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US: It's a Gray Area - Let's Revitalize Hemp Industry!

James P Gray

Daily Post

Saturday 29 Mar 2008

Source: Daily Pilot
Date: March 29 2008
Author: James P Gray

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“Hemp” is the name that is commonly used for the industrial (non-drug)
usage of the cannabis plant, otherwise known as marijuana. The use of
cannabis for hemp products goes back thousands of years, to the degree
that the ancient Greek word for “canvas” was the same word as “cannabis.”

In addition, hemp was also found in pottery shards that were used more
than 10,000 years ago in China and Japan, and was also used in those
regions for clothes, shoes, ropes and an early form of paper.

The stalk of the cannabis or marijuana plant has no THC content
whatsoever, which is to say that it has no mind-altering properties. In
fact, you could get as much of a “high” from smoking the stalk of the
marijuana plant as you could from smoking the newspaper you now are
reading. In addition, today’s agriculturalists can cross-pollinate the
entire plant to reduce its THC level virtually to zero. Nevertheless,
because it is still considered marijuana, it is still illegal to grow
hemp in our country.

But that has not always been true. During colonial times, hemp was used
for large numbers of products. For example, the sails used on the USS
Constitution (or “Old Ironsides”) were made from hemp, and several of
the drafts of the Declaration of Independence were printed on parchment
made from this same natural substance. Hemp was also used back then in
the making of rope, textiles and gunny sacks, and was even used as money
from 1631 until the early 1800s.

Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and numbers of other famous planters
had large numbers of acres planted in hemp, and Benjamin Franklin was
one of the most active hemp paper merchants. In fact, hemp was so useful
that the first laws in the colonies addressing cannabis actually
required the various townships to grow a certain amount of hemp, based
upon the size of their populations.

The December 1941 edition of Popular Mechanics said that Henry Ford grew
hemp on his estate, and that he had made some “plastic” cars that were
composed mostly of hemp, wheat straw and sisal. In addition, it is
believed that Rudolph Diesel invented the engine that bears his name to
run on a variety of fuels, especially those based upon vegetable and
seed oils like those found in hemp.

Today, hemp can be used in thousands of commercial products. The fibers
can be used for clothing like shirts and dresses, and for backpacks,
shoes, sandals, wallets, hats, bedspreads, thermal insulation, animal
bedding, mulch for vegetation and an almost unlimited number of other
similar products. It can also be blended with silk, linen or cotton to
make fine quality garments. Napoleon used hemp extensively for uniforms
for his foot soldiers because of its low cost and durability, and the
emperors of China frequently had it blended with silk to make their fine
garments.

Hemp fibers also have many uses in the manufacture of such things as
rope, twine, packaging material, paper products, plywood and carpets.
BMW and Mercedes-Benz use biocomposites made mostly from hemp fibers in
the manufacturing of interior panels for some of their automobiles, and
the fibers are also used today in Europe and China to strengthen cement.

Hemp seeds themselves are a significant food source, since they are
highly nutritious and contain beneficial omega fatty acids, amino acids
and minerals. As a result, they are now commercially available in
cereals, frozen waffles, hemp tofu and nut butter. In fact, my wife
recently purchased some nutritious hemp granola for me at Trader Joe’s,
and it tasted quite good! It can also be used as a non-dairy milk
product similar to soy milk, and as a non-dairy hemp “ice cream.”

The oil from the hemp seed has additional uses as lip balms, soaps and
moisturizing agents for creams. In addition, since the hemp seed oil
dries when exposed to the air, it makes a fine oil-based paint that is
similar to linseed oil.

If you want to learn more, simply put the word “hemp” into an Internet
search engine, and you will be amazed at the positive things you find.
But if those uses for hemp do not convince you in themselves, try these
facts.

Hemp is one of the earth’s fastest-growing plants, it requires little or
no pesticides, and it replenishes the soil with nutrients and nitrogen.

In 1916, USDA Bulletin No. 404 stated that 1 acre of hemp over time
produces the same amount of paper pulp as 4.1 acres of trees. And, of
course, it takes about 20 years to grow the trees, but it takes only one
season of 120 to 180 days to grow the hemp.

Furthermore, one can obtain about 250% more fiber per acre from hemp
than from cotton, and about 600% more than from flax. And because it is
so fast-growing, hemp produces more energy per acre for biodiesel or
alcohol fuel than corn, sugar, flax or any other crop.

So why is hemp not being manufactured and used by our merchants for
these products? Well, actually it is. But under today’s federal laws,
the hemp must be imported from countries like Canada, the United
Kingdom, Romania and China. So, since even the countries of the European
Union can grow hemp under special licenses, the United States is now the
only industrialized country in which it is illegal to grow hemp. This
situation has been so profitable for Canada that it experienced a 300%
growth in hempseed products in 2007 alone.

Our government’s hypocrisy in saying hemp should continue to be
prohibited is dramatically demonstrated by a 14-minute movie produced by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1942 called “Hemp for Victory.”
During World War II, hemp was used extensively for military uniforms,
canvas, rope and other products. But when our supplies of hemp and jute
in the Philippines and Indonesia were cut off by the Japanese, the
United States Government appealed through this film to all “patriotic”
farmers to grow hemp.

So with pictures of our nation’s flags waiving in the breeze and our
troops preparing for battle, and accompanied by the strains of songs
like “Anchors Aweigh,” our farmers were instructed how and where to
plant hemp, and how best to harvest it. After all, we needed “Hemp for
light-duty fire hoses,” for “thread for shoes for millions of American
soldiers,” for “parachute webbing for our paratroopers,” for supplying
the “34,000 feet of rope for each of our United States Navy ships,” and
for “countless uses on ship and shore.” “Hemp for mooring our ships!”
“Hemp for tow lines!” “Hemp for Victory!”

But after the war, hemp again in the eyes of the government went back to
being a prohibited substance without any practical usage of any kind.

So please help us get away from this hypocrisy and economic stupidity by
convincing our government to pass a law like the following: “Any
cannabis plant that has a THC content of 0.3% or less is legal to
cultivate, harvest, possess and sell in the United States of America.”
Of course, anything with a THC content above 0.3% would continue to be
governed by whatever laws and regulations are in place for marijuana.

That new law would in itself allow these plants, seeds and fibers to be
raised, harvested and used without any more state interference than now
exists for raising any other products. And that act alone would reclaim
an enormously profitable industry for our farmers, manufacturers,
merchants and consumers.

http://www.dailypilot.com/articles/2008/03/30/opinion/dpt-gray033008.txt

 

 

 

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