About Us
Mission Statement
Rules of Conduct
 
Name:
Pswd:
Remember Me
Register
 

Why Not Consider Industrial Hemp?
Author: m-hadley    Date: 07/07/2008 10:58:26

Good Monday Morning, Everybody,

I trust that everyone enjoyed their long weekend and even though Frangela is fabulous, we are all no doubt ready for the return of Momma and the mooks. Here's a recycled post on a cause near and dear to my heart. The cultivation of Industrial Hemp could solve our energy problems, provide a useful substitute to tobacco crops that are falling as more and more Americans quit the cigarette smoking habit (no smiting of smokers among us intended :P). Anyway, read on and and always comments are welcome. Happee Mondee, kids!

With all the talk about reducing carbon emissions in this country, we are ignoring a sensible alternative to ethanol, an alternative that has already proven problematic because it takes a large amount of corn to produce, thereby removing corn from the food supply. An obvious answer to the problem of creating a cheap, easy-to-grow, renewable resource is the cultivation of industrial hemp. Before you all start making jokes about stoners and bongs and other references to industrial hemp's notorious cousin cannabis sativa or marijuana, let me explain that industrial hemp has a very low percentage of THC (typically less than 1%) - the active ingredient that creates a "high" from ingesting or smoking marijuana, so that a stoner would literally have to smoke a bale of industrial hemp in about 20 seconds and then all the smoker would get for her/his trouble is a headache.

The DEA remains in the dark ages about this ideal crop that not only could solve our energy problems, but also is so versatile, the fiber produced from this amazing plant can serve as a source of paper, clothing, and even cooking oil. Industrial Hemp is grown legally in Canada and many countries in Europe. It grows pesticide and herbicide-free and grows in virtually any part of the country. In fact, the government encouraged the cultivation of industrial hemp during WWI & WWII in order to make rope and other supplies for the troops. This is why the legacy of ditch weed still grows in many parts of rural America. If you'd like to learn more about this phenomenal crop, please visit the web site, Vote Hemp, and contact your Congress people about passing legislation that would allow farmers to grow industrial hemp - we are going to need all the help we can find to end our addiction to foreign sources of oil. This a great way to add to the solution!

Read about the government's insane battle to destroy industrial hemp crops being cultivated on the Sovereign Lakota Nation: S.D. family seeks the right to grow hemp.

Here's a link to an excellent column by Jamison Colburn, Why The War on Drugs Should Not Include a War on Hemp.

:heart: & :hug:
Cheers,
mfaye

 

293 comments (Latest Comment: 07/08/2008 07:10:17 by Random)
   Perma Link

Share This!

Furl it!
Spurl
NewsVine
Reddit
Technorati