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- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Subject: "Hemp: Lifeline to the Future" -- I gave this to Bill Clinton today
- Message-ID: <1993Feb22.205420.21115@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Date: Mon, 22 Feb 1993 20:54:20 GMT
-
- The Prez and Vice-Prez of the U.S. visited SGI today. Along with a "metal-
- detected" crowd I stood outside the cafeteria for an hour-plus (rain coming
- and going) while they were given a demo of our machines, and then rapped it
- down inside the caf' with a select group of SGI'ers. Finally they came out
- and walked the cordoned line of us shaking all hands as they went.
-
- As Clinton walked by me I was able to hand him two copies of the below (in
- "prettified" hardcopy format of course--e-mail me if you'd like a PostScript
- version) while saying "Please read this." with a LOT of emphasis. I thought
- he might go by too fast or that some SS guy would not let me pass the
- papers, but there was no resistance, he looked directly at me after I spoke
- to him and said, "I will." with, what I felt, was straightforward honesty.
-
- Of course, this is one of the biziest and most sought after people on the
- planet. Pretty unlikely he'll read this himself, but you just never know.
-
- I must admit it was pretty exciting. Now I've got to start sending copies
- to my lengthy list of military conversion/activist/peace/enviromental/
- officialdom/elected-types/groups and press them with the same questions I
- ask you all below to ask every- one/group you know/connect with.
- --ratitor
-
-
- Article: 983 of sgi.talk.ratical
- From: dave@ratmandu.esd.sgi.com (dave "who can do? ratmandu!" ratcliffe)
- Subject: Hemp: Lifeline to the Future - Exercising Our Appropriate Intelligence
- Summary: hemp is the world's premier renewable natural resource
- Keywords: renewable, cheap, clean instead of limited, dirty, expensive
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- Date: Thu, 18 Feb 1993 17:49:31 GMT
- Lines: 1732
-
-
-
- HEMP, THE PLANT THAT CAN SAVE MOTHER EARTH
-
-
- Locate the blind spot in the culture--the place where the culture
- isn't looking, because it dare not--because if it were to look
- there, its previous values would dissolve. --Terence McKenna
-
-
-
-
- The following is a transcript of a remarkable commentary on hemp, the
- world's premiere renewable natural resource, by journalist and commentator
- Hugh Downs speaking for ABC News radio out of New York in November, 1990.
- Mr. Downs did his homework exceedingly well for this report--he succeeded
- in including a great deal of useful information in the short timespan of
- only nine minutes, forty seconds. Seeking to leverage off the clarity of
- his research, nine footnotes have been added to the text to provide people
- with a cross-section of the reference material substantiating the facts
- Mr. Downs articulates.
- It is hoped people will be motivated and inspired by the information
- below, to understand how, since the mid-thirties, this society has been
- reduced to an infantile status in which the awareness has been lost of how
- exceedingly useful a natural resource the vegetable hemp is, and, how
- simply changing the way we have been taught to think about this plant,
- will enable us to clear away the stagnant, constipated, tired and
- inappropriate thinking that has inhibited some of the very best qualities
- of human innovation, creativity, and resourcefulness for more than half a
- century.
- As the documentation below explains, the uses of cannabis hemp are as
- varied and multi-faceted as any of us could ever possibly imagine or hope
- for. This plant can indeed provide us solutions to MANY of the critical
- imbalances we as an industrial culture have created in the brief span of
- the past few hundred years. From the production of all forms of paper
- products, to plastics as tough as steel, to fuel that can replace all oil,
- gas, coal and nuclear power consumption, to a rich source of vegetable oil
- and protein, to all manner and form of fabrics and textiles, to medicinal
- products for the management of pain, chronic neurologic diseases,
- convulsive disorders, migraine headache, anorexia, mental illness, and
- bacterial infections, to 100% non-toxic paints and varnishes, to
- lubricants, to building materials that can replace dry wall and plywood,
- to carpets, rope, laces, sails, . . . the list rolls on and on and on.
- And the only thing that prevents us from once again employing this raw
- material for tens of thousands of useful and non-polluting products to
- replace the dirty, limited and expensive non-renewables derived from
- toxic petro-chemicals, is the way we have learned to think about hemp:
- "You can't use it--it's illegal."
- "Even if we could save the planet's life systems by changing that?"
- "That's right."
- This is the kind of frozen, devolutionary thinking we must expand our
- conscious awareness out beyond to once again encompass the capacity for
- hopes and dreams of the kind of world we want to, and can, provide our
- great-grandchildren's great-grandchildren with.
- Trust your own infinite intelligence and creativity. There is NO LIMIT
- to what we as sentient beings can do to change the world for the
- betterment of all. All we need to appreciate is that any and all change
- starts with how we consider or think about the world. We can stop
- cutting down ALL trees used for making paper and fuel; stop extracting
- and consuming petroleum we continue to spill into the oceans, as well as
- be partially consumed and end up forever in the atmosphere destroying the
- protective screen from the sun that has existed for millions of years;
- we can stop burning coal and begin to end the recently created phenomenon
- of acid rain; we can stop unearthing uranium and transmuting it into the
- most deadly man-made substance known to human beings. None of these
- limited, dirty and expensive forms of energy sources need be relied on
- anymore. The choice and decision is all of ours to make and implement.
- Teach yourselves and all you know or meet about this lifeline to our
- collective future. Send copies of this post to elected/appointed
- officials asking them why cannabis hemp/marijuana prohibition laws are
- allowed to stand when this premier natural resource can truly save the
- planet, ourselves and all future generations of all life on Mother Earth.
- The "leaders" will eventually have to follow and change course from the
- current going `alternative' of "lemming death." (As always PostScript
- versions of this file are available for any wanting "prettified"
- hardcopy.)
-
- -- ratitor
- dave@sgi.com
- version 1.1
-
-
-
- . . . the most important thing is not to be dualistic. Our "original
- mind" includes everything within itself. It is always rich and
- sufficient within itself. You should not lose your self-sufficient
- state of mind. This does not mean a closed mind, but actually an
- empty mind and a ready mind. If your mind is empty, it is always
- ready for anything; it is open to everything. In the beginner's
- mind there are many possibilities; in the expert's mind there are few.
- -- Shunryu Suzuki, "Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind,"
- Weatherhill, 1985, p. 21.
-
-
-
- transcript of Hugh Downs commentary on hemp, for ABC News, NY, 11/90:
- ____________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- Voters in the state of Alaska recently made marijuana illegal again
- for the first time in 15 years. If Alaska turns out to be like the
- other 49 states, the law will do little to curb use or production.
- Even the drug czar himself, William Bennett, has abandoned the drug war
- now that his "test case" of Washington, D.C., continues to see rising
- crime figures connected with the drug industry.
- Despite the legal trend against marijuana, many Americans continue
- to buck the trend. Some pro-marijuana organizations in fact tell us
- that marijuana, also known as hemp, could, as a raw material, save the
- U.S. economy. That's some statment. Not by smoking it--that's a minor
- issue. Would you believe that marijuana could replace most oil and
- energy needs? That marijuana could revolutionize the textile industry
- and stop foreign imports? Those are the claims.
- Some people think marijuana, or hemp, may be the epidome of yankee
- ingenuity. Mr. Jack Herer, for example, is the national director and
- founder of an organization called HEMP (that's an acronym for "Help End
- Marijuana Prohibition") located in Van Nuys, California. Mr. Herer is
- the author of a remarkable little book called, "The Emperor Wears No
- Clothes," wherein, not surprisingly, Mr. Herer urges the repeal of
- marijuana prohibition.
- Mr. Herer is not alone. Throughout the war on drugs, several
- organizations have consistently urged the legalization of marijuana.
- "High Times" magazine for example, The National Organization to Reform
- Marijuana Laws or NORML for short, and an organization called BACH--the
- Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp.
- But the reason the pro-marijuana lobby want marijuana legal has
- little to do with getting high, and a great deal to do with fighting
- oil giants like Saddam Hussein, Exxon and Iran. The pro-marijuana
- groups claim that hemp is such a versatile raw material, that its
- products not only compete with petroleum, but with coal, natural gas,
- nuclear energy, pharmaceutical, timber and textile companies.[1]
- It is estimated that methane and methanol production alone from hemp
- grown as biomass could replace 90% of the world's energy needs.[2] If
- they are right, this is not good news for oil interests and could
- account for the continuation of marijuana prohibition. The claim is
- that the threat hemp posed to natural resource companies back in the
- thirties accounts for its original ban.
- At one time marijuana seemed to have a promising future as a
- cornerstone of industry. When Rudolph Diesel produced his famous
- engine in 1896, he assumed that the diesel engine would be powered by a
- variety of fuels, especially vegetable and seed oils. Rudolph Diesel,
- like most engineers then, believed vegetable fuels were superior to
- petroleum. Hemp is the most efficient vegetable.
- In the 1930s the Ford Motor Company also saw a future in biomass
- fuels. Ford operated a successful biomass conversion plant, that
- included hemp, at their Iron Mountain facility in Michigan. Ford
- engineers extracted methanol, charcoal fuel, tar, pitch, ethyl-acetate
- and creosote. All fundamental ingredients for modern industry and now
- supplied by oil-related industries.[2]
- The difference is that the vegetable source is renewable, cheap and
- clean, and the petroleum or coal sources are limited, expensive and
- dirty. By volume, 30% of the hemp seed contains oil suitable for
- high-grade diesel fuel as well as aircraft engine and precision machine
- oil.
- Henry Ford's experiments with methanol promised cheap, readily
- renewable fuel. And if you think methanol means compromise, you should
- know that many modern race cars run on methanol.
- About the time Ford was making biomass methanol, a mechanical
- device[3] to strip the outer fibers of the hemp plant appeared on the
- market. These machines could turn hemp into paper and fabrics[4]
- quickly and cheaply. Hemp paper is superior to wood paper. The first
- two drafts of the U.S. constitution were written on hemp paper. The
- final draft is on animal skin. Hemp paper contains no dioxin, or other
- toxic residue, and a single acre of hemp can produce the same amount of
- paper as four acres of trees.[5] The trees take 20 years to harvest
- and hemp takes a single season. In warm climates hemp can be harvested
- two even three times a year. It also grows in bad soil and restores
- the nutrients.
- Hemp fiber-stripping machines were bad news to the Hearst paper
- manufacturing division, and a host of other natural resource firms.
- Coincidentally, the DuPont Chemical Company had, in 1937, been granted
- a patent on a sulfuric acid process to make paper from wood pulp. At
- the time DuPont predicted their sulfuric acid process would account for
- 80% of their business for the next 50 years.
- Hemp, once the mainstay of American agriculture, became a threat to
- a handful of corporate giants. To stifle the commercial threat that
- hemp posed to timber interests, William Randolph Hearst began referring
- to hemp in his newspapers, by its Spanish name, "marijuana." This did
- two things: it associated the plant with Mexicans and played on racist
- fears, and it misled the public into thinking that marijuana and hemp
- were different plants.
- Nobody was afraid of hemp--it had been cultivated and processed into
- usable goods, and consumed as medicine, and burned in oil lamps, for
- hundreds of years. But after a campaign to discredit hemp in the
- Hearst newspapers, Americans became afraid of something called
- marijuana.
- By 1937, the Marijuana Tax Act was passed which marked the beginning
- of the end of the hemp industry. In 1938, "Popular Mechanics" ran an
- article about marijuana called, "New Billion Dollar Crop."[6] It was
- the first time the words "billion dollar" were used to describe a U.S.
