Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jan 2000
Source: Capital Press (OR)
Copyright:  Capital Press Agriculture Weekly
Contact:  PO Box 2048, Salem, OR 97308
Fax: (503) 370-4383
Website: http://www.capitalpress.com/

HEMP EXPERIMENTATION COULD DISCOVER BENEFITS

The poor, little, defenseless hemp plant provides an easy gauge for 
measuring urban America's loss of touch with its agrarian roots.

If the enforcers of our drug laws and their counterparts in prosecutors' 
offices knew just a little more about farming, they would understand better 
what the hemp controversy is about.

And in that case, it wouldn't be a controversy at all. Hemp isn't about 
drugs. It's about rope. It's also about a potentially profitable crop that 
would be compatible with other farming operations throughout much of the 
country, including the Northwest

Like farmers in other countries, American ranchers could grow hemp without 
having it mistaken for its marijuana cousin. In an age when the 
agricultural industry faces financial ruin, they would add a crop that has 
several uses, a ready market and the promise of profitability.

To be sure, it might be overproduced like many other commodities, but at 
least farmers would have an option. They are in constant search of rotation 
or alternative crops.

Hemp is a great fabric producer. It's used for cloth and paper, among other 
items, but its sturdy fibers are especially prized for rope.

Farmers throughout the land met a heavy demand in World War II. When 
wartime production ceased, the hemp plant lived on in wild form. It was 
said that wild hemp was found in every county in the West.

Word had it that many a country boy, testing reports that it was really 
marijuana, tried smoking hemp behind the barn, only to learn why it doesn't 
pose the threat that drug officials think it does.

Hemp has only trace amounts of the intoxicant that gives marijuana users 
their high. Even though that has been enough for drug enforcers to ban it, 
it isn't enough to give smokers a buzz.

Think of the products that would be gone from grocery and pharmacy shelves 
if the same attitude prevailed toward items with trace amounts of alcohol.

That's hemp's problem. It has traces, but only traces, of its evil cousin's 
no-no. One thing that concerns drug-law enforcers is the possibility that 
legal hemp would give new meaning to the term cover crop. They're afraid 
hemp would shield the marijuana plant from identification.

But hemp would be cut before marijuana had matured. If anything, an 
unharvested hemp stand might give away the secret of its cover.

To be reasonable, a shield for marijuana isn't what the working farmer has 
in mind. Nor is it what the marketplace wants. A profitable crop with an 
industrial purpose is the real issue involving the introduction of hemp as 
an agricultural commodity.

But let's at least test the product and the potential problem. Minnesota 
and Hawaii have cleared the legal way for experimentation.

Georgia farmers are calling on their legislators to let them grow hemp. 
Other states, including those in the Northwest, ought to put their muscle 
behind appeals to their legislatures for legal authority to try the fiber 
producer.

The national legislature ought to take up the issue of distinguishing 
between hemp and marijuana and consider how to authorize the former without 
promoting the latter.

Hemp's potential purposes are great, and smoking it for intoxication isn't 
one of them.
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