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Victory for Hemp
Starting on the first of next year, farmers in North Dakota can apply for licenses to grow hemp, the biological cousin of marijuana that can be used to make everything from soap to rope to groovy hacky-sack covers. Tired of watching their Canadian neighbors making good money off the stuff, state legislators legalized industrial hemp production last year. But there's still one major hurdle: the DEA has to give approval, since it considers hemp no different from pot - even though you'd have to smoke about an acre of the stuff to get a buzz. Of course, federal authorities have never been known for the rationality of their approach to anything connected with marijuana. The Supreme Court, for instance, just upheld a 55 year sentence for a guy convicted of selling three bags of pot to an undercover cop. Even the judge who was forced to impose the punishment, thanks to mandatory-minimum sentencing laws, called it "unjust, cruel and irrational."
Posted by Vince Beiser on 12/12/06 at 5:01 PM | E-mail | Print | Digg | de.licio.us | Reddit | Newsvine | Yahoo! MyWeb | StumbleUpon | Netscape | Google |
Comments
Yeah, the Hearst thing should be more widely known. But what will Wayerhauser and Plum Creek do if we get our fiber from hemp, besides sell their land for conservation land...saaaaay...
Best,
D
Posted by: Dano on 12/13/06 at 9:24 AM
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Movable Type 3.33
I find the bit about hemp being a biological cousin to marijuana a bit misleading. Hemp is marijuana - the very same plant. What you're talking about there is ditchweed, which has very low quantities of THC. But it's still the same species.
In fact, one of the reasons (among many) they banned marijuana in the first place was that lawmakers were unaware that hemp, a common industrial plant, and marijuana, the thing the Hearst newspapers had been demonizing for years, were in fact the very same plant. It's really too bad, because marijuana is incredibly useful. But irrational prohibitions are the hallmark of American policy.
Posted by: Russell on 12/13/06 at 2:04 AM