1230 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
1230 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
![]() |
COULD ONE PLANT SAVE THE EARTH?
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By Howard Anshell
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What if you could wave a magic wand and come up with a single plant that
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could help save the rain forests, power our cars cheaply, reduce pollution
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drastically, and preserve the precious knowledge that is crumbling away in
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libraries throughout the world?
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Sounds far-fetched, doesn't it?
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What if that very same plant could help ease the suffering of cancer
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patients, and actually prevent certain kinds of blindness? What if it could
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even feed the world's starving peoples more efficiently than any current food
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source, and clothe them in materials that would last far longer than what they
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now wear?
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If this all sounds like a fairy tale to you, let me tell you right now that
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no magic wand is necessary. A plant that can do all these things, and more,
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exists right now and grows in virtually every country of the world. That plant
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is Hemp -- Cannabis, known in the U.S. primarily as the intoxicant Marijuana.
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Most people are aware that, in our passion for paper goods, we have cut down
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too many trees already. Terrible damage has been done to the earth's fragile
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environment, particularly the vital rain forests of the world. A great deal
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of this destruction is caused by the world's ever-growing need for paper
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products. Not only are trees -- which supply a great deal of the oxygen we
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|
breathe -- being chopped down, but it takes tons of toxic chemicals to turn
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the pulp of these trees into paper.
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Ironically, the paper we have so diligently plundered our planet for is
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basically temporary. It is disintegrating so rapidly that libraries and
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universities all over the world are warning of the consequences. What is
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needed, then, is a source of pulp fiber that is cheaper, less polluting, and
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more durable than wood. Hemp is that fiber, and it's annually renewable.
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As a matter of fact, hemp was the source of much of the world's paper until
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this century. Most people don't know it, but the original draft of the
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Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper. Later, it was copied
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onto parchment for the final draft, but the hemp draft still exists more than
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200 years later. Many books even older than that, printed on hemp paper, are
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still in existence today, whereas wood paper dissolves in less than a single
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century.
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But what of the cost? Is hemp cheaper to produce than wood paper? An
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acre of hemp can produce as much pulp as four acres of trees. Furthermore,
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the growing of hemp does not deplete the soil in the same manner as trees.
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Hemp can be grown annually, whereas trees take decades to replace. And hemp
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requires only one fifth of the chemicals to turn the same amount of pulp into
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|
paper. Thus, much of our irreplaceable rain forests could be left standing.
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|
The hemp plant's own natural production of oxygen, and the fact that it grows
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|
easily in many adverse climates, would help to reverse global warming. The
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|
oil extracted from hemp seeds can also be used to replace potentially
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dangerous linseed oil as a base for paint. Hemp could help to alleviate the
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"Greenhouse Effect" and cut water pollution. Hemp is also an extremely
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efficient plant to use for biomass instead of corn, the most popular source
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|||
|
of biomass today; it can yield as much as eight times the methanol. In our
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|
search for cleaner fuels, methanol has been the most promising, but it
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currently costs more than gasoline. If hemp methanol could cut costs by that
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much, it would make the cleaner fuel cheaper so more people would use it. Hemp
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could help reduce auto emissions.
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Furthermore, hemp fiber can be used to make clothing. As with paper, hemp
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was, until this century, one of the primary sources of cloth, from the coarsest
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|||
|
canvas (which was named after Cannabis) to the finest silk-like garments.
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There are still a few countries in the world which use hemp fiber for clothes;
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its durability is over 20 times greater than that of cotton.
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|
Perhaps even more astonishing is the seed of the Cannabis plant. It is a
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|
more efficient source of protein than the soybean. Mass production of hemp
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|
seeds alone could do a lot toward easing the tragedy of hunger. Hemp seeds
|
|||
|
can be made into a nutritious porridge, brewed into a tea, sprouted, or even
|
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|
used for animal feed. Hemp could help feed and clothe the world's starving
|
|||
|
children.
|
|||
|
Since the hemp plant is a weed which easily grows where most other plants,
|
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especially food crops, wither, it is an ideal plant to use in efforts to
|
|||
|
refoliate arid land and to retain topsoil. Hemp can help fight drought.
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|||
|
If you're an environmentalist, or just care about solving the world's
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|
ecological problems, you should support efforts to legalize cannabis-hemp
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for industrial purposes.
