some of the most stupid and thoughtless contradictions in USA's society, a society which still manages to exhert considerable influence over the rest of the world. If, however, like me, you think it's ridiculous that the possession of a pound of weed should make you spend the rest of your life in jail while many murders and rapes don't, you should definitely read this book.