More Hemp
Hearst in its era was the News Corporation of its day. "Hearst
newspapers introduced the word "marijuana" into English and inflamed
the public with outrageous stories of drug-related violence."
http://www.lightparty.com/Energy/Hemp5.html
INDUSTRIAL HEMP NOW
"Make the most of the Indian Hemp seed and sow it everywhere."
- George Washington, 1794
1. "Since 1937, about half the forests in the world have been cut down to
make paper. If hemp had not been outlawed, most would still be standing,
oxygenating the planet." - Alan Bock
2. Historical tradition, if not current federal law, favors hemp. The U.S.
Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, The Gutenberg Bible, and Old
Glory (our nation's first flag) were all made from hemp - as was the favorite
fuel of Henry Ford, the reading lamp oil of Abraham Lincoln, the paints used by
Van Gogh and Rembrandt, and the parachute webbing that saved the live of George
Bush.
3. Hemp canvas covered the Westward-bound wagons, the tall sailing ships, the
bi-planes and zeppelins of World War I, and provided the original Levi pants
worn by California goldminers in 1849.
4. Hemp was so crucial to colonial America that its cultivation was mandated
by law.
5. INDUSTRIAL USES: As an agricultural commodity, hemp is arguably the
world's top renewable resource for fuel, paper, cloth, paint, plastic, protein,
soap, oil and over 25,000 other products.
6. Anything made from oil or wood can be made from hemp.
7. Hemp biomass can be converted into fuels (methane, methanol, gasoline)
more efficiently than fossil fuels (coal, oil) and without the sulfur or acid
rain.
8. Hemp fiberboard is stronger than wood; hemp houses are as strong as cement
houses and better insulated.
9. Plastic, rayon, cellophane made from hemp are biodegradable; plastic and
nylon made from petrochemicals are non-biodegradable. Grocery shoppers given the
choice between paper or plastic bags must decide between cutting down trees or
spewing toxic chemicals. In landfills, both biodegrade slowly if at all.
Visualize a third choice: biodegradable cellophane bags made from hemp. The
paper industry uses nearly half the world's timber harvest. According to the
USDA, hemp produces four times the paper/acre as trees, and grows in all climate
zones of the contiguous 48 states.
10. Hemp paper will last up to 1,500 years; hemp cloth is stronger than
cotton. Cotton requires more pesticides than any other agricultural product (39
million pounds in 1993).
11. Hemp grows without pesticides. Hemp's long taproot improves soil quality
and reduces erosion.
ERADICATION CONSPIRACY: During the 1930s, machinery was developed for
separating hemp fibers from the stalk, thus making widespread industrial use
feasible. Popular Mechanics called hemp a "billion-dollar crop."
12. Hemp's future looked promising but this was not to be. DuPont had just
obtained patents for making nylon from coal, plastic from oil, and paper from
trees.
13. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon (an oil baron) was DuPont's chief
financial backer. The Hearst newspaper empire owned enormous timber tracts. The
oil, synthetic fiber, timber and cotton industries stood to lose billions if
hemp was not outlawed.
14. Secret meetings were held. Treasury Secretary Mellon appointed his
nephew-in-law to head the Federal Bureau of Narcotics. Hearst newspapers
introduced the word "marijuana" into English and inflamed the public
with outrageous stories of drug-related violence.
15. Anti-marijuana films (Reefer Madness and Assassin of Youth) fanned the
flames of hysteria. The strategy worked. In 1937, Congress outlawed hemp by
imposing a prohibitive tax - just as DuPont's annual report predicted: "...
the revenue-raising power of government may be converted into an instrument for
forcing acceptance of sudden new ideas of industrial and social
reorganization."
16. DuPont Corporation, 1937 As a model of deception and orchestrated media
manipulation, the anti-hemp crusade constitutes one of the greatest hoaxes ever
perpetuated on the American People. Few public relations campaigns in history
can match its success in eradicating competition while transforming citizens
into unknowing pawns of big business. The legacy of Reefer Madness lives on
today. Industrial-grade hemp is worthless as marijuana since its THC (tetrahydrocannabinol)
content is so low, as little as 0.06%.
17. Industrial-grade hemp varieties poses no psychoactive effects. In
contrast, high-grade marijuana strains can have THC contents exceeding 10% but
are worthless for industrial purposes.
18. This vital distinction is lost on those caught up in the anti-drug frenzy
currently fashionable in this country - a frenzy perpetuated by vested
interests. The New York Times, for example, owns a pulp mill in Canada and
benefits from wood pulp paper production.
