Author: Jesse Barton Source: The Daily (University of Washington) Contact: http://www.thedaily.washington.edu/html/feedback.nclk Pubdate: February 25, 1998 Website: http://www.thedaily.washington.edu/ THE DISTRUST OF PROGRESS The humans' distaste and distrust of progress probably had its start when some young troglodyte proposed the controlled use of fire in the cave for heat, warmth and protection. This proposal was certainly met with the most vociferous opposition followed by outright attacks on the name, body and family of the insubordinate lad. The elders saw this as a blatant attempt of the youth to make life easier and more comfortable with the use of something that was strictly taboo. The elders did not allow the use of fire because they had seen what fire can do when someone stands in it and they weren't about to let some kid bring it into his cave and spread the idea to others. The elders thought not only of the dangers but also the abuses that such a tool could be used for and felt the price too high to allow its controlled use. Yet despite all the clamoring, all the demagoguery, and all the predictions of world damnation and moral corruption they failed to stop what they initially didn't understand because they soon learned that the benefits of fire outweighed the potential (real or imagined) costs of abuse. Today you see the same ignorant behavior surrounding the legalization of marijuana. Despite the promising medicinal and overwhelming agricultural potential of this plant, our politicians have found it necessary to spend more time picking out next year's interns than getting rid of a program which incarcerates a person for smoking marijuana every 54 seconds at a cost of $23,000 dollars a year -- and which ultimately costs taxpayers $7.5 billion dollars a year. The recent failure of Senate Bill 6271, which would have allowed possession of marijuana for a medical condition, reflects that the simian thought processes our fire-taming ancestor encountered are still at work today. Marijuana needs to be addressed as more than a drug of the underworld; it is a drug with very useful medicinal qualities. Many studies show marijuana to be very effective in reducing nausea in cancer chemotherapy patients as well as reducing the nausea, vomiting and the loss of appetite experienced by AIDS patients. Other studies show that marijuana is also effective at treating glaucoma, the leading cause of blindness in the U.S., by reducing the intraocular pressure which causes it, and clinical evidence demonstrates marijuana's effectiveness as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of an assortment of nervous system abnormalities and injuries including multiple sclerosis, paraplegia, epilepsy and quadriplegia. The problem with SB6271 is that it doesn't go far enough. What we really need is a bill that will allow farmers to begin growing hemp commercially. Industrial hemp is not the same as the much-beleaguered marijuana plant in the sense that it contains only trace amounts of the psychoactive ingredient, THC. Smoking hemp won't give you a buzz, it will give you a headache and a sore throat. Industrial hemp is also different in the sense that it has the potential to become a billion-dollar agricultural crop with over 25,000 possible different uses. Hemp has many advantages over other agricultural plants. It is incredibly versatile because we can use it to make textiles (ropes, yarns, fabrics), paper, paints, plastics, cosmetics, foodstuffs, insulation and animal feed. The fabrics made from hemp are better in many respects than those made of cotton. First, they are more durable, they don't stretch and they are water resistant. A longer-lasting fabric would reduce our consumption and reduce our generation of waste. Second, hemp's growing cycle of only 100 days is almost 50 days shorter than cotton's. This would allow a farmer to plant hemp twice in one year, compared to planting cotton once. Third, hemp produces a higher yield of fiber per acre than cotton. Fourth, hemp does not require pesticides, while the cotton grown in our country currently uses half of all pesticides sprayed in the U.S. Fifth, hemp does not require fertilizer as it is not harvested until the leaves fall off, which decompose and replenish the soil. Farmers have grown hemp on the same site for twenty years without fertilizer and without noticeably depleting the soil of nutrients. Cotton, however, requires large amounts of fertilizer each year. All of this translates into a more efficient fiber. Hemp lasts longer, grows faster, produces more fiber, is naturally pest-resistant and doesn't require fertilization. This would reduce the amount of acreage required to grow products destined for textile use and reduce our dependence on environmentally damaging pesticides and fertilizers. The hemp seed also offers advantages not seen in other agricultural products. It contains the second highest concentration of protein -- soy has the highest -- and the highest concentration of essential amino and fatty acids. Although soybeans have a higher concentration of protein, hemp seeds provide a higher quality of protein with the added benefit of having close to no saturated fat. The U.S. currently produces about half of all the soybeans in the world, about 50 million metric tons, for food and oil. Hemp seed could not only provide this food and oil but can do so without being as easily affected by temperature and water as the soybean plant IS. The use of hemp as a material for making paper also has many advantages over the current process which uses wood pulp. One acre of hemp in annual rotation provides as much usable fiber for pulp as does four acres of forest during its necessary 20-year rotation period. Hemp also requires fewer chemicals to produce the pulp necessary for making paper. In order to make paper from natural fibers, the lignin which holds the cellulose together must be broken down. Environmentally harmful sulfur-based chemicals break down this lignin and leave the cellulose. Trees are 18-30% lignin, while hemp is only 4% lignin, which reduces the need for chemicals. Therefore, hemp is four times more productive than a forest at providing pulp and it provides this pulp with at least four to seven times less pollution. I am not contending that the legalization of marijuana will have the same profound effects on human civilization as the use of fire. What I am contending is that the continued prohibition on its use is based on ignorance -- an ignorance that costs us billions of dollars, lowers the standard of living for the sick and degrades our environment. To oppose the legalization of marijuana because some people may abuse it and use it to make them "high" for no reason is like wanting to ban fire because some people use it to light their marijuana and their crack. We can use marijuana and fire for more than just getting "high." They both have very useful, very real purposes. You cannot judge something by the evil uses it can be put to. If you did, nothing would be legal because nothing is abuse-proof. Support the legalization of marijuana. Copyright 1998 The Daily of the University of Washington