- agricultural product. "Popular Mechanics" said,
-
- . . . a machine has been invented which solves a problem more
- than 6,000 years old. . . .
- The machine . . . is designed for removing the fiber-
- bearing cortex from the rest of the stalk, making hemp fiber
- available for use without a prohibitive amount of human labor.
- Hemp is the standard fiber of the world. It has great
- tensile strength and durability. It is used to produce more
- than 5,000 textile products ranging from rope, to fine laces,
- and the woody "hurds" remaining after the fiber has been
- removed, contain more than seventy-seven per cent cellulose,
- and can be used to produce more than 25,000 products ranging
- from dynamite to cellophane.
-
- Well since the "Popular Mechanics" article appeared over half a
- century ago, many more applications have come to light. Back in 1935,
- more than 58,000 tons of marijuana seed were used just to make paint
- and varnish (all non-toxic, by the way). When marijuana was banned,
- these safe paints and varnishes were replaced by paints made with toxic
- petro-chemicals. In the 1930s no one knew about poisoned rivers or
- deadly land-fills or children dying from chemicals in house paint.
- People did know something about hemp back then, because the plant and
- its products were so common.
- All ships lines were made from hemp and much of the sail canvas.
- (In fact the word "canvas" is the Dutch pronunciation of the Greek word
- for hemp, "cannabis.") All ropes, fozzers (sp?) and lines aboard ship,
- all rigging, nets, flags and pennants were also made from marijuana
- stalks. And so were all charts, logs and bibles.
- Today many of these items are made, in whole or in part, with
- synthetic petro-chemicals and wood. All oil lamps used to burn hemp-
- seed oil until the whale oil edged it out of first place in the mid-
- nineteenth century. And then, when all the whales were dead,
- lamplights were fueled by petroleum, and coal, and recently radioactive
- energy.[7]
- This may be hard to believe in the middle of a war on drugs, but the
- first law concerning marijuana in the colonies at Jamestown in 1619,
- ordered farmers to grow Indian hemp. Massachussetts passed a
- compulsory grow law in 1631. Connecticut followed in 1632. The
- Chesapeake colonies ordered their farmers, by law, to grow marijuana in
- the mid-eighteenth century. Names like Hempstead or Hemphill dot the
- American landscape and reflect areas of intense marijuana cultivation.
- During World War II, domestic hemp production became crucial when
- the Japanese cut off Asian supplies to the U.S. American farmers (and
- even their sons), who grew marijuana, were exempt from military duty
- during World War II. A 1942 U.S. Department of Agriculture film called
- "Hemp For Victory" extolled the agricultural might of marijuana and
- called for hundreds of thousands of acres to be planted.[8] Despite a
- rather vigorous drug crackdown, 4-H clubs were asked by the government
- to grow marijuana for seed supply. Ironically, war plunged the
- government into a sober reality about marijuana and that is that it's
- very valuable.
- In today's anti-drug climate, people don't want to hear about the
- commercial potential of marijuana. The reason is that the flowering
- top of a female hemp plant contains a drug. But from 1842 through the
- 1890s a powerful concentrated extract of marijuana was the second most
- prescribed drug in the United States. In all that time the medical
- literature didn't list any of the ill effects claimed by today's drug
- warriors.[9]
- Today, there are anywhere from 25 to 30 million Americans who smoke
- marijuana regularly. As an industry, marijuana clears well more than
- $4 billion a year. [This must have been a misreading of his notes--for
- 1990, the minimum figure would have been at least $40 billion for the
- entire nation. (phone interview with Jack Herer)] Obviously, as an
- illegal business, none of that money goes to taxes. But the modern
- marijuana trade only sells one product, a drug. Hemp could be worth
- considerably more than $4 [$40] billion a year, if it were legally
- supplying the 50,000 safe products the proponents claim it can.
- If hemp could supply the energy needs of the United States, its
- value would be inestimable. Now that the drug czar is in final
- retreat, America has an opportunity to, once and for all, say farewell
- to the Exxon Valdez, Saddam Hussein and a prohibitively expensive
- brinkmanship in the desert sands of Saudi Arabia.
- This is Hugh Downs, ABC News, New York.
-
-
-
-
-
- Humanity has been held to a limited and distorted view of itself,
- from its interpretation of the most intimate emotions to its
- grandest visions of human possibilities, by virtue of its
- subordination of women.
- Until recently, "mankind's" understandings have been the only
- understandings generally available to us. As other perceptions
- arise--precisely those perceptions that men, because of their
- dominant position could not perceive--the total vision of human
- possibilities enlarges and is transformed.
- -- Jean Baker Miller, "Toward a New Psychology of Women" (1976)
-
-
-
- -----
-
- Footnotes:
-
- [1] If you are unfamiliar with the facts about hemp, the world's premier
- renewable natural resource, a great place to start is Jack Herer's
- information-compressed, "Hemp and the Marijuana Conspiracy: The
- Emperor Wears No Clothes," (c) 1985, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1992, available
- in many bookstores, or from H.E.M.P., 5632 Van Nuys Blvd., Suite 210,
- Van Nuys, CA 91401. From the Introduction:
- The purpose of this book is to revive the authoritative historical,
- social and economic perspective needed to ensure comprehensive legal
- reforms, abolish cannabis hemp/marijuana prohibition laws, and save
- the Earth's life systems.
- Another book going to press at this time is "Hemp: Lifeline To The
- Future, Unexpected Answers To Our Environment And Economic Crises,"
- written by Chris Conrad, the founder and international director of
- BACH, the Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp, Box 71093, LA, CA
- 90071-0093, 213/288-4152.
-
-
-
-
- [2] "About 6% of contiguous United States land area put into cultivation
- for biomass could supply all current demands for oil and gas."
-
- Very few people know what "biomass conversion" or "pyrolysis" mean--not
- only in terms of their dictionary definitions, but in terms of what
- they mean as alternative sources of energy, to the limited, expensive
- and dirty petro-chemical, nuclear, or coal sources. The only reason
- the U.S.--and every other nation on earth--can't once again become
- energy independent and smog free is because people are not educated
- concerning the facts about solutions to the environment/energy "crises"
- continuously lamented and tepidly addressed "leaders," claiming they
- are the best informed to decide what to do. The knowledge exists right
- now for our lifeline to the future and the health and well-being of the
- Seventh Generation yet unborn. Everyone of us must learn about this
- existent lifeline and teach everyone else we know what the facts are
- for THE way out of the current "crisis".
-
-
- HEMP FOR FUEL
- Excerpted from "Energy Farming in America," by Lynn Osburn
-
- BIOMASS CONVERSION to fuel has proven economically feasible, first
- in laboratory tests and by continuous operation of pilot plants in
- field tests since 1973. When the energy crop is growing it takes in
- C02 from the air, so when it is burned the C02 is released, creating
- a balanced system.
- Biomass is the term used to describe all biologically produced
- matter. World production of biomass is estimated at 146 billion
- metric tons a year, mostly wild plant growth. Some farm crops and
- trees can produce up to 20 metric tons per acre of biomass a year.
- Types of algae and grasses may produce 50 metric tons per year.
- This biomass has a heating value of 5000-8000 BTU/lb, with
- virtually no ash or sulfur produced during combustion. About 6% of
- contiguous United States land area put into cultivation for biomass
- could supply all current demands for oil and gas.
- The foundation upon which this will be achieved is the emerging
- concept of "energy farming," wherein farmers grow and harvest crops
- for biomass conversion to fuels.
-
- PYROLYSIS IS THE TECHNIQUE of applying high heat to organic matter
- (ligno-cellulosic materials) in the absence of air or in reduced air.
- The process can produce charcoal, condensable organic liquids
- (pyrolytic fuel oil), non-condensable gasses, acetic acid, acetone,
- and methanol. The process can be adjusted to favor charcoal,
- pyrolytic oil, gas, or methanol production with a 95.5% fuel-to-feed
- efficiency.
- Pyrolysis has been used since the dawn of civilization. Ancient
- Egyptians practiced wood distillation by collecting the tars and
- pyroligneous acid for use in their embalming industry.
- Methanol-powered automobiles and reduced emissions from coal-fired
- power plants can be accomplished by biomass conversion to fuel
- utilizing pyrolysis technology, and at the same time save the
- American family farm while turning the American heartland into a
- prosperous source of clean energy production.
- Pyrolysis has the advantage of using the same technology now used
- to process crude fossil fuel oil and coal. Coal and oil conversion
- is more efficient in terms of fuel-to-feed ratio, but biomass
- conversion by pyrolysis has many environmental and economic
- advantages over coal and oil.
- Pyrolysis facilities will run three shifts a day. Some 68% of the
- energy of the raw biomass will be contained in the charcoal and fuel
- oils made at the facility. This charcoal has nearly the same heating
- value in BTU as coal, with virtually no sulfur.
- Pyrolytic fuel oil has similar properties to no. 2 and no. 6 fuel
- oil. The charcoal can be transported economically by rail to all
- urban area power plants generating electricity. The fuel oil can be
- transported economically by trucking creating more jobs for
- Americans. When these plants use charcoal instead of coal, the
- problems of acid rain will begin to disappear.
- When this energy system is on line producing a steady supply of
- fuel for electrical power plants, it will be more feasible to build
- the complex gasifying systems to produce methanol from the cubed
- biomass, or make synthetic gasoline from the methanol by the addition
- of the Mobil Co. process equipment to the gasifier.
-
- FARMERS MUST BE ALLOWED TO GROW an energy crop capable of
- producing 10 tons per acre in 90-120 days. This crop must be woody
- in nature and high in lignocellulose. It must be able to grow in all
- climactic zones in America.
- And it should not compete with food crops for the most productive
- land, but be grown in rotation with food crops or on marginal land
- where food crop production isn't profitable.
- When farmers can make a profit growing energy, it will not take
- long to get 6% of continental American land mass into cultivation of
- biomass fuel--enough to replace our economy's dependence on fossil
- fuels. We will no longer be increasing the C02 burden in the
- atmosphere. The threat of global greenhouse warming and adverse
- climactic change will diminish.
- To keep costs down, pyrolysis reactors need to be located within a
- 50 mile radius of the energy farms. This necessity will bring life
- back to our small towns by providing jobs locally.
-
- HEMP IS THE NUMBER ONE biomass producer on planet earth: 10 tons
- per acre in approximately four months. It is a woody plant
- containing 77% cellulose. Wood produces 60% cellulose.
- This energy crop can be harvested with equipment readily
- available. It can be "cubed" by modifying hay cubing equipment.
- This method condenses the bulk, reducing trucking costs from the
- field to the pyrolysis reactor. And the biomass cubes are ready for
- conversion with no further treatment.
- Hemp is drought resistant, making it an ideal crop in the dry
- western regions of the country. Hemp is the only biomass resource
- capable of making America energy independent. And our government
- outlawed it in 1938.
- Remember, in 10 years, by the year 2000, America will have
- exhausted 80% of her petroleum reserves. Will we then go to war with
- the Arabs for the privilege of driving our cars; will we stripmine
- our land for coal, and poison our air so we can drive our autos an
- extra 100 years; will we raze our forests for our energy needs?
- During World War II, our supply of hemp was cut off by the
- Japanese. The federal government responded to the emergency by
- suspending marijuana prohibition. Patriotic American farmers were
- encouraged to apply for a license to cultivate hemp and responded
- enthusiastically. Hundreds of thousands of acres of hemp were grown.
