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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Former CIA Director Woolsey Weaves Case for Legalizing Hemp
Title:US: Former CIA Director Woolsey Weaves Case for Legalizing Hemp
Published On:2008-03-11
Source:Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO)
Fetched On:2008-03-11 22:08:28
FORMER CIA DIRECTOR WOOLSEY WEAVES CASE FOR LEGALIZING HEMP

Former CIA Director Jim Woolsey is scheduled to address a meeting
today at the Canadian Consulate in Denver.

But he won't speak about terrorism.

Woolsey, who has served under former President Clinton and has been
an adviser to President Bush, will hold court via telephone on
another of his favorite topics: industrial hemp.

Commercial farming of hemp is banned in the United States for its
apparent similarities to marijuana - a charge repudiated by hemp
supporters. Developed regions such as Europe and Canada allow farmers
to grow hemp for industrial purposes such as ropes or fabrics. The
Canadian consulate in Denver supports the move to lift the ban.

Woolsey says hemp, if allowed in the U.S., could become a low-water-
consuming and easy-to-grow feedstock for biofuels. Also, because of
its biological properties, hemp could inhibit the growth of illegal
marijuana through cross-pollination.

"Historically, the Drug Enforcement Administration has interpreted
hemp to be in the marijuana band so as to include a ban on it,"
Woolsey said Monday during a phone interview with the Rocky. "In
fact, what that is doing is undermining the single most effective way
to cause trouble for marijuana."

"Hemp is so valuable, the last time I looked, it was many times more
than the price of wheat and has industrial uses so substantial,"
added Woolsey, a self-described conservative Democrat who also serves
on the board of the North American Industrial Hemp Council.

"If you harvested hemp, you could use part of the plant for
industrial purposes and the rest of the plant for cellulosic
feed-stock for some type of biofuels."

Today's meeting is expected to draw about three dozen supporters of
industrial hemp, including farmers and representatives from Colorado
legislators. Most farmers' lobbies, including those in Colorado,
support lifting the ban on industrial hemp. They hope to pass a
resolution in the current legislative session, said Mike Bowman,
chairman of the Colorado Industrial Hemp Initiative.

A pending bill in Congress, if approved, would give rights to states
to regulate industrial hemp.
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