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But there is another important use for the Cannabis plant, and the fact
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that our government is blocking this use should encourage every single
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American. I am speaking of the important and immediate medical relif that
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hemp can provide. Cannabis has been used as herbal medicine for a myriad
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of conditions throughout world history. right now, in particular, we know
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of at least two extremely serious situations in which marijuana is the most
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effective medicine available. The first concerns cancer patients. Modern
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|
treatments for many kinds of cancer often involve the use of chemotherapy
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in order to kill or reduce the cancer. An unfortunate side effect of
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chemotherapy is that it causes severe nausea in the patient. Even Marinol,
|
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the government's synthesized THC drug, has to be swallowed to be administered,
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and the hardest thing for someone with severe nausea to do is to swallow
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something! For that matter, even when Marinol can be used, it is relatively
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ineffective; although THC is the primary active ingredient in Cannabis, it
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is augmented by dozens of other active ingredients, mixed as only Mother
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Nature can, each of which contributes to the overall effect. Only actual
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marijuana can help these people -- it alone relieves the feeling of nausea.
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Sometimes it even actually stimulates their appetites, enabling them to
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gain the considerable advantage of regular nourishment. Some AIDS patients
|
|||
|
can benefit similarly. The other medical use of Cannabis that is widely
|
|||
|
known is as a treatment to prevent the advance of glaucoma, a disease of
|
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|
pressure in the eyes, which ranks among the leading causes of blindness.
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Many glaucoma patients do not respond to other methods of therapy, and for
|
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them, pot is the only thing standing between them and the loss of their
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eyesight!
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NORML -- the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws --
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has already fought for the right of cancer patients and glaucoma sufferers
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to use medical marijuana. They have even won a court case in the Drug
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Enforcement Agency's own courts; a DEA judge decided that marijuana should
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be reclassified as a recognized medicine, so that thousands of people who so
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desperately need it can obtain it legally and under controlled conditions.
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Unfortunately, the bureaucrats of the DEA have refused the judge's request
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to reclassify it, thus adding needlessly to the suffering of untold numbers
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of people who are already going through the agony of these diseases. Patients
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are forced to obtain the one drug that helps them illegally. The DEA's spurious
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reasoning is that letting anyone smoke marijuana, even for medical reasons,
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sets a bad example for young people.
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This kind of callousness is absolutely unconscionable.
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What kind of "example" is it for kids to see that a government agency
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does not act to save people from dying or going blind, when a mere stroke
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of the pen could prolong thousands of lives?
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|
Is it a better "example", then, to be more concerned with how things might
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|
appear than with the real suffering of real people?
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|
Out of all the cancer patients and all the glaucoma patients that exist
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|
in this country, there are, as of this writing, only five certified legal
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users. Five! Inaction and red tape on the part of the DEA, largely fueled
|
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|
by ignorance and myth, have stymied the efforts to aid all the rest of these
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|
thousands of chronically and terminally ill patients, while ignoring even more
|
|||
|
who suffer from other diseases that marijuana could help treat. No one has
|
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|
ever been known to have died from an overdose of pot.
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|
We should not stand for it! How can this continue in the U.S.A.?
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|
Whether or not you think marijuana should be allowed to be smoked for
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|
personal pleasure -- and that's a whole other story -- we should all stand up
|
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|
for those who need it as medicine. We can help those who need this relief
|
|||
|
today, and at the same time help to heal the earth's ecosystem.
|
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|
Write or call your State and Federal Representatives and Senators and tell
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them how Hemp can help the environment. Moreover, demand that marijuana be
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made legally available for doctors to prescribe. Or, write to NORML, and we
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will forward your letters to the people who need to see them.
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And join NORML!
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(Reprinted from Vol. 3 No. 118 (1991) of The Truth Seeker, Box 2832, San
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Diego, CA 92112 USA, send $1 for sample issue.)
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-------------------
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Here's a list of national/local contacts in the Hemp Movement for more
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information or to get involved:
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N.O.R.M.L.
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1636 "B" Street, NW, #3
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Washington, DC 20009
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(202) 483-5500
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Colorado N.O.R.M.L.
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137 W. County Line Road #500
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Littleton, Co 80215
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(303) 470-1100
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Hemp information, lawyer referal, lots of other info.