19. DuPont, Monsanto, Dow Chemical and Standard Oil are protected from
competition by the marijuana laws...as are the cotton, coal, timber, chlorine,
polyester, latex paint and vinyl plastic industries. The major considerations
blocking hemp's utilization are not agricultural or botanical, but political.
20. PATENTED HEMP At least 18 European and Asian countries now grow
industrial-grade hemp. France, the world's largest producer of industrial hemp,
recently patented a hybrid strain containing only 0.4% THC.
21. This ensures ongoing seed purchases from France. French hybrid hemp
requires fertilizers, growth stimulators and pesticides.
22. Patents promote the cultivation of inferior seeds which adversely affect
hemp's overall commercial value.
ENERGY CONVERSION Global climate change is the most threatening and
intractable of all environmental problems we face. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the
most crucial of the greenhouse gases contributing to global warming. Since
pre-industrial times, CO2 levels have risen by almost 30% due to deforestation
and fossil fuel combustion.
23. The U.S. currently burns fossil fuels for 93% of its energy needs and
consumes 25% of the world's supply.
24. One tank of gasoline generates up to 400 pounds of CO2. During the 1930s,
Henry Ford grew hemp on his estate to demonstrate the efficiency of methanol
production. Both Henry Ford and Rudolph Diesel (inventor of the diesel engine)
intended to power their vehicles with plant-based fuels.
25. Hemp biomass grown for fuel would reverse global warming by converting
CO2 into oxygen during the growing cycle. Hemp is one of the richest biomass
sources. Each acre of hemp yields 10 tons of biomass (1,000 gallons of methanol)
in 4 months.
26. The gas turbine generates cost-competitive electrical power using biomass
fuels. Researchers at Princeton University estimate that biomass fuels combined
with advanced gasifier-gas turbine technology could compete in cost with coal,
nuclear, and hydroelectric power in both industrialized and developing
countries.
27. If vehicle fuel efficiency were doubled, biomass energy could replace all
fossil fuels now used in cars and all coal burned for electricity in the U.S. To
maximize efficiency, plant-based methanol, plastic, rayon and electrical
production could occur at the same facility. In 1982, U.S. nuclear power plants
consumed 540 tons of nuclear fuel, and coal-fired power plants released 2,772
tons of radioactive uranium and thorium into the environment.
28. Hemp biomass farms would abate foreign oil dependency, soil erosion, acid
rain, air pollution and global warming, while laying the groundwork for
revitalized rural communities. Rural pasture land (7% of U.S. acreage) could
produce enough biomass to end U.S. dependence on gas and oil.
29. By converting cotton, tobacco, sugar and cattle feed production into
biomass, energy independence would be within reach. The least valuable hemp
product is biomass fuels. Each acre of hemp grown for fiber and pulp is worth
$750 - considerably more than each acre of corn or wheat.
30. In 1994, President Clinton issued an executive order naming hemp in the
National Defense Industrial Resources Preparedness Policy.
31. In 1995, the Hemp Production Act was introduced in Colorado, and the
Governor of Kentucky appointed a hemp feasibility task force.
32. Several American companies are using imported hemp to produce clothing,
paper, oil and other products. Hemp ice cream, cheese, cookie and pancake mixes
are now available. In each case, demand outstrips supply. Domestically-grown
hemp products would generate new job and business opportunities that benefit the
environment. Innovative economic and environmental programs can benefit
communities. When Oregon restricted logging in 1991, a state restraining program
turned timber workers into auto mechanics, cabinet makers, health care workers,
or accountants.
33. Similar programs can retrain workers now employed in the chlorine,
pesticide, bleached paper, cotton, tobacco and coal industries. In the long run,
every American job depends on our natural resources. Let us uphold our
forefather's traditions by restoring hemp to its rightful place as this nation's
top renewable resource. Let us use its bountiful harvest to heal the mistakes of
generations past and ensure the quality of life for succeeding generations. The
transition of our economy from petrochemical-based to plant-based will ease the
conversion to a chlorine-free economy. Both conversions should be planned and
coordinated simultaneously. During World War II, America's prohibitionist hemp
laws were suspended to meet pending material shortages.
34. Our government asked Kentucky 4-H Club youths to help in the war effort
by growing hemp.35 Farmers were encouraged to grow hemp through the USDA film
"Hemp for Victory." Critical environmental pressures call for these
laws to again be set aside.