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News (Media Awareness Project) - US UT: Column: Hemp Should Be Part Of Our Green Future
Title:US UT: Column: Hemp Should Be Part Of Our Green Future
Published On:2009-04-14
Source:Daily Utah Chronicle, The (U of Utah, UT Edu)
Fetched On:2009-04-16 01:48:32
HEMP SHOULD BE PART OF OUR GREEN FUTURE

Hempfest, an event held in the Union on Thursday, helped to educate
students about the benefits of industrial hemp and the societal costs
of America's often misinformed war on drugs.

The fear and untruthful arguments that have been used to keep hemp
illegal have propagated the myth that hemp and marijuana are one and
the same.

While hemp and marijuana are from the same genus Cannabis, hemp is
extremely low-less than 1 percent-in the marijuana-high producing
psychoactive cannabinoid delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and high
in the antipsychoactive cannabinoid cannabidiol (CBD). Marijuana is
the exact opposite, with a high level of THC and a low level of CBD.
CBD actually blocks the marijuana high, and hemp's high percentage of
CBD makes it not only an impossible means to a drug fix, it
essentially makes hemp the "antimarijuana," according to a study by
David West for the North American Industrial Hemp Council.

This means that no matter how many hemp bracelets are smoked in a
bong, baked in brownies or melted down on a spoon, a high will not be
produced. The argument that marijuana and hemp are one and the same
because they share the same genus is only valid in the sense that
poodles and wolves, which both share the genus Canis, are the same.
The idea that people can get high on hemp is basically like saying
French poodles often roam in packs, seeking a vulnerable moose to
pounce on for their next meal.

Why then is there such a vehement argument against industrialized
hemp, which can be used in everything from paper to nutritious food?
Sadly, outdated cliches of the "Reefer Madness" age have taken
precedence over common sense and a long national history that supports
hemp's practicality. In Jamestown, it was illegal not to grow hemp and
founding fathers George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew it
copiously on their plantations. Instead of smoking it in fatties, they
used it to, among other things, make paper, like the paper upon which
they drafted the Declaration of Independence. Henry Ford built a car
made of hemp, and though it might not have been as hilarious as its
marijuana counterpart, brilliantly engineered by Cheech and Chong in
"Up in Smoke," it shows that hemp's versatility has long since been
underutilized.

Time has not rendered hemp obsolete.

According to studies posted on www.votehemp.com , hemp is the world's
strongest natural fiber. It is cheaper and lasts longer than cotton,
and while cotton uses close to 50 percent of all the world's
pesticides, hemp can be grown in almost any environment with little or
no pesticides. Industrial hemp can yield three to eight dry tons of
fiber per acre, four times what an average forest can yield. Also,
trees take approximately 20 years to mature, but hemp takes just
around four months, a testament to its sustainability. Paper made from
wood pulp tends to last between 25 and 80 years, whereas hemp paper
lasts for centuries, ensuring there will still be an extra Washington,
D.C. tourist stop to view the Declaration of Independence while that
first draft of the George Washington essay you wrote on paper from
Kinko's freshman year crumbles into oblivion. These benefits have
persuaded every developed nation but the United States to view hemp as
an established crop, rather than an enemy of the drug war.

It is this information that groups such as Students for Sensible Drug
Policy are promoting via events like Hempfest. SFSDP's Utah chapter
president Valerie Douroux, who organized Hempfest, said the main goal
was to "spread awareness and unify the community...In the go green
sustainability movement, hemp is the answer."

Although it might be, the propaganda of the past seems to still have
mainstream America too dazed and confused to see the benefits of
anything prefaced by the terrifying name cannabis. Americans, and
especially Utahns, need to open their eyes and face the facts. Modern
industrial hemp is a crucial factor in the preservation of our forests
and the movement toward global sustainability, not mere fuel for
"Beavis & Butt-Head" marathons and late night Taco Bell.
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