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Hemp Initiative Project
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Jon Baraga
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1015 S. Gaylord # 181
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Denver, Co 80209
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(303) 470-1100 ext. 511
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They need petitioners for the 1992 Colorado Hemp Initiative.
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No More Drug War Foundation
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P.O. Box 18780
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Denver, Co 80218
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Rocky Mountain Hemp Network
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Connie Barr-Rowe
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P.O. Box 150804
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Lakewood, CO 80215
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(303) 239-6410 or 470-1100 ext. 611 (leave msg)
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General Hemp info., coalition of people with illnesses requiring hemp
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for medicine. Lots of legal hemp products such as clothing, nutritional
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hemp products, etc.
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Sustainable Futures
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Auga Das, director
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(303) 470-1100 ext. 711
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Your one-stop shop for hemp-seed oil, hemp-seed cake, instructional
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hemp videos.
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Auraria Hemp Club
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Student Union Building Room 230-C, Meets every Monday 3:30-5:00 PM
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Headed up by a knowledgable herbalist, lots of good info and videos.
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Hemp Educational Media Productions
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Rt. 7, Box 373
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Golden, Co 80403
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Hemp videos, information, activism.
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San Diego County N.O.R.M.L.
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Box 171396
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San Diego, CA 92197
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(619) 571-0088
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.END
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COULD ONE PLANT SAVE THE EARTH?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
By Howard Anshell
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What if you could wave a magic wand and come up with a single
|
|||
|
plant that could help save the rain forests, power our cars
|
|||
|
cheaply, reduce pollution drastically, and preserve the precious
|
|||
|
knowledge that is crumbling away in libraries throughout the
|
|||
|
world?
|
|||
|
Sounds far-fetched, doesn't it?
|
|||
|
What if that very same plant could help ease the suffering of
|
|||
|
cancer patients, and actually prevent certain kinds of blindness?
|
|||
|
What if it could even feed the world's starving peoples more
|
|||
|
efficiently than any current food source, and clothe them in
|
|||
|
materials that would last far longer than what they now wear?
|
|||
|
If this all sounds like a fairy tale to you, let me tell you
|
|||
|
right now that no magic wand is necessary. A plant that can do
|
|||
|
all these things, and more, exists right now and grows in
|
|||
|
virtually every country of the world. That plant is Hemp --
|
|||
|
Cannabis, known in the U.S. primarily as the intoxicant
|
|||
|
Marijuana. Most people are aware that, in our passion for paper
|
|||
|
goods, we have cut down too many trees already. Terrible damage
|
|||
|
has been done to the earth's fragile environment, particularly
|
|||
|
the vital rain forests of the world. A great deal of this
|
|||
|
destruction is caused by the world's ever-growing need for paper
|
|||
|
products. Not only are trees -- which supply a great deal of the
|
|||
|
oxygen we breathe -- being chopped down, but it takes tons of
|
|||
|
toxic chemicals to turn the pulp of these trees into paper.
|
|||
|
Ironically, the paper we have so diligently plundered our
|
|||
|
planet for is basically temporary. It is disintegrating so
|
|||
|
rapidly that
|
|||
|
libraries and
|
|||
|
universities all over the world are warning of the consequences.
|
|||
|
What is needed, then, is a source of pulp fiber that is cheaper,
|
|||
|
less polluting, and more durable than wood. Hemp is that fiber,
|
|||
|
and it's annually renewable. As a matter of fact, hemp was the
|
|||
|
source of much of the world's paper until this century. Most
|
|||
|
people don't know it, but the original draft of the Declaration
|
|||
|
of Independence was written on hemp paper. Later, it was copied
|
|||
|
onto parchment for the final draft, but the hemp draft still
|
|||
|
exists more than 200 years later. Many books even older than
|
|||
|
that, printed on hemp paper, are still in existence today,
|
|||
|
whereas wood paper dissolves in less than a single century.
