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- From: sirkay@aol.com (Sir Kay)
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp
- Subject: Reefer Madness???
- Date: 9 Jun 1994 04:27:08 -0400
- Message-ID: <2t6jos$7iv@search01.news.aol.com>
-
- Subject: Reefer Madness????? pt 2
- Date: 9 Jun 1994 04:30:03 -0400
- Message-ID: <2t6jub$7k2@search01.news.aol.com>
-
- Subject: Reefer Madness??? pt 3
- Date: 9 Jun 1994 04:31:04 -0400
- Message-ID: <2t6k08$7ko@search01.news.aol.com>
-
- Subject: Reffer Madness??? pt 4
- Date: 9 Jun 1994 04:32:03 -0400
- Message-ID: <2t6k23$7l5@search01.news.aol.com>
-
- Essay:
- Reefer Madness?
- By
- Dune Hartsell
-
-
- For thousands of years, Hemp (Cannabis Sativa) has been one of the
- most useful plants known to man. It's strong, stringy fibers make
- durable rope and can be woven into anything from sails to shirts;
- it's pithy centers, or "Hurds," make excellent paper; it's seeds,
- high in protein and oil, have been pressed into lighting or
- lubricating oils and pulped into animal feed; and extracts of it's
- leaves have provided a wide range of medicines and tonics.
- Hemp also has a notable place in American history:
- -Washington and Jefferson grew it.
- -Our first flags were likely made of hemp cloth.
- -The first and second drafts of the Declaration of Independence
- were written on paper made from Dutch Hemp.
- -When the pioneers went west, their wagons were covered with hemp
- canvas (the word "canvas" comes from canabacius , hemp cloth).
- -The first "Levis" sold to prospectors were sturdy hemp coveralls.
- -Abraham Lincoln's wife, Mary Todd, came from the richest hemp
- growing family in Kentucky.
- After the Civil War, however, hemp production in the States
- declined steeply. Without slave labor, hemp became too expensive to
- process. Besides, cotton ginned by machines was cheaper. Still, hemp
- fabric remained the second most common cloth in America.
- The plant's by-products remained popular well into this century.
- Maple Sugar combined with Hashish (a resin from hemp leaves) was sold
- over the counter and in Sears Roebuck catalogs as a harmless candy.
- Hemp rope was a mainstay of the Navy. Two thousand tons of hemp seed
- were sold annually as birdfeed. The pharmaceutical industry used hemp
- extracts in hundreds of potions and vigorously fought attempts to
- restrict hemp production. And virtually all good paints and varnishes
- were made from hemp-seed oil and/or linseed oil.
- In the 1920's and '30s the American public became increasingly
- concerned about drug addiction-----especially to Morphine and a
- "miracle drug" that had been introduced by the Bayer Company in 1898
- under the brand name "Heroin." By the mid-1920's, there were 20,000
- heroin addicts in the U.S. alone.
- Most Americans were unaware that smoking hemp was intoxicating;
- however, until William Randolph Hearst launched a campaign of
- sensational stories that linked "the killer weed" to everything from
- Jazz to "Crazed minorities," and even unspeakable crimes. Hearst's
- papers featured headlines like:
- MARIJUANA MAKES FIENDS OF BOYS IN 30 DAYS:
- HASIESH GOADS USERS TO BLOOD LUST
- and
- NEW DOPE LURE, MARIJUANA, HAS MANY VICTIMS
- In 1930 Hearst was joined in his crusade against hemp by Harry
- J. Anslinger, commissioner of the newly organized Federal Bureau of
- Narcotics (FBN). Hearst often quoted Anslinger in his newspaper
- stories, printing sensational comments like: "If the hideous monster
- Frankenstein came face to face with the monster marijuana he would
- drop dead of fright."
- Not everyone shared their opinion. In 1930, the US government
- formed the Siler Commission to study marijuana smoking by off-duty
- servicemen in Panama. The Commission found no lasting effects and
- recommended that no criminal penalties apply to it's use.
- Nonetheless, Hearst's and Anslinger's anti-hemp campaign had
- results. By 1931, twenty-nine states had prohibited marijuana use for
- nonmedical purposes. In 1937, after two years of secret hearings and
- based largely on Anslinger's testimony, Congress passed the Marijuana
- Tax Act, which essentially outlawed marijuana in America.
- Because Congress was not sure it was constitutional to ban hemp
- outright, it taxed the plant prohibitively instead. Hemp growers had to
- register with the government; sellers and buyers had to fill out cumbersome
- paperwork; and, of course, it was a federal crime not to comply.
- For selling an ounce or less of marijuana to an unregistered
- person, the federal tax was 100 dollars. (To give some sense on how
- prohibitive the tax was, "legitimate" marijuana was selling for $2 a
- pound at the time. In 1994 dollars, the federal tax would be roughly
- 2,000 dollars an ounce.)
- The Marijuana Tax Act effectively destroyed all legitimate
- commercial cultivation of hemp. Limited medical use was permitted,
- but as hemp derivatives became prohibitively expensive for doctors
- and pharmacists, they turned to chemically derived drugs instead. All
- other nonmedical uses, from rope to industrial lubricants, were taxed
- out of existence.
- With most of their markets gone, farmers stopped growing hemp,
- and the legitimate industry disappeared. Ironically, though, hemp
- continued to grow wild all over the country, and its "illegitimate"
- use was little affected by Congress.