- The argument against hemp production does not hold up to scrutiny:
- hemp grown for biomass makes very poor grade marijuana. The 20 to 40
- million Americans who smoke marijuana would loath to smoke hemp grown
- for biomass, so a farmer's hemp biomass crop is worthless as
- marijuana.
- It is time the government once again respond to our economic
- emergency as they did in WWII to permit our farmers to grow American
- hemp so this mighty nation can once again become energy independent
- and smog free.
- For more information on the many uses of hemp, contact BACH, the
- Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp, Box 71093, LA, CA 90071-0093,
- 213/288-4152.
- --excerpt from Herer, "Emperor Wears No Clothes," 1991 edition, p. 136
- For an updated version of "Energy Farming In America," "Books In Print"
- lists "Ecohemp: Economy and Ecolgy with Hemp," Access Unlimited,
- Frazier Park, CA, 805/632-2644.
-
-
-
-
- [3] The device invented was named the decorticator and in the mid 1930s it
- was poised to do for hemp what the cotton gin had done for cotton:
- create a fast and economically feasible way of "removing the fiber-
- bearing cortex from the rest of the stalk, making hemp fiber available
- for use without a prohibitive amount of human labor." ("Popular
- Mechanics," February, 1938)
-
-
-
-
- [4] from "The Emperor Wears No Clothes," p. 23:
-
- MAN-MADE FIBER . . .
- THE TOXIC ALTERNATIVE TO NATURAL FIBERS.
-
- The late 1920s and 1930s saw continuing consolidation of power into
- the hands of a few large steel, oil and chemical (munitions) companies.
- The U.S. federal government placed much of the textile production for
- the domestic economy in the hands of their chief munitions maker,
- DuPont.
- The processing of nitrating cellulose into explosives is very similar
- to the process for nitrating cellulose into synthetic fibers and
- plastics. Rayon, the first synthetic fiber, is simply stabilized
- guncotton, or nitrated cloth, the basic explosive of the 19th century.
- "Synthetic plastics find application in fabricating a wide variety of
- articles, many of which in the past were made from natural products,"
- beamed Lammot DuPont ("Popular Mechanics," June 1939, pg. 805).
- "Consider our natural resources," the president of DuPont continued,
- "The chemist has aided in conserving natural resources by developing
- synthetic products to supplement or wholly replace natural products."
- DuPont's scientists were the world's leading researchers into the
- processes of nitrating cellulose and were in fact the largest processor
- of cellulose in the nation in this era.
- The February, 1938 "Popular Mechanics" article stated "Thousands of
- tons of hemp hurds are used every year by one large powder company for
- the manufacture of dynamite and TNT." History shows that DuPont had
- largely cornered the market in explosives by buying up and
- consolidating the smaller blasting companies in the late 1800s. By
- 1902 they controlled about two-thirds of industry output.
- They were the largest powder company, supplying 40% of the munitions
- for the allies in WWI. As cellulose and fiber researchers, DuPont's
- chemists knew hemp's true value better than anyone else. The value of
- hemp goes far beyond line fibers; although recognized for linen,
- canvas, netting and cordage, these long fibers are only 20% of the
- hempstalks' weight. 80% of the hemp is in the 77% cellulose hurd, and
- this was the most abundant, cleanest resource of cellulose (fiber) for
- paper, plastics and even rayon.
- The empirical evidence in this book shows that the federal
- government--through the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act--allowed this munitions
- maker to supply synthetic fibers for the domestic economy without
- competition. The proof of a successful conspiracy among these corporate
- and governing interests is simply this: In 1991 DuPont was still the
- largest producer of man-made fibers, while no citizen has legally
- harvested a single acre of textile grade hemp in over 50 years.
- An almost unlimited tonnage of natural fiber and cellulose would have
- become available to the American farmer in 1937, the year DuPont
- patented nylon and the polluting wood-pulp paper sulfide process. All
- of hemp's potential value was lost.
- Simple plastics of the early 1900s were made of nitrated cellulose,
- directly related to DuPont's munitions-making processes. Celluloid,
- acetate and rayon were the simple plastics of that era, and hemp was
- well known to cellulose researchers as the premier resource for this
- new industry to use. Worldwide, the raw material of simple plastics,
- rayon and paper could be best supplied by hemp hurds.
- Nylon fibers were developed between 1926-1936 by the noted Harvard
- chemist Wallace Carothers, working from German patents. These
- polyamides are long fibers based on observed natural products.
- Carothers, supplied with an open-ended research grant from DuPont, made
- a comprehensive study of natural cellulose fibers. He duplicated
- natural fibers in his labs and polyamides--long fibers of a specific
- chemical process--were developed.
- Coal tar and petroleum based chemicals were employed, and different
- devices, spinnerets and processes were patented. This new type of
- textile, nylon, was to be controlled from the raw material stage, as
- coal, to the completed product; a patented chemical product. The
- chemical company centralized the production and profits of the new
- "miracle" fiber.
- The introduction of nylon, the introduction of high-volume machinery
- to separate hemp's long fiber from the cellulose hurd, and the
- outlawing of hemp as "marijuana" all occurred simultaneously.
- The new man-made fibers (MMFs) can best be described as war material.
- The fiber making process has become one based on big factories,
- smokestacks, coolants and hazardous chemicals, rather than one of
- stripping out the abundant, naturally available fibers.
- Coming from a history of making explosives and munitions, the old
- "chemical dye plants" now produce hosiery, mock linens, mock canvas,
- latex paint and synthetic carpets. Their polluting factories make
- imitation leather, upholstery and wood surfaces, while an important
- part of the natural cycle stands outlawed.
- The standard fiber of world history, America's traditional crop,
- hemp, could provide our textiles, paper and be the premier source for
- cellulose. The war industries--DuPont, Allied Chemical, Monsanto,
- etc.,--are protected from competition by the marijuana laws. They make
- war on the natural cycle and the common farmer.
- Shan Clark
- _______________________________________________________________________
- Sources:
- "Encyclopedia of Textiles" 3rd Edition by the editors of "American
- Fabrics and Fashions Magazine," William C. Legal, Publisher Prentice-
- Hall, Inc. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1980; "The Emergence of Industrial
- America Strategic Factors in American Economic Growth Since 1870,"
- Peter George, State University, NY; "DuPont" (a corporate
- autobiography published periodically by E.I. DuPont De Nemours and Co.,
- Inc. Wilmington, DE); "The Blasting Handbook," E.I. DuPont De Nemours
- & Co. Inc., Wilmington, DE; "Mechanical Engineering Magazine," Feb.
- 1938; "Popular Mechanics," Feb. 1938; "Journal of Applied Polymer
- Science," Vol. 47, 1984; "Polyamides, the Chemistry of Long Molecules"
- (author unknown) U.S. Patent #2,071,250 (Feb. 16, 1937), W.H.
- Carothers; "DuPont Dynasties," Jerry Colby; "The American Peoples
- Encyclopedia," the Sponsor Press, Chicago, 1953.
-
-
-
-
- [5] Dewey and Merrill, "Bulletin #404, Hemp Hurds As Paper-Making
- Material," U.S.D.A., Washington, D.C., October 14, 1916.
-
- from the prophetic "Conclusions" section of this USDA Bulletin:
- There appears to be little doubt that under the present system of
- forest use and consumption the present supply cannot withstand the
- demands placed upon it. By the time improved methods of forestry have
- established an equilibrium between production and consumption, the
- price of pulp wood may be such that a knowledge of other available raw
- materials may be imperative.
- Semicommercial paper-making tests were conducted, therefore, on hemp
- hurds, in cooperation with a paper manufacturer. After several trials,
- under conditions of treatment and manufacture which are regarded as
- favorable in comparison with those used with pulp wood, paper was
- produced which received very favorable comment both from investigators
- and from the trade which according to official test would be classed as
- a No. 1 machine finished printing paper. (p. 25)
-
- "This remarkable new pulp technology for papermaking was invented in
- 1916 by our own U.S. Department of Agriculture chief scientists,
- Lyster H. Dewey, Botanist in Charge of Fiber-Plant Investigations, and
- Jason L. Merrill, Paper-Plant Chemist, Paper-Plant Investigations.
- As the USDA bulletin suggested, this process had to stay in the
- laboratory until the invention of decorticating and havesting
- machinery allowed for its economic utilization.
- Until this time, hemp paper had only been made from rags and stalk
- fibers while the fiber and cellulose-rich hurds were burnt to
- fertilize the soil.
- Some cannabis plant strains regularly reach tree-like heights of 20
- feet or more in one growing season.
- The new paper process used hemp "hurds"--77% of the hemp stalk's
- weight, which was then a wasted by-product of the fiber-stripping
- process. In 1916, USDA Bulletin No. 404, reported that one acre of
- cannabis hemp, in annual rotation over a 20-year period, would produce
- as much pulp for paper as 4.1 acres of trees being cut down over the
- same 20-year period. This process would use only 1/4 to 1/7 as much
- polluting sulfur-based acid chemicals to break down the glue-like
- lignin that binds the fibers of the pulp, or even none at all using
- soda ash. The problem of dioxin contamination of rivers is avoided in
- the hemp paper making process, which does not need to use chlorine
- bleach (as the wood pulp paper making process requires) but instead
- safely substitutes hydrogen peroxide in the bleaching process.
- All this lignin must be broken down to make pulp paper. Hemp pulp
- is only 4% lignin, while trees are 18-30% lignin. Thus hemp provides
- four times as much pulp with at least four to seven times less
- pollution. . . .
- As we have seen, this hemp pulp-paper potential depended on the
- invention and the engineering of new machines for stripping the hemp
- by modern technology. This would also lower demand for lumber and
- reduce the cost of housing, while at the same time helping
- re-oxygenate the planet.
- As an example: If the new (1916) hemp pulp paper process were legal
- today, it would soon replace about 70% of all wood pulp paper,
- including computer printout paper, corrugated boxes and paper bags."
- -- Herer, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes", 1991 edition, pp. 20-22,
- 118-122.
-
-
-
-
- [6] complete text below of "New Billion-Dollar Crop," "Popular Mechanics,"
- Febraury, 1938, followed by "Pinch Hitters for Defense" (12/41)
- describing Henry Ford's new auto bodies consisting entirely of plastics
- made from vegetables producing cellulose fibers (of which hemp is the
- most efficient of all vegetables), followed by an two excerpts from
- "The Emperor" about "Paints and Varnishes" and "Building Materials and
- Housing:"
-
-
- NEW BILLION-DOLLAR CROP
- Popular Mechanics
- February, 1938
-
- AMERICAN farmers are promised a new cash crop with an annual value of
- several hundred million dollars, all because a machine has been
- invented which solves a problem more than 6,000 years old. It is
- hemp, a crop that will not compete with other American products.
- Instead, it will displace imports of raw material and manufactured
- products produced by underpaid coolie and peasant labor and it will
- provide thousands of jobs for American workers throughout the land.
- The machine which makes this possible is designed for removing the
- fiber-bearing cortex from the rest of the stalk, making hemp fiber
- available for use without a prohibitive amount of human labor.
- Hemp is the standard fiber of the world. It has great tensile
- strength and durability. It is used to produce more than 5,000
- textile products, ranging from rope to fine laces, and the woody
- "hurds" remaining after the fiber has been removed contain more than
- seventy-seven per cent cellulose, and can be used to produce more
- than 25,000 products, ranging from dynamite to Cellophane.