|
|||
|
But what of the cost? Is hemp cheaper to produce than wood
|
|||
|
paper? An acre of hemp can produce as much pulp as four acres of
|
|||
|
trees. Furthermore, the growing of hemp does not deplete the
|
|||
|
soil in the same manner as trees. Hemp can be grown annually,
|
|||
|
whereas trees take decades to replace. And hemp requires only
|
|||
|
one fifth of the chemicals to turn the same amount of pulp into
|
|||
|
paper. Thus, much of our irreplaceable rain forests could be
|
|||
|
left standing. The hemp plant's own natural production of oxygen,
|
|||
|
and the fact that it grows easily in many adverse climates, would
|
|||
|
help to reverse global warming. The oil extracted from hemp
|
|||
|
seeds can also be used to replace
|
|||
|
potentially
|
|||
|
dangerous linseed oil as a base for paint. Hemp could help to
|
|||
|
alleviate the "Greenhouse Effect" and cut water pollution. Hemp
|
|||
|
is also an extremely efficient plant to use for biomass instead
|
|||
|
of corn, the most popular source of biomass today; it can yield
|
|||
|
as much as eight times the methanol. In our search for cleaner
|
|||
|
fuels, methanol has been the most promising, but it currently
|
|||
|
costs more than gasoline. If hemp methanol could cut costs by
|
|||
|
that much, it would make the cleaner fuel cheaper so more people
|
|||
|
would use it. Hemp could help reduce auto emissions.
|
|||
|
Furthermore, hemp fiber can be used to make clothing. As with
|
|||
|
paper, hemp was, until this century, one of the primary sources
|
|||
|
of cloth, from the coarsest canvas (which was named after
|
|||
|
Cannabis) to the finest silk-like garments. There are still a few
|
|||
|
countries in the world which use hemp fiber for clothes; its
|
|||
|
durability is over 20 times greater than that of cotton.
|
|||
|
Perhaps even more astonishing is the seed of the Cannabis plant.
|
|||
|
It is a
|
|||
|
more efficient source of protein than the soybean. Mass
|
|||
|
production of hemp seeds alone could do a lot toward easing the
|
|||
|
tragedy of hunger. Hemp seeds can be made into a nutritious
|
|||
|
porridge, brewed into a tea,
|
|||
|
sprouted, or even
|
|||
|
used for animal feed. Hemp could help feed and clothe the
|
|||
|
world's starving children.
|
|||
|
Since the hemp plant is a weed which easily grows where most
|
|||
|
other plants, especially food crops, wither, it is an ideal plant
|
|||
|
to use in efforts to refoliate arid land and to retain topsoil.
|
|||
|
Hemp can help fight drought. If you're an environmentalist, or
|
|||
|
just care about solving the world's ecological problems, you
|
|||
|
should support efforts to legalize cannabis-hemp for industrial
|
|||
|
purposes.
|
|||
|
But there is another important use for the Cannabis plant, and
|
|||
|
the fact that our government is blocking this use should
|
|||
|
encourage every single American. I am speaking of the important
|
|||
|
and immediate medical relief that hemp can provide. Cannabis has
|
|||
|
been used as herbal medicine for a myriad of conditions
|
|||
|
throughout world history. Right now, in particular, we know of
|
|||
|
at least two extremely serious situations in which marijuana is
|
|||
|
the most effective medicine available. The first concerns cancer
|
|||
|
patients. Modern treatments for many kinds of cancer often
|
|||
|
involve the use of chemotherapy in order to kill or reduce the
|
|||
|
cancer. An unfortunate side effect of chemotherapy is that it
|
|||
|
causes severe nausea in the patient. Even Marinol, the
|
|||
|
government's synthesized THC drug, has to be swallowed to be
|
|||
|
administered, and the hardest thing for someone with severe
|
|||
|
nausea to do is to swallow something! For that matter, even when
|
|||
|
Marinol can be used, it is relatively ineffective; although THC
|
|||
|
is the primary active ingredient in Cannabis, it is augmented by
|
|||
|
dozens of other active ingredients, mixed as only Mother Nature
|
|||
|
can, each of which contributes to the overall effect. Only
|
|||
|
actual marijuana can help these people -- it alone relieves the
|
|||
|
feeling of nausea. Sometimes it even actually stimulates their
|
|||
|
appetites, enabling them to gain the considerable advantage of
|
|||
|
regular nourishment. Some AIDS patients can benefit similarly.
|
|||
|
The other medical use of Cannabis that is widely known is as a
|
|||
|
treatment to prevent the advance of glaucoma, a disease of
|
|||
|
pressure in the eyes, which ranks among the leading causes of
|
|||
|
blindness. Many glaucoma patients do not respond to other methods
|
|||
|
of therapy, and for them, pot is the only thing standing between
|
|||
|
them and the loss of their eyesight!