- Was a viable hemp industry forced out of existence because it
- was a threat to people's health or because it was a threat to a few
- large businesses that would profit from banning it?
- Here are some facts, hemp was outlawed just as a new technology
- would have made hemp paper far cheaper than wood-pulp paper.
- Traditionally, hemp fiber had to be separated from the stalk by
- hand, and the cost of labor made this method uncompetitive. But in
- 1937, the year that hemp was outlawed, the decoricator machine was
- invented; it could process as much as three tons of hemp an hour and
- produced higher quality fibers with less loss of fiber than
- wood-based pulp. According to some scientists, hemp would have been
- able to undercut competing products overnight. Enthusiastic about the
- new technology, Popular Mechanics predicted that hemp would become
- America's first "billion dollar crop." The magazine pointed out that
- "10,000 acres devoted to hemp will produce as much paper as 40,000
- acres of average [forest] pulp land."
- According to Jack Herer, an expert on the "hemp conspiracy,"
- Hearst, the Du Ponts and other "industrial barons and financiers knew
- that machinery to cut, bale, decoriticate (separate fiber from the
- stalk) and process hemp into paper was becoming available in the mid
- 1930's." (The Emperor Wears No Clothes )
- Hearst, one of the promoters of the anti-hemp hysteria, had a
- vested interest in protecting the pulp industry. Hearst owned
- enormous timber acreage; competition from hemp paper might have
- driven the Hearst paper-manufacturing division out of business and
- cause the value of his acreage to plummet. (ibid)
- Herer says that Hearst was even responsible for popularizing the
- term "marijuana" in American culture. In fact, he suggests,
- popularizing the word was a key strategy of Hearst's efforts: "The
- first step in creating hysteria was to introduce the element of fear
- of the unknown by using a word that no one had ever heard of
- before...'marijuana.'" (ibid)
- The DuPont Company also had an interest in the pulp industry. At
- this time, it was in the process of patenting a new sulfuric acid
- process for producing wood-pulp paper. According to the company's own
- records, wood-pulp products ultimately accounted for more than 80% of all of
- DuPont's railroad car loadings for the next 50 years. (ibid)
- But DuPont had even more reasons to be concerned about hemp. In
- the 1930's, the company was making drastic changes in its business
- strategy. Traditionally a manufacturer of military explosives, DuPont
- realized after the end of World War I that developing peacetime uses
- for artificial fibers and plastics would be more profitable in the
- long run. So it began pouring millions of dollars into research,
- Which resulted in the development of such synthetic fibers as rayon
- and nylon.
- -Two years before the prohibitive hemp tax, DuPont developed a new
- synthetic fiber, nylon, which was an ideal substitute for hemp rope.
- -The year after the hemp tax, DuPont was able to bring another
- "miracle" synthetic fabric onto the market, rayon. Rayon, which
- became widely used for clothing, was a direct competitor to hemp
- cloth.
- -"Congress and the Treasury Department were assured, through secret
- testimony given by DuPont, that Hemp-seed oil could be replaced with
- synthetic petrochemical oils made principally by DuPont." These oils
- were used in paints and other products.(ibid)
- The millions spent on these products, as well as the hundreds of
- millions in expected profits from them, could have been wiped out if
- the newly affordable hemp products were allowed on the market. So,
- according to Herer, DuPont worked with Hearst to eliminate hemp.
- DuPont's point man was none other than Harry Anslinger, the
- commissioner of the FBN. Anslinger was appointed to the FBN by
- Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, who was also chairman of the Mellon
- Bank, DuPont's chief financial backer. But Anslinger's relationship
- to Mellon wasn't just political; he was also married to Mellon's
- niece.
- Anslinger apparently used his political clout to sway
- congressional opinion on the hemp tax. According to Herer, the
- American Medical Association (AMA) tried to argue for the medical
- benefits of hemp. But after the AMA officials testified to Congress,
- "they were quickly denounced by Anslinger and the entire
- congressional committee, and curtly excused."
- Five years after the hemp tax was imposed, when Japanese seizure
- of Philippine hemp caused a wartime shortage of rope, the government
- reversed itself. Overnight, the U.S. government urged hemp
- cultivation once again and created a stirring movie called "Hemp for
- Victory" then, just as quickly, it recriminalized hemp after the
- shortage had passed.
- While U.S. hemp was temporarily legal, however, it saved the
- life of a young pilot named George Bush, who was forced to bail out
- of his burning airplane after a battle over the Pacific. At the time
- he didn't know that:
- -Parts of his aircraft engine were lubricated with hemp-seed oil.
- -100% of his life-saving parachute webbing was made from U.S. grown
- hemp.
- -Virtually all of the rigging and lines of the ship that rescued
- him were made of hemp.
- -The flightsuit on his back was a rubberized hemp-cloth.
- -The fire hoses on the ship were woven from hemp
- Ironically, President Bush consistently opposed decriminalizing hemp
- grown in the United States.
- Does the hemp conspiracy continue? in March 1992, Robert Bonner,
- the chief of the Drug Enforcement Agency, effectively rejected a
- petition to permit doctors to prescribe marijuana for patients as
- medication for chronic pain. Bonner said: "Beyond doubt the claims
- that marijuana is medicine are false, dangerous and cruel." But,
- according to a federal administrative law judge, Francis Young, "The
- record clearly shows that marijuana has been accepted as capable of
- relieving the distress of great numbers of very ill people and doing
- so with safety under medical supervision." ( The New York Times)
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