- Machines now in service in Texas, Illinois, Minnesota and other
- states are producing fiber at a manufacturing cost of half a cent a
- pound, and are finding a profitable market for the rest of the stalk.
- Machine operators are making a good profit in competition with
- coolie-produced foreign fiber while paying farmers fifteen dollars a
- ton for hemp as it comes from the field.
- From the farmers' point of view, hemp is an easy crop to grow and
- will yield from three to six tons per acre on any land that will grow
- corn, wheat, or oats. It has a short growing season, so that it can
- be planted after other crops are in. It can be grown in any state of
- the union. The long roots penetrate and break the soil to leave it
- in perfect condition for the next year's crop. The dense shock of
- leaves, eight to twelve feet above the ground, chokes out weeds. Two
- successive crops are enough to reclaim land that has been abandoned
- because of Canadian thistles or quack grass.
- Under old methods, hemp was cut and allowed to lie in the fields
- for weeks until it "retted" enough so the fibers could be pulled off
- by hand. Retting is simply rotting as a result of dew, rain and
- bacterial action. Machines were developed to separate the fibers
- mechanically after retting was complete, but the cost was high, the
- loss of fiber great, and the quality of fiber comparatively low.
- With the new machine, known as a decorticator, hemp is cut with a
- slightly modified grain binder. It is delivered to the machine where
- an automatic chain conveyor feeds it to the breaking arms at the rate
- of two or three tons per hour. The hurds are broken into fine pieces
- which drop into the hopper, from where they are delivered by blower
- to a baler or to truck or freight car for loose shipment. The fiber
- comes from the other end of the machine, ready for baling.
- From this point on almost anything can happen. The raw fiber can
- be used to produce strong twine or rope, woven into burlap, used for
- carpet warp or linoleum backing or it may be bleached and refined,
- with resinous by-products of high commercial value. It can, in fact,
- be used to replace the foreign fibers which now flood our markets.
- Thousands of tons of hemp hurds are used every year by one large
- powder company for the manufacture of dynamite and TNT. A large
- paper company, which has been paying more than a million dollars a
- year in duties on foreign-made cigarette papers, now is manufacturing
- these papers from American hemp grown in Minnesota. A new factory in
- Illinois is producing fine bond papers from hemp. The natural
- materials in hemp make it an economical source of pulp for any grade
- of paper manufactured, and the high percentage of alpha cellulose
- promises an unlimited supply of raw material for the thousands of
- cellulose products our chemists have developed.
- It is generally believed that all linen is produced from flax.
- Actually, the majority comes from hemp--authorities estimate that
- more than half of our imported linen fabrics are manufactured from
- hemp fiber. Another misconception is that burlap is made from hemp.
- Actually, its source is usually jute, and practically all of the
- burlap we use is woven by laborers in India who receive only four
- cents a day. Binder twine is usually made from sisal which comes
- from Yucatan and East Africa.
- All of these products, now imported, can be produced from home-
- grown hemp. Fish nets, bow strings, canvas, strong rope, overalls,
- damask tablecloths, fine linen garments, towels, bed linen and
- thousands of other everyday items can be grown on American farms.
- Our imports of foreign fabrics and fibers average about $200,000,000
- per year; in raw fibers alone we imported over $50,000,000 in the
- first six months of 1937. All of this income can be made available
- for Americans.
- The paper industry offers even greater possibilities. As an
- industry it amounts to over $1,000,000,000 a year, and of that eighty
- per cent is imported. But hemp will produce every grade of paper,
- and government figures estimate that 10,000 acres devoted to hemp
- will produce as much paper as 40,000 acres of average pulp land.
- One obstacle in the onward march of hemp is the reluctance of
- farmers to try new crops. The problem is complicated by the need for
- proper equipment a reasonable distance from the farm. The machine
- cannot be operated profitably unless there is enough acreage within
- driving range and farmers cannot find a profitable market unless
- there is machinery to handle the crop. Another obstacle is that the
- blossom of the female hemp plant contains marijuana, a narcotic, and
- it is impossible to grow hemp without producing the blossom. Federal
- regulations now being drawn up require registration of hemp growers,
- and tentative proposals for preventing narcotic production are rather
- stringent.
- However, the connection of hemp as a crop and marijuana seems to
- be exaggerated. The drug is usually produced from wild hemp or
- locoweed which can be found on vacant lots and along railroad tracks
- in every state. If federal regulations can be drawn to protect the
- public without preventing the legitimate culture of hemp, this new
- crop can add immeasurably to American agriculture and industry.
-
- "Popular Mechanics Magazine" can furnish the name and address of the
- maker of, or dealer in, any article described in its pages. If you
- wish this information, write to the Bureau of Information, inclosing
- a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Pinch Hitters for Defense
- Popular Mechanics
- December, 1941
-
- Over in England it's saccharine for sugar; on the continent it's
- charcoal "gasogenes" in the rumble seat instead of gasoline in the
- tank. Here in America there's plenty of sugar, plenty of gasoline.
- Yet there's an industrial revolution in progress just the same, a
- revolution in materials that will affect every home.
- After twelve years of research, the Ford Motor Company has
- completed an experimental automobile with a plastic body. Although
- its design takes advantage of the properties of plastics, the
- streamline car does not differ greatly in appearance from its steel
- counterpart. The only steel in the hand-made body is found in the
- tubular welded frame on which are mounted 14 plastic panels, 3/16
- inch thick. Composed of a mixture of farm crops and synthetic
- chemicals, the plastic is reported to withstand a blow 10 times as
- great as steel without denting. Even the windows and windshield are
- of plastic. The total weight of the plastic car is about 2,000
- pounds, compared with 3,000 pounds for a steel automobile of the same
- size. Although no hint has been given as to when plastic cars may go
- into production, the experimental model is pictured as a step toward
- materialization of Henry Ford's belief that some day he would "grow
- automobiles from the soil."
- When Henry Ford recently unveiled his plastic car, result of 12
- years of research, he gave the world a glimpse of the automobilie of
- tomorrow, its tough panels molded under hydraulic pressure of 1,500
- pounds per square inch from a recipe that calls for 70 percent of
- cellulose fibers from wheat straw, hemp and sisal plus 30 percent
- resin binder. The only steel in the car is its tubular welded frame.
- The plastic car weighs a ton, 1,000 pounds lighter than a comparable
- steel car. Manufacturers are already taking a low-priced plastic car
- to test the public's taste by 1943.
-
- * * * * *
-
- 6. Paints and Varnishes
-
- For thousands of years, virtually all good paints and varnishes
- were made with hemp seed oil and/or linseed oil.
- For instance, in 1935 alone, 116 million pounds (58,000 tons)
- [National Institute of Oilseed Products congressional testimony
- *against* the 1937 Marijuana Transfer Tax Law] of hemp seed were
- used in America just for paint and varnish. As a comparison, consider
- that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), along with all America's
- state and local police agencies, claim to have seized for all of 1988,
- 651.5 tons of American-grown marijuana--seed, plant, root, dirt clump
- and all.[National Narcotics Intelligence Consumer's Committee, NNICC
- Report, 1988 DEA office relase, El Paso, TX, April, 1989.] The hemp
- drying oil business went principally to DuPont petro-chemicals.
- [Sloman, Larry, "Reefer Madness," Grove Press, New York, NY, 1979,
- pg. 72.]
- Congress and the Treasury Department were assured through secret
- testimony given by DuPont in 1935-37 directly to Herman Oliphant,
- Chief Counsel for the Treasury Dept., that hemp seed oil could be
- replaced with synthetic petro-chemical oils made principally by
- DuPont.
- Oliphant was solely responsible for drafting the Marijuana Tax Act
- that was submitted to Congress.[Bonnie, Richard and Whitebread,
- Charles, "The Marijuana Conviction," Univ. of Virginia Press, 1974.]
- (See complete story in Chapter 4, "The Last Days of Legal Cannabis.")
- -- Herer, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes," 1991 edition, p. 8.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- 11. Building Materials And Housing
-
- Because one acre of hemp produces as much cellulose fiber pulp as
- 4.1 acres of trees (Dewey & Merrill, "Bulletin #404," U.S. Dept. of
- Ag., 1916), hemp is the perfect material to replace trees for pressed
- board, particle board and cor concrete construction molds.
- Practical, inexpensive construction material which is fire
- resistant, with excellent thermal and sound insulating qualities, can
- be made using a process called Environcore.(c) This process,
- developed by Mansion Industries, applies heat and compression to
- agricultural fiber to create strong construction paneling, replacing
- dry wall and plywood. (See Appendix, p. 172. [Vincent H. Miller, "A
- Grass House In Your Future?," "Freedom Network News," June/July 1989])
- Hemp has been used throughout history for carpet backing. Hemp
- fiber has potential in the manufacture of strong, rot resistant
- carpeting--eliminating the poisonous fumes of burning synthetic
- materials in a house or commercial fire, along with allergic reactions
- associated with new synthetic carpeting.
- Plastic plumbing pipe (PVC pipes) can be manufactured using
- renewable hemp cellulose as the chemical feedstocks, replacing non-
- renewable petroleum-based chemical feedstocks.
- So we can envision a house of the future built, plumbed, painted and
- furnished with the world's num,ber one renewable resource--hemp.
- -- Herer, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes," 1991 edition, p. 10.
-
-
-
-
- [7] Most people think with the Cold War over, nuclear weapons, and, the
- nuclear industry as a whole, will simply become a thing of the past.
- This is NOT the perspective of the people who run the nuclear weapons
- labs--the heart of the nuclear industry. DOE plans for creating an
- "assembly line" for international commerce in enriched uranium for
- foreign atomic power plants are swinging into high gear at the same
- time the justification for the existence of the nuclear establishment
- over the past 50 years--communism--is no more.
- The following Fact Sheet by the Western States Legal Foundation is
- only one indicator of what the DOE and the Nuclear Weapons Complex
- intend to do to create a "thriving" international commerce in enriched
- high-level radioactive materials, the most long-lived biologically
- toxic matter existent on earth. And, as has consistently happened
- throughout the history of the development of nuclear technology in the
- United States, all this is being done in secret without ANY meaningful
- public debate. Who's interests are truly being served here?
- Teaching all people in the industrial nations how hemp IS our
- lifeline to the future--how it IS the renewable, cheap, and clean
- vegetable source to meet humanity's energy needs instead of the
- astronomically expensive and lethally polluting source that nuclear
- technology is--this is what we must be about.
- And when people respond by saying, "Yes, but what are you going to
- use if we don't further develop and employ nuclear?--Petroleum and coal
- are too dirty and solar isn't technologically feasible yet." That's
- when you respond by explaining why alcohol prohibition of the 1920s was
- rescinded by FDR in the 30s, why hemp prohibition must be rescinded
- now, and how hemp is THE world's premier renewable natural resource
- that is only waiting for us to re-exercise our own best intelligence to
- employ it to solve our energy "crisis".