|
|||
|
NORML -- the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana
|
|||
|
Laws --has already fought for the right of cancer patients and
|
|||
|
glaucoma sufferers to use medical marijuana. They have even won
|
|||
|
a court case in the Drug Enforcement Agency's own courts; a DEA
|
|||
|
judge decided that marijuana should be reclassified as a
|
|||
|
recognized medicine, so that thousands of people who so
|
|||
|
desperately need it can obtain it legally and under controlled
|
|||
|
conditions. Unfortunately, the bureaucrats of the DEA have
|
|||
|
refused the judge's request to reclassify it, thus adding
|
|||
|
needlessly to the suffering of untold numbers of people who are
|
|||
|
already going through the agony of these
|
|||
|
diseases. Patients
|
|||
|
are forced to obtain the one drug that helps them illegally. The
|
|||
|
DEA's spurious reasoning is that letting anyone smoke marijuana,
|
|||
|
even for medical reasons, sets a bad example for young people.
|
|||
|
This kind of callousness is absolutely unconscionable.
|
|||
|
What kind of "example" is it for kids to see that a government
|
|||
|
agency does not act to save people from dying or going blind,
|
|||
|
when a mere stroke of the pen could prolong thousands of lives?
|
|||
|
Is it a better "example", then, to be more concerned with how
|
|||
|
things might appear than with the real suffering of real people?
|
|||
|
Out of all the cancer patients and all the glaucoma patients
|
|||
|
that exist in this country, there are, as of this writing, only
|
|||
|
five certified legal users. Five! Inaction and red tape on the
|
|||
|
part of the DEA, largely fueled by ignorance and myth, have
|
|||
|
stymied the efforts to aid all the rest of these thousands of
|
|||
|
chronically and terminally ill patients, while ignoring even more
|
|||
|
who suffer from other diseases that marijuana could help treat.
|
|||
|
No one has ever been known to have died from an overdose of pot.
|
|||
|
We should not stand for it! How can this continue in the
|
|||
|
U.S.A.? Whether or not you think marijuana should be allowed
|
|||
|
to be smoked for personal pleasure -- and that's a whole other
|
|||
|
story -- we should all stand up for those who need it as
|
|||
|
medicine. We can help those who need this relief today, and at
|
|||
|
the same time help to heal the earth's ecosystem. Write or
|
|||
|
call your State and Federal Representatives and Senators and tell
|
|||
|
them how Hemp can help the environment. Moreover, demand that
|
|||
|
marijuana be made legally available for doctors to prescribe.
|
|||
|
Or, write to NORML, and we will forward your letters to the
|
|||
|
people who need to see them. And join NORML!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(Reprinted from Vol. 3 No. 118 (1991) of The Truth Seeker, Box
|
|||
|
2832, San Diego, CA 92112 USA, send $1 for sample issue.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-------------------
|
|||
|
Here's a list of national/local contacts in the Hemp Movement for
|
|||
|
more information or to get involved:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
N.O.R.M.L.
|
|||
|
1636 "B" Street, NW, #3
|
|||
|
Washington, DC 20009
|
|||
|
(202) 483-5500
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Colorado N.O.R.M.L.
|
|||
|
137 W. County Line Road #500
|
|||
|
Littleton, Co 80215
|
|||
|
(303) 470-1100
|
|||
|
Hemp information, lawyer referral, lots of other info.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Initiative Project
|
|||
|
Jon Baraga
|
|||
|
1015 S. Gaylord # 181
|
|||
|
Denver, Co 80209
|
|||
|
(303) 470-1100 ext. 511
|
|||
|
They need petitioners for the 1992 Colorado Hemp Initiative. No
|
|||
|
More Drug War Foundation
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 18780
|
|||
|
Denver, Co 80218
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rocky Mountain Hemp Network
|
|||
|
Connie Barr-Rowe
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 150804
|
|||
|
Lakewood, CO 80215
|
|||
|
(303) 239-6410 or 470-1100 ext. 611 (leave msg)
|
|||
|
General Hemp info., coalition of people with illnesses requiring
|
|||
|
hemp for medicine. Lots of legal hemp products such as clothing,
|
|||
|
nutritional hemp products, etc.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sustainable Futures
|
|||
|
Auga Das, director
|
|||
|
(303) 470-1100 ext. 711
|
|||
|
Your one-stop shop for hemp-seed oil, hemp-seed cake,
|
|||
|
instructional hemp videos.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Auraria Hemp Club (Fastest Growing Club on Campus.)