-
-
- WESTERN STATES LEGAL FOUNDATI0N
- 1440 BROADWAY, SUITE #500, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA 94612
- PHONE: 510/839-5877 FAX: 510/839-5397
-
-
- FACTSHEET
- ---------
-
- URANIUM-ATOMIC VAPOR LASER ISOTOPE SEPARATION
- (U-AVLIS)
- LAWRENCE LIVERMORE NATIONAL LABORATORY
-
- This factsheet is prepared by the Western States Legal Foundation
- (WSLF), a non-profit environmental and peace organization which has
- actively monitored Department of Energy (DOE) operations at Lawrence
- Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) since 1982. WSLF, in association
- with other public interest organizations, is evaluating DOE's proposal
- to commence commercial-scale demonstration of a uranium-enrichment
- facility known as U-AVLIS. DOE recently announced that U-AVLIS
- operations pose "no significant environmental impact" to the
- surrounding community.
-
- What Is U-AVLIS?
- ----------------
-
- Over the past sixteen years, DOE has conducted research into the
- expansion of commercial production of enriched uranium for export and
- use in foreign atomic power plants. Alarmed by increasing competition
- in the uranium export market by France and Japan (and possible entry
- into the market by the Soviet Union), DOE has invested hundreds of
- millions of dollars to develop a new technology to enrich fuel-grade
- uranium. The objective of the commercial AVLIS program is to generate
- a market capable of contributing over one billion dollars to the U.S.
- balance of trade.
-
- AVLIS, which stands for Atomic Vapor Laser Isotope Separation, is
- a technology capable of enriching uranium and plutonium for weapons use
- as well as for nuclear fuel. LLNL recently operated a pilot Special
- Isotope Separation (SIS) facility designed to vaporize and refine
- plutonium (for weapons use), utilizing AVLIS technology. U-AVLIS is
- the commercial counterpart to the weapons-related SIS program.
-
- In the U-AVLIS facility, uranium is vaporized and ionized with
- high energy lasers. The desirable U-235 isotope is then collected in
- the separator, and the remaining U-238 ("depleted uranium") is
- discarded. In 1991, DOE completed construction of the Uranium
- Demonstration system (UDS), a plant-scale pilot U-AVLIS facility for
- demonstration of "large scale, integrated uranium enrichment." Should
- the program prove successful, DOE plans to start full scale plant
- construction in 1993 and production by 1997.
-
- What Are The Possible Environmental Impacts from U-AVLIS?
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- The United States still has no effective long-term solution to the
- disposal of radioactive waste associated with nuclear power plants.
- The end product of AVLIS' vast subsidy to the nuclear power industry is
- thousands of tons of more radioactive waste, with nowhere to go. The
- problem of nuclear waste disposal is even more acute in foreign nations
- which are to be the primary end-user of AVLIS-produced enriched
- uranium.
-
- According to DOE's recent environmental assessment for the U-AVLIS
- demonstration project, the U-AVLIS facility will annually generate up
- to 40,000 kilograms of solid radioactive waste, 20,000 liters of liquid
- radioactive waste, and 60,000 liters of mixed liquid radioactive and
- non-radioactive hazardous waste. U-AVLIS will *triple* the amount of
- liquid radioactive waste produced at LLNL, and will account for roughly
- one out of three barrels of "mixed" waste to accumulate at LLNL without
- any effective means at disposal. U-AVLIS itself is anticipated to use
- thousands of gallons of hazardous laser dye solutions, and process
- thousands of kilograms of uranium. The maximum capacity of molten
- uranium in U-AVLIS is 600 kilograms, and some 5000 kilograms will be
- stored in the facility at any one time. Transportation of uranium in
- and out of LLNL is conservatively estimated to quadruple during U-AVLIS
- operations.
-
- LLNL is listed on the National Priorities List as a Superfund site
- based on serious groundwater contamination. Throughout its operation,
- LLNL has had a documented record of releasing radioactive and hazardous
- materials into the air, water and soil. The Department of Health
- Services has repeatedly cited LLNL for numerous violations of hazardous
- waste laws. The state of Nevada has threatened to return thousands of
- barrels of waste illegally shipped for storage to the Nevada Test site.
- In 1990, an internal DOE investigation (the "Tiger Team") pinpointed
- numerous failures of management to effectively handle the serious
- hazardous waste problems associated with LLNL operations. U-AVLIS
- presents its own special risks of accidents, including accidental
- spillage of laser dyes, and spontaneous combustion of molten uranium,
- in close proximity to the Livermore population of 56,000 and a greater
- Bay Area population of 5 million.
-
- Proliferation Risks
- -------------------
-
- WSLF believes that the planned export of thousands of pounds of
- enriched uranium will encourage the proliferation not only of risky
- atomic power technology, but nuclear weapons as well. The United
- States, in concert with the AVLIS program, is actively encouraging the
- market for enriched uranium through "safe" atomic power programs
- abroad. AVLIS itself is also subject to copying by other nations,
- where it can be used to develop plutonium or uranium based bombs.
-
- What Environmental Review Has Been Done?
- ----------------------------------------
-
- Almost none. DOE has prepared three brief "environmental
- assessments" under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) for the
- U-AVLIS program. The two earlier assessments are "classified" and not
- available to the public. In May 1991, DOE released a cursory
- assessment for the demonstration phase of the U-AVLIS, concluding that
- the project was without significant environmental impacts. No public
- hearing has ever been held concerning U-AVLIS. DOE's current position
- is that it need not prepare a full environmental impact statement (EIS)
- or conduct a public hearing until it is ready to "deploy U-AVLIS on a
- commercial scale." WSLF demands that DOE prepare a full environmental
- impact statement and hold public hearings on the environmental risks
- associated with U-AVLIS.
-
-
-
-
- [8] Transcript of the original 1942 United States Department of Agriculture
- Film, "Hemp for Victory" extolling some of the many uses of this
- ancient plant and premier world resource:
-
- HEMP FOR VICTORY
- -- 1942 --
- Reprinted from "High Times," October 1989
-
-
- Long ago when these ancient Grecian temples were new, hemp was
- already old in the service of mankind. For thousands of years, even
- then, this plant had been grown for cordage and cloth in China and
- elsewhere in the East. For centuries prior to about 1850 all the ships
- that sailed the western seas were rigged with hempen rope and sails.
- For the sailor, no less than the hangman, hemp was indispensable.
- A 44-gun frigate like our cherished Old Ironsides took over 60 tons
- of hemp for rigging, including an anchor cable 25 inches in
- circumference. The Conestoga wagons and prairie schooners of pioneer
- days were covered with hemp canvas. Indeed the very word canvas comes
- from the Arabic word for hemp. In those days hemp was an important
- crop in Kentucky and Missouri. Then came cheaper imported fibers for
- cordage, like jute, sisal and Manila hemp, and the culture of hemp in
- America declined.
- But now with Philippine and East Indian sources of hemp in the hands
- of the Japanese, and shipment of jute from India curtailed, American
- hemp must meet the needs of our Army and Navy as well as of our
- Industry. In 1942, patriotic farmers at the government's request
- planted 36,000 acres of seed hemp, an increase of several thousand
- percent. The goal for 1943 is 50,000 acres of seed hemp.
- In Kentucky much of the seed hemp acreage is on river bottom land
- such as this. Some of these fields are inaccessible except by boat.
- Thus plans are afoot for a great expansion of a hemp industry as a part
- of the war program. This film is designed to tell farmers how to
- handle this ancient crop now little known outside Kentucky and
- Wisconsin.
- This is hemp seed. Be careful how you use it. For to grow hemp
- legally you must have a federal registration and tax stamp. This is
- provided for in your contract. Ask your county agent about it. Don't
- forget.
- Hemp demands a rich, well-drained soil such as is found here in the
- Blue Grass region of Kentucky or in central Wisconsin. It must be
- loose and rich in organic matter. Poor soils won't do. Soil that will
- grow good corn will usually grow hemp.
- Hemp is not hard on the soil. In Kentucky it has been grown for
- several years on the same ground, though this practice is not
- recommended. A dense and shady crop, hemp tends to choke out weeds.
- Here's a Canada thistle that couldn't stand the competition, dead as a
- dodo. Thus hemp leaves the ground in good condition for the following
- crop.
- For fiber, hemp should be sewn closely, the closer the rows, the
- better. These rows are spaced about four inches. This hemp has been
- broadcast. Either way it should be sewn thick enough to grow a slender
- stalk. Here's an ideal stand: the right height to be harvested
- easily, thick enough to grow slender stalks that are easy to cut and
- process.
- Stalks like these here on the left wield the most fiber and the best.
- Those on the right are too coarse and woody. For seed, hemp is planted
- in hills like corn. Sometimes by hand. Hemp is a dioecious plant.
- The female flower is inconspicuous. But the male flower is easily
- spotted. In seed production after the pollen has been shed, these male
- plants are cut out. These are the seeds on a female plant.
- Hemp for fiber is ready to harvest when the pollen is shedding and
- the leaves are falling. In Kentucky, hemp harvest comes in August.
- Here the old standby has been the self-rake reaper, which has been used
- for a generation or more.
- Hemp grows so luxuriantly in Kentucky that harvesting is sometimes
- difficult, which may account for the popularity of the self-rake with
- its lateral stroke. A modified rice binder has been used to some
- extent. This machine works well on average hemp. Recently, the
- improved hemp harvester, used for many years in Wisconsin, has been
- introduced in Kentucky. This machine spreads the hemp in a continuous
- swath. It is a far cry from this fast and efficient modern harvester,
- that doesn't stall in the heaviest hemp.
- In Kentucky, hand cutting is practicing in opening fields for the
- machine. In Kentucky, hemp is shucked as soon as safe, after cutting,
- to be spread out for retting later in the fall.
- In Wisconsin, hemp is harvested in September. Here the hemp
- harvester with automatic spreader is standard equipment. Note how
- smoothly the rotating apron lays the swaths preparatory to retting.
- Here it is a common and essential practice to leave headlands around
- hemp fields. These strips may be planted with other crops, preferably
- small grain. Thus the harvester has room to make its first round
- without preparatory hand cutting. The other machine is running over
- corn stubble. When the cutter bar is much shorter than the hemp is
- tall, overlapping occurs. Not so good for retting. The standard cut
- is eight to nine feet.
- The length of time hemp is left on the ground to ret depends on the
- weather. The swaths must be turned to get a uniform ret. When the
- woody core breaks away readily like this, the hemp is about ready to
- pick up and bind into bundles. Well-retted hemp is light to dark grey.
- The fiber tends to pull away from the stalks. The presence of stalks
- in the bough-string stage indicates that retting is well underway.
- When hemp is short or tangled or when the ground is too wet for
- machines, it's bound by hand. A wooden bucket is used. Twine will do
- for tying, but the hemp itself makes a good band.
- When conditions are favorable, the pickup binder is commonly used.
- The swaths should lie smooth and even with the stalks parallel. The
- picker won't work well in tangled hemp. After binding, hemp is shucked
- as soon as possible to stop further retting. In 1942, 14,000 acres of
- fiber hemp were harvested in the United States. The goal for the old
- standby cordage fiber, is staging a strong comeback.
- This is Kentucky hemp going into the dryer over mill at Versailles.
- In the old days braking was done by hand. One of the hardest jobs
- known to man. Now the power braker makes quick work of it.
- Spinning American hemp into rope yarn or twine in the old Kentucky
- river mill at Frankfort, Kentucky. Another pioneer plant that has been
- making cordage for more than a century. All such plants will presently
- be turning out products spun from American-grown hemp: twine of
- various kinds for tying and upholster's work; rope for marine rigging
- and towing; for hay forks, derricks, and heavy duty tackle; light
- duty firehose; thread for shoes for millions of American soldiers;
- and parachute webbing for our paratroopers.
- As for the United States Navy, every battleship requires 34,000 feet
- of rope. Here in the Boston Navy Yard, where cables for frigates were
- made long ago, crews are now working night and day making cordage for
- the fleet. In the old days rope yarn was spun by hand. The rope yarn
- feeds through holes in an iron plate. This is Manila hemp from the
- Navy's rapidly dwindling reserves. When it is gone, American hemp
- will go on duty again: hemp for mooring ships; hemp for tow lines;
- hemp for tackle and gear; hemp for countless naval uses both on ship
- and shore. Just as in the days when Old Ironsides sailed the seas
- victorious with her hempen shrouds and hempen sails. Hemp for victory.
-
-
-
-
- [9] Introduction from "Marijuana: Medical Papers," Tod H. Mikuriya, M.D.,
- Medi-Comp Press, 1973, pp. xiii-xxvii, describing some of the recent
- history of western medical explorations into the salutory medicinal
- benefits of hemp drugs--a history that is almost completely unknown to
- people at the end of the 20th century, but, throughout the majority of
- the 19th century, was commonly known and experienced by much of the
- population:
-
- Introduction
-
- Medicine in the Western World has forgotten almost all it once knew
- about therapeutic properties of marijuana, or cannabis.
- Analgesia, anticonvulsant action, appetite stimulation, ataraxia,
- antibiotic properties and low toxicity were described throughout
- medical literature, beginning in 1839, when O'Shaughnessy introduced
- cannabis into the Western pharmacopoeia.
- As these findings were reported throughout Western medicine, cannabis
- attained wide use. Cannabis therapy was described in most
- pharmacopoeial texts as a treatment for a variety of disease
- conditions.
- During the second half of the 1800s and in the present century,
- medical researchers in some measure corroborated the early reports of
- the therapeutic potential of cannabis. In addition, much laboratory
- research has been concerned with bioassay, determination of the mode of
- action, and attempts to solve the problems of insolubility in water and
- variability of strength among different cannabis specimens.
- "Recreational" smoking of cannabis in the twentieth century and the
- resultant restrictive federal legislation have functionally ended all
- medical uses of marijuana.
- In light of such assets as minimal toxicity, no buildup of tolerance,
- no physical dependence, and minimal autonomic disturbance, immediate
- major clinical reinvestigation of cannabis preparations is indicated in
- the management of pain, chronic neurologic diseases, convulsive
- disorders, migraine headache, anorexia, mental illness, and bacterial
- infections.
- Recently declassified secret U.S. Defense Department studies
- reconfirm marijuana's congeners to have therapeutic utility.
- Cannabis indica, Cannabis sativa, Cannabis americana, Indian hemp and
- marijuana (or marihuana) all refer to the same plant. Cannabis is used
- throughout the world for diverse purposes and has a long history
- characterized by usefulness, euphoria or evil--depending on one's point
- of view. To the agriculturist cannabis is a fiber crop; to the
- physician of a century ago it was a valuable medicine; to the
- physician of today it is an enigma; to the user, a euphoriant; to the
- police, a menace; to the traffickers, a source of profitable danger;
- to the convict or parolee and his family, a source of sorrow.
- This book is concerned primarily with the medicinal aspects of
- cannabis.
-
- The Chinese emperor Shen-nung is reported to have taught his people
- to grow hemp for fiber in the twenty-eighth century B.C. A text from
- the period 1500-1200 B.C. documents a knowledge of the plant in China-
- -but not for use as fiber. In 200 A.D., the use of cannabis as an
- analgesic was described by the physician Hoa-tho.[44]
- In India the use of hemp preparations as a remedy was described
- before 1000 B.C. In Persia, cannabis was known several centuries
- before Christ. In Assyria, about 650 B.C., its intoxicating properties
- were noted.[44]
- Except for Herodotus' report that the Scythians used the smoke from
- burning hemp seeds for intoxication, the ancient Greeks seemed to be
- unaware of the psychoactive properties of cannabis. Dioscorides in the
- first century A.D. rendered an accurate morphologic description of the
- plant, but made no note of intoxicating properties.[10]
- In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, Arabic writers described
- the social use of cannabis and resultant cruel but unsuccessful
- attempts to suppress its non-medical use.[44]
- Although Galen described the use of the seeds for creating warmth, he
- did not describe the intoxicating qualities of hemp. Of interest is
- the paucity of references to hemp's intoxicating properties in the lay
- and medical literature of Europe before the 1800s.[44]
- The therapeutic use of cannabis was introduced into Western medicine
- in 1839, in a forty-page article by W. B. O'Shaughnessy, a thirty-
- year-old physician serving with the British in India.[27] His
- discussion of the history of the use of cannabis products in the East
- reveals an awareness that these drugs had not only been used in
- medicine for therapeutic purposes, but had also been used for
- recreational and religious purposes.
- O'Shaughnessy is not primarily known for his discovery of hemp drugs,
- but rather for his basic studies on intravenous electrolyte therapy in
- 1831, and his introduction of the telegraph into India in the
- 1850s.[26]
- After studying the literature on cannabis and conferring with
- contemporary Hindu and Mohammedan scholars O'Shaughnessy tested the
- effects of various hemp preparations on animals, before attempting to
- use them to treat humans. Satisfied that the drug was reasonably safe,
- he administered preparations of cannabis extract to patients, and
- discovered that it had analgesic and sedative properties.
- O'Shaughnessy successfully relieved the pain of rheumatism and stilled
- the convulsions of an infant with this strange new drug. His most
- spectacular success came, however, when he quelled the wrenching muscle
- spasms of tetanus and rabies with the fragrant resin. Psychic effects
- resembling a curious delirium, when an overdose was given, were treated
- with strong purgatives, emetics with a blister to the nape of the neck,
- and leeches on the temples.[27]
- The use of cannabis derivatives for medicinal purposes spread rapidly
- throughout Western medicine, as is evidenced in the report of the
- Committee on Cannabis Indica of the Ohio State Medical Society,
- published in 1860. In that report physicians told of success in
- treating stomach pain, childbirth psychosis, chronic cough, and
- gonorrhea with hemp products.[25] A Dr. Fronmueller, of Fuerth, Ohio,
- summarized his experiences with the drug as follows:
-
- I have used hemp many hundred times to relieve local pains of an
- inflammatory as well as neuralgic nature, and judging from these
- experiments, I have to assign to the Indian hemp a place among
- the so-called hypnotic medicines next to opium; its effects are
- less intense, and the secretions are not so much suppressed by
- it. Digestion is not disturbed; the appetite rather increased;
- sickness of the stomach seldom induced; congestion never. Hemp
- may consequently be employed in inflammatory conditions. It
- disturbs the expectoration far less than opium; the nervous
- system is also not so much affected. The whole effect of hemp
- being less violent, and producing a more natural sleep, without
- interfering with the actions of the internal organs, it is
- certainly often preferable to opium, although it is not equal to
- that drug in strength and reliability. An alternating course of
- opium and Indian hemp seems particularly adapted to those cases
- where opium alone fails in producing the desired effect.[25]
-
- Because cannabis did not lead to physical dependence, it was found to
- be superior to the opiates for a number of therapeutic purposes.
- Birch, in 1889, reported success in treating opiate and chloral
- addiction with cannabis,[5] and Mattison in 1891 recommended its use to
- the young physician, comparing it favorably with the opiates. He
- quoted his colleague Suckling:
-
- With a wish for speedy effect, it is so easy to use that
- modern mischief-maker, hypodermic morphia, that they [young
- physicians] are prone to forget remote results of incautious
- opiate giving.
- Would that the wisdom which has come to their professional
- fathers through, it may be, a hapless experience, might serve
- them to steer clear of narcotic shoals on which many a patient
- has gone awreck.
- Indian hemp is not here lauded as a specific. It will, at
- times, fail. So do other drugs. But the many cases in which it
- acts well, entitle it to a large and lasting confidence.
- My experience warrants this statement: cannabis indica is,
- often, a safe and successful anodyne and hypnotic.[23]
-
- In their study of the medical applications of cannabis, physicians of
- the nineteenth century repeatedly encountered a number of difficulties.
- Recognizing the therapeutic potential of the drug, many experimenters
- sought ways of overcoming these drawbacks to its use in medicine, in
- particular the following:
- Cannabis products are insoluble in water.
- The onset of the effects of medicinal preparations of cannabis takes
- an hour or so; its action is therefore slower than that of many other
- drugs.
- Different batches of cannabis derivatives vary greatly in strength;
- moreover, the common procedure for standardization of cannabis samples,
- by administration to test animals, is subject to error owing to
- variability of reactions among the animals.
- There is wide variation among humans in their individual responses to
- cannabis.
- Despite these problems regarding the uncertainty of potency and
- dosage and the difficulties in mode of administration, cannabis has
- several important advantages over other substances used as analgesics,
- sedatives, and hypnotics:
- The prolonged use of cannabis does not lead to the development of
- physical dependence. [11, 13, 14, 24, 39, 44]
- There is minimal development of tolerance to cannabis products.
- (Loewe notes a slight "beginner's habituation" in dogs, during the
- first few trials with the drug, as the only noticeable tolerance
- effect.[20]) [11, 13, 14, 24, 44]
- Cannabis products have exceedingly low toxicity.[9, 21, 22, 24] (The
- oral dose required to kill a mouse has been found to be about 40,000
- times the dose required to produce typical symptoms of intoxication in
- man.)[21]
- Cannabis produces no disturbance of vegetative functioning, whereas
- the opiates inhibit the gastrointestinal tract, the flow of bile and
- the cough reflex.[1, 2, 24, 44, 46]
- Besides investigating the physical effects of medicinal preparations
- of cannabis, nineteenth-century physicians observed the psychic effects
- of the drug in its therapeutic applications.[4, 27, 33] They found
- that cannabis first mildly stimulates, and then sedates the higher
- centers of the brain. Hare suggested in 1887 a possible mechanism of
- cannabis' analgesic properties:
-
- During the time that this remarkable drug is relieving pain a
- very curious psychical condition manifests itself; namely, that
- the diminution of the pain seems to be due to its fading away in
- the distance, so that the pain becomes less and less, just as the
- pain in a delicate ear would grow less and less as a beaten drum
- was carried farther and farther out of the range of hearing.
- This condition is probably associated with the other well-
- known symptom produced by the drug; namely, the prolongation of
- time.[16]
-
- Reynolds, in 1890,[33] summed up thirty years of his clinical
- experience using cannabis, finding it useful as a nocturnal sedative in
- senile insomnia, and valuable in treating dysmenorrhea, neuralgias
- including tic douloureux and tabetic symptoms, migraine headache and
- certain epileptoid or choreoid muscle spasms. He felt it to be of
- uncertain benefit in asthma, alcoholic delirium and depressions.
- Reynolds thought cannabis to be of no value in joint pains that were
- aggravated by motion and in cases of true chronic epilepsy.
- Reynolds stressed the necessity of titrating the dose of each
- patient, increasing gradually every third or fourth day, to avoid
- "toxic" effects:
-
- The dose should be given in minimum quantity, repeated in not
- less than four or six hours, and gradually increased by one drop
- every third or fourth day, until either relief is obtained, or
- the drug is proved, in such case, to be useless. With these
- precautions I have never met with any toxic effects, and have
- rarely failed to find, after a comparatively short time, either
- the value or the uselessness of the drug.[33]
-
- Concerning migraine headache, Osler stated in his text: Cannabis
- indica is probably the most satisfactory remedy.[11, 28]
-
-
- In his definitive survey of the literature and report of his own
- studies, deceptively titled "Marihuana, America's New Drug Problem,"
- Walton notes that cannabis was widely used during the latter half of
- the nineteenth century, and particularly before new drugs were
- developed:
-
- This popularity of the hemp drugs can be attributed partly to
- the fact that they were introduced before the synthetic hypnotics
- and analgesics. Chloral hydrate was not introduced until 1869
- and was followed in the next thirty years by paraldehyde,
- sulfonal and the barbitals. Antipyrine and acetanilide, the
- first of their particular group of analgesics, were introduced
- about 1884. For general sedative and analgesic purposes, the
- only drugs commonly used at this time were the morphine
- derivatives and their disadvantages were very well known. In
- fact, the most attractive feature of the hemp narcotics was
- probably the fact that they did not exhibit certain of the
- notorious disadvantages of the opiates. The hemp narcotics do
- not constipate at all, they more often increase than decrease
- appetite, they do not particularly depress the respiratory center
- even in large doses, they rarely or never cause pruritis or
- cutaneous eruptions and, most important, the liability of
- developing addiction is very much less than with opiates.[44]
-
- The use of cannabis in American medicine was seriously affected by
- the increased use of opiates in the latter half of the nineteenth
- century. With the introduction of the hypodermic syringe into American
- medicine from England in 1856 by Barker and Ruppaner, the use of the
- faster acting, water-soluble opiate drugs rapidly increased. The Civil
- War helped to spread the use of opiates in this country; the injected
- drugs were administered widely--and often indiscriminately--to relieve
- the pain of maimed soldiers returning from combat. (Opiate addiction
- was once called the "army disease."[41]) As the use of injected
- opiates increased, cannabis declined in popularity.
- Cannabis preparations were still widely available in legend and
- over-the-counter forms in the 1930s. Crump (Chairman, Investigating
- Committee, American Medical Association) in 1931 mentioned the
- proprietaries "Piso's Cure," "One Day Cough Cure" and "Neurosine" as
- containing cannabis.[44] In 1937 Sasman listed twenty-eight
- pharmaceuticals containing cannabis.[36] Cannabis was still recognized
- as a medicinal agent in that year, when the committee on legislative
- activities of the American Medical Association concluded as follows:
-
- . . . there is positively no evidence to indicate the abuse of
- cannabis as a medicinal agent or to show that its medicinal use
- is leading to the development of cannabis addiction. Cannabis at
- the present time is slightly used for medicinal purposes, but it
- would seem worthwhile to maintain its status as a medicinal agent
- for such purposes as it now has. There is a possibility that a
- re-study of the drug by modern means may show other advantages to
- be derived from its medicinal use.[32]
-
- Meanwhile, in Mexico, the poor were smoking marijuana to relax and to
- endure heat and fatigue. (Originally marijuana was the Mexican slang
- word for the smoking preparation of dried leaves and flowering tops of
- the Cannabis sativa plant--the indigenous variety of the hemp plant.)
- The recreational smoking of marijuana may have started in this
- country in New Orleans in about 1910, and continued on a small scale
- there until 1926, when a newspaper ran a six-part series on the use of
- the drug.[44] The fad subsequently spread up the Mississippi and
- throughout the United States, faster than local and state laws could be
- passed to discourage it. The use of "tea" or "muggles" blossomed into
- a minor "psychedelic revolution" of the 1920s. Narcotics officers
- encouraged the enactment of local prohibitory laws and eventually
- succeeded in bringing about restrictive Federal legislation. In 1937
- Congress passed the Marihuana Tax Act, the finale to a series of
- prohibitory acts in the individual states. Under the new laws, the
- already dwindling use of cannabis as a therapeutic substance in
- medicine was brought to a virtual halt. In 1941, cannabis was dropped
- from the "National Formulary and Pharmacopoeia."
- Around the time of the passage of the Marihuana Tax Act, Walton
- postulated sites of action for cannabis drugs. Cortical areas, he
- found, are affected at low dosage, while at high dosage there seems to
- be a depressant effect on the thalamo-cortical pathways. Hyperemia of
- the brain appears to be a local phenomenon, unless centers controlling
- vasodilation might be located in the thalamo-cortical region. Similar
- possible mechanisms are suggested for the phenomenon of mild
- hypoglycemia, usual hunger and thirst and occasional lacrimation and
- nausea.[44]
- Despite restrictive legislation, a few medical researchers have had
- the opportunity to continue the investigation of the therapeutic
- applications of cannabis in recent years. In his study of the medical
- applications of cannabis for Mayor La Guardia's committee, Dr. Samuel
- Allentuck reported, among other findings, favorable results in treating
- withdrawal of opiate addicts with tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), a
- powerful purified product of the hemp plant.[1, 24]
- An article in 1949, buried in a journal of chemical abstracts,
- reported that a substance related to THC controlled epileptic seizures
- in a group of children more effectively than diphenylhydantoin
- (Dilantin(R)), a most commonly prescribed anticonvulsant.[9]
- A number of experimenters, believing that cannabis products might be
- of value in psychiatry, have investigated the applications of various
- forms of them in the treatment of mental disorders. Cannabis had been
- used in the nineteenth century to treat mental illness.[19, 25, 45, 46]
- However, aside from some rather equivocal clinical studies, primarily
- in the treatment of depression,[29, 30, 35, 39] and another report of
- success in treating withdrawal from alcohol and opiate addiction,[42]
- no significant contemporary psychiatric studies involving cannabis
- therapy have been reported to date.
- Many current "authoritative" publications unequivocally state that
- there is no legitimate medical use for marijuana. As compared with the
- 1800s, this century has seen very little medical research on the array
- of some twenty chemicals that are found in the hemp plant.[37]
- Today's readers may tend to be skeptical about a report of a cure for
- gonorrhea published over a century ago.[19, 25] Such findings may bear
- reinvestigation, however, in the light of a report from Czechoslovakia
- in 1960 that cannabidiolic acid, a product of the unripe hemp plant,
- has bacteriocidal properties.[7] Some of the therapeutic applications
- reported in the early medical papers have been corroborated by later
- investigators, but for the most part the therapeutic aspects of
- cannabis remain to be re-explored under modern clinical conditions.
- In the past twenty years, clinical and basic research on cannabis
- have dwindled to practically nothing. The record of tax stamps issued
- by the Federal Bureau of Narcotics for cannabis research, as compared
- with those for research on narcotic drugs, tells the story of the
- twenty-year "drought" in the investigation of cannabis products:[43]
-
- Users for Purposes of Research,
- Instruction, or Analysis
-
- Year Narcotic Drugs Marijuana
-
- 1938 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 5
- 1941 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 ..
- 1943 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 43
- 1946 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323 ..
- 1948 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 87
- 1951 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1078 ..
- 1953 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 18
- 1956 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284 ..
- 1958 . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 6
- 1961 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344 ..
- 1965 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 16
-
- The rising non-medical use of marijuana both floated and was buoyed
- by the "psychedelic revolution" of the mid 1960s. The panicked
- reaction included a renewed scientific interest in the drug.
- Eleven studies funded by the National Institute of Mental Health
- 1967 concerning cannabis were either specialized animal experiments,
- part of an observational sociologic study of a number of drugs, or
- explorations of chemical detection methods. No human studies were
- included.
- Of the fifty-six projects funded during the next fiscal years 1968-69
- only two used humans.[52] The next year was somewhat less cautious
- with eight out of thirty-five projects devoted to clinical studies.[53]
- Some of the preliminary results are in from these studies. Much is
- still unpublished.
- According to Harris, the toxicity factor of marijuana derivatives is
- over two hundred and that chronic smoking of marijuana is less harmful
- to the lungs than tobacco cigarettes.[49]
- Domino described the cross tolerance of THC and alcohol in
- pigeons[47] corroborating Jones' clinical observations.[50, 51] These
- rediscoveries demand therapeutic trial.
-
- In August 1971 certain secret Defense Department documents were
- declassified. While at NIMH as a consulting research psychiatrist in
- 1967 I had become aware of the existence of clandestine research at
- Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland.
- From 1954-59 Dr. Van M. Sim was in charge of the project. He
- reported to "Medical World News:" "Marijuana . . . is probably the
- most potent anti-epileptic known to medicine today."[49]
- Dr. Harold F. Hardman, then with the Defense contracting group at the
- University of Michigan's Department of Pharmacology reported effects of
- profound hypothermia and felt marijuana derivatives to be potentially
- quite useful in brain and traumatic surgery.[48]
- The principal focus was, however, on the possible use of THC homologs
- as incapacitating agents. Besides the aforementioned government agency
- and university, the private sector was represented by the Arthur D.
- Little Company of Cambridge, Massachusetts.[55]
- Recently in the course of a study of effects on driving, it was
- incidentally discovered that cannabis lowers intraocular pressure, thus
- being possibly useful in the treatment of glaucoma.[56]
- Thus, a helix is made. Modern technologic methods confirm
- O'Shaughnessy's observations 130 years ago. After swinging away from
- the knowledge of marijuana's properties through the worship of new
- synthetics, an unrelated rise of marijuana use socially, illegalization
- and removal from availability for clinical use, medicine rediscovers
- marijuana.
- The flame of knowledge is at a low ebb, kept alive by isolated
- scientists and clinicians; it is now being rekindled by these recent
- circumscribed revelations.
-
- Unless existing restrictive state and federal laws governing
- marijuana are changed, there will be no future for either modern
- scientific investigation or controlled clinical trial by present-day
- methods.
-
- The tide is turning. The Federal Bureau of Narcotic and Dangerous
- Drugs, National Institute of Mental Health and The Food and Drug
- Administration Joint Committee recently authorized human therapeutic
- trial of cannabis products. We may now look forward to reinvestigation
- of the numerous possible medical uses of marijuana.[54]
- A concerted effort is indicated for full-scale investigations where
- knowledge is lacking. Acute and chronic effects of cannabis should be
- restudied by modern methods. Metabolic pathways of action and
- detoxification need exploration by the pharmaceutical means of today.
- Chronic toxicity studies must be undertaken to examine possible long-
- term effects of cannabis use. (Cunningham in 1893 found no gross
- central nervous system changes with chronic administration of hemp
- drugs to primates over several months.[8])
- Medical science must again confront the problems of cannabis'
- insolubility in water and its variable strength. Since human and
- animal responses vary a great deal, individual doses must be titrated.
- The popular "double blind" type of study methods will require revision.
- The reporting of personal drug experience was once acceptable to the
- scientific community.[15, 22, 25, 29, 34, 39, 44] Humans who are drug
- "sophisticates" will again become indispensable to psychoactive drug
- research, as wine tasters are to the wine industry, for only humans can
- verbally report the subtle and complex effects of these substances.
- Government agencies having stimulated little significant clinical
- research in this field, the pharmaceutical industry should take the
- initiative in starting basic research and clinical studies into the
- purified congeners of cannabis for their chemical properties,
- pharmacologic qualities and therapeutic applications.
-
- "Possible Therapeutic Applications of
- Tetrahydrocannabinols and Like Products"
-
- Analgesic-hypnotic [16, 18, 19, 23, 25, 27,33, 45]
- Appetite stimulant [18, 25, 27]
- Antiepileptic-antispasmodic [9, 18, 27, 33, 40, 45, 49]
- Prophylactic and treatment of the neuralgias, including migraine
- and tic douloureux [3, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23, 25, 28, 31, 33, 38, 40, 45]
- Antidepressant-tranquilizer [6, 16, 18, 19, 23, 25, 31, 33, 40, 45]
- Antiasthmatic [18, 25, 45]
- Oxytocic [25, 45]
- Antitussive [3, 16, 25, 38, 45]
- Topical anesthetic [8]
- Withdrawal agent for opiate and alcohol addiction [5, 23, 24, 38,
- 42, 45, 47, 50, 51]
- Childbirth analgesic [12]
- Antibiotic [7]
- Intraocular hypotensive [56]
- Hypothermogenic [48]
-
- Medicine, being an empiric art, has not hesitated in the past to
- utilize a substance first used for recreational purposes, (Morton
- "discovered" ether for anesthetic purposes after observing medical
- students at "ether frolics" in 1846. [Howard W. Haggard: "Devils,
- Drugs and Doctors," Harper and Row, New York, 1929, p. 99.]) in the
- pursuit of the more noble purposes of healing, relieving pain and
- teaching us more of the workings of the human mind and body. The
- active constituents of cannabis appear to have remarkably low acute and
- chronic toxicity factors and might be quite useful in the management of
- many chronic disease conditions. More reasonable laws and regulations
- controlling psychoactive drug research are required to permit
- significant medical inquiry to begin so that we can fill the large gaps
- in our knowledge of cannabis.
-
- REFERENCES
- 1. Adams, Koger: "Marihuana," "Bulletin of the New York Academy of
- Medicine," 18:705-29, Nov. 1942.
- 2. Ames, Frances: "A clinical and metabolic study of acute
- intoxication with cannabis sativa and its role in the model psychoses,"
- "J. of Mental Science," 104:972-99, Oct. 1958.
- 3. Anderson, G. S. D.: "Remarks on the remedial virtues of cannabis
- indica, or Indian hemp," "Boston Med. and Surg. J.," 67:427-30, 1863.
- 4. Bell, John: "On the haschisch or cannabis indica," "Boston Med.
- and Surg. J.," 56:209-16, 229-36, 1857.
- 5. Birch, Edward A.: "The use of Indian hemp in the treatment of
- chronic chloral and chronic opium poisoning," "Lancet," 1:625, 30 Mar.
- 1889.
- 6. Boyd, E. S., and Merritt, D. A.: "Effects of a
- tetrahydrocannabinol derivative on some motor systems in the cat,"
- "Arch. Internat. de Pharmacodynamie et de Therapie," 153:1-12, 1965.
- 7. CIBA Foundation Study Group, "Hashish--Its Chemistry and
- Pharmacology," 1964, pp. 45, 49.
- 8. Cunningham, D. D.: Report by Brigade-Surgeon--Lieut. Col. D. D.
- Cunningham, F.R.S., C.I.E., on the nature of the effects accompanying
- the continued treatment of animals with hemp drugs and with dhatura;
- "from" "Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission," 1893-4, Government
- Central Printing Office, Simla, India, 1894, Vol. 3, pp. 192-96.
- 9. Davis, J. P., and Ramsey, H. H.: "Antiepileptic action of
- marihuana-active substances," "Federat. Proc.," 8:284-85, Mar. 1949.
- 10. Dioscorides, Pedanius: "The Greek Herbal of Dioscorides," Edited
- by Robert T. Gunther, Hafner Publishing Co., New York, 1959, pp. 390-
- 91.
- 11. Eddy, N. B., Halbach, H., Isbell, H., and Seevers, M. H.: "Drug
- dependence: its significance and characteristics. "Psychopharmacology
- Bull.," 3:1-12, July 1966.
- 12. "Effects of alcohol and cannabis during labor," "JAMA," 94:1165,
- 1930.
- 13. Goodman, L. S., and Gilman, A.: "The Pharmacological Basic of
- Therapeutics," 2nd Edition, Macmillan, New York, 1955.
- 14. Goodman, L. S., and Gilman, A.: "The Pharmacological Basis of
- Therapeutics," 3rd Edition, Macmillan, New York, 1965.
- 15. Hamilton, H. C., Lescohier, A. W., and Perkins, R. A.: "The
- physiological activity of cannabis sativa. Comparison of extracts from
- Indian and American-grown drug upon human subjects," "J. Amer. Pharm.
- Assoc.," 2:22-30, 1913.
- 16. Hare, Hobart Amory: "Clinical and physiological notes on the
- action of cannabis indica," "Therap. Gaz.," 11:225-28, 1887.
- 17. Hare, H. A., and Chrystie, W.: "A System of Practical
- Therapeutics," Lee Brothers and Co., Philadelphia, 1892, Vol. 3.
- 18. "Indian Materia Medica," edited by A. K. Nadkarni, Popular Book
- Depot, Bombay, 1954.
- 19. "Lilly's Hand Book of Pharmacy and Therapeutics," Eli Lilly and
- Co., Indianapolis, 1898, p. 32.
- 20. Loewe, S.: "The active principles of cannabis and the
- pharmacology of the cannabinols," "Archiv fur Experim. Pathologie und
- Pharmakologie," 211:175-93, 1950.
- 21. Loewe, S.: "Studies on the pharmacology and acute toxicity of
- compounds with marihuana activity," "J. Pharmacol. and Experim.
- Therap.," 88:154-61, Oct. 1946.
- 22. Marshall, C. R.: "A contribution to the pharmacology of cannabis
- indica," "JAMA," 31:882-91, 15 Oct. 1898.
- 23. Mattison, J. B.: "Cannabis indica as an anodyne and hypnotic,"
- "St. Louis Med. and Surg. J.," 61:265-71, Nov. 1891.
- 24. "Mayor's Committee on Marihuana, The Marihuana Problem in the
- City of New York," Jaques Cattell, Lancaster, Pa., 1944.
- 25. McMeens, R. R.: "Report of the committee on cannabis indica;
- from Transactions of the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the Ohio State
- Medical Society," Follett, Foster and Co., Columbus, Ohio, 1860, pp.
- 75-100.
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- of fluid therapy and the Indian telegraph service." "New Eng. J. of
- Med.," 276:283-84, 2 Feb. 1967.
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- or gunjah," "Trans. Med. and Phy. Soc.," Bengal, 71-102, 1838-40;
- 421-61, 1842.
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- Medicine," 8th Edition, D. Appleton and Co., New York, 1916, p. 1089.
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- in psychiatry: "(1) synhexyl," "J. of Mental Science," 96:176-79,
- 1950.
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- the marihuana homologue synhexyl," "J. Neurol. Neurosurg, Psychiat.,"
- 11:271-79, 1948.
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- 108:2214-15, 1937.
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- cannabis indica," "Lancet," 1:637-38, 22 Mar. 1890.
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- Experimental," L. H. Ringer, New York, 1912.
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- by cannabis indica and psychotherapy," "Guy's Hospital Report,"
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- pp. 379-82.
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- for public release." The National Technical Information Service,
- Department of Commerce, 1971.
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- Intraocular Pressure," "JAMA," Sept. 6, 1971. Vol. 217, no. 10.
-
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________________________
- A STRATEGY TO DEREGULATE AMERICAN HEMP
-
- In 1937, a Special Interest Group Got the Cannabis Industry Banned by
- Attacking "Marijuana" While Concealing the Many Valuable Uses of the Plant.
- Today, a Public Interest Group, BACH, Intends to Deregulate Cannabis by
- Promoting "Hemp" and Showing How Everyone Benefits From This Reform.
-
-
- We start with a natural core constituency: Civil libertarians, Rock-n-
- Roll/Rasta/Jazz music fans, paraphernalia makers and users, medical users,
- sympathetic media and officials, Vietnam vets, entrepreneurs, the art
- community and the "Sixties Generation." We can rapidly win over farmers,
- economists, environmentalists, holistic/natural medicine advocates, the
- unemployed, hunger relief projects, tax reformers and free market/anti-Big
- Government forces and others.
-
- THE FARMING COMMUNITY is our linchpin, linking the Northwest,
- Midwest and South. It is in financial trouble and will be the
- first major beneficiary of hemp commerce.
-
- TEXTILE, FUEL, PAPER INDUSTRIES AND MARKETS, MEDICAL AND
- RECREATIONAL USERS are concentrated in coastal and urbanized
- population centers.
-
- SHIPPING, INVESTORS, COMMODITIES MARKETS AND BANKS link these
- regions, create a role for the Interstate Commerce Commission
- (ICC) in deregulating hemp and add to the financial pressure
- for reform.
-
- We anticipate strong resistance in pharmaceuticals and
- plastics, where entrenched forces stand to lose a share of the
- market when hemp products come into common use.
- But this pressure will soon be offset by the support of hemp
- industry consumers, investors and workers who benefit from new
- spin-off industries.
-
-
- CAMPAIGN SUMMARY
-
- PHASE ONE: ORGANIZATION: Develop and target literature and lobby campaigns,
- alert our consituency, explain the economic and social significance of this
- reform to potential allies and win "celebrity" endorsements. We need to
- demonstrate an interstate supply and demand network to establish the economic
- vitality of hemp commerce, thereby drawing financial and political support
- and setting the stage for ICC intervention against state laws that impede
- trade.
-
- PHASE TWO: PUBLIC RELATIONS: Launch a program of speaking engagements and
- advertisments (PSAs and paid) to redefine the hemp debate, sway the general
- public and create a climate of support based on people's self-interest. Our
- goal is to disassociate hemp from "drugs" and align it with jobs, prosperity
- and traditional American self-sufficiency.
-
- PHASE THREE: DEREGULATION: Introduce non-threatening deregulation
- legislation, support initiatives/referenda, set up test cases to pursue
- legalization through the courts and use business pressure to win ICC action.
-
-
-
- BACH Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp
- P.O. Box 71903, Los Angeles, CA 90071-0093
- 310/288-4152
-
- _____________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- --
- "We are able to inform you that ancient grandfathers, the great stands
- of cedar and redwoods, are in danger of extinction by chainsaws. The
- maple, chief of trees, is dying from the top down, as was prophesied by
- Ganiodaiio, Handsome Lake, in 1799. Great rivers and streams are filled
- with chemicals and filth, and these great veins of life are being used
- as sewers.
- "We were told the female is sacred and carries the gift of life as our
- Mother Earth, the family is the center of our life and that we must build
- our communities with life and respect for one another.
- "We were told the Creator loves children the most, and we can tell the
- state of affairs of the nation by how the children are being treated.
- "When we return to Onondaga, we will begin our Great Midwinter
- ceremonies. We will tie the past year in a bundle and give thanks once
- again for another year on this earth.
- "This was given to us, and we have despoiled and polluted it. If we are
- to survive, dear friends and colleagues, we must clean it up now or suffer
- its consequences.
- . . . But Lyons also remembered turning to Leon Shenandoah, chief of
- the Grand Council of the Six Nations Confederacy. "My chief, he doesn't
- say much, but I asked and he said, `They're not taking it serious enough.
- I don't think they realize what's going to happen to them. What's coming.'
- He would have liked to see less posturing. We have our prophecies. We
- know what is coming down the road.'"
- -- Onondaga Chief Oren Lyons, on the Global Forum he
- helped organize on Environment and Development for
- Survival held in Moscow, January 15 to 19, 1990.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-