|
|||
|
Student Union Building Room 230-C, Meets every Monday 3:30-5:00
|
|||
|
PM Headed up by a knowledgeable herbalist, lots of good info and
|
|||
|
videos.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Educational Media Productions
|
|||
|
Rt. 7, Box 373
|
|||
|
Golden, Co 80403
|
|||
|
Hemp videos, information, activism.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HEMPwear, etc.
|
|||
|
1090 S Wadsworth Unit D
|
|||
|
Lakewood, Co
|
|||
|
Colorado's first Hemp-only emporium...hemp-clothing, fabric &
|
|||
|
textiles;Hemp-seed-oil and nutritional products;Hemp
|
|||
|
bracelets,etc., including Jack Herer's "The Emperor Wears No
|
|||
|
Clothes"...the book that spawned the 90's HEMP Movement, 188p,
|
|||
|
extensively footnoted/documented.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
H.E.M.P. (Help End Marijuana Prohibition)
|
|||
|
5632 Van Nuys Blvd.,Suite 210
|
|||
|
Van Nuys, CA 91401 (213) 392-1806
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp (BACH)
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 71093
|
|||
|
Los Angeles, CA 90071-0093 (213) 288-4152
|
|||
|
information on getting started in the legal hemp
|
|||
|
business;economic information on hemp. Extensive information on
|
|||
|
the 50,000 commercial products which can be made from hemp.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Institute
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 65130
|
|||
|
St. Paul, MN 97204
|
|||
|
(612) 222-2628
|
|||
|
Cannabis Action Network
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 54528
|
|||
|
Lexington, KY 40555
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Drug Policy Foundation
|
|||
|
4801 Mass Ave. NW #400
|
|||
|
Washington DC 20016-2078
|
|||
|
(202) 895-1634
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
American Hemp Council
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 71093
|
|||
|
Los Angeles, CA 90071-0093
|
|||
|
(213) 288-4152
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
T.E.A.C.H.(Therapeutic & Ecological Applications of Cannabis
|
|||
|
Hemp) 2833 Frankford Ave.,
|
|||
|
Panama City, FL 32405 (904) 763-6812
|
|||
|
Medical information, Petition for Herbal & Medical Rights to
|
|||
|
immediately end federal and state prohibition of herbal and
|
|||
|
medical use of cannabis sativa(l), also known as hemp.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Family Council on Drug Awareness (FCDA)
|
|||
|
Box 71093
|
|||
|
Los Angeles, CA 90071-0093 (213) 288-4512
|
|||
|
Many educational pamphlets, including "10 Things You Should Know
|
|||
|
About Marijuana...", "Marijuana & Christianity", "10 Things Every
|
|||
|
Parent, Teenager & Teacher Should Know About Marijuana...",
|
|||
|
"Marijuana & The Bible", etc. @ 30 cents apiece.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Freedom Fighters c/o
|
|||
|
High Times, 211 E. 43rd St
|
|||
|
New York, New York 10017
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DIRECTORY OF B.A.C.H. REPRESENTATIVES
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NATIONAL OFFICE: 213/288-4152
|
|||
|
POB 71093, LA CA 90071-0093
|
|||
|
BRITISH COLUMBIA
|
|||
|
Ucluelet: Chris Bennett 604/726-7239
|
|||
|
Vancouver:Charles Crossland 604/874-5435
|
|||
|
Paul DeFelice 604/229-4338
|
|||
|
CALIFORNIA
|
|||
|
Los Angeles:Chris Conrad 213/288-4152
|
|||
|
Fresno:Chuck Corcoran 209/277-1319
|
|||
|
San Francisco:Peter King 415/826-0787
|
|||
|
San Diego:John Storey 619/274-0034
|
|||
|
Santa Cruz:Roland Wilson 408/423-4974
|
|||
|
Arcata:Aaron Rose 707/442-8689
|
|||
|
Sacramento:Matthew Russell 916/444-0718
|
|||
|
GEORGIA
|
|||
|
Atlanta:Kathy Alterman 404/928-0827
|
|||
|
James Bell 404/739-1870
|
|||
|
HAWAII
|
|||
|
Hilo:Roger Christie 808/969-9712
|
|||
|
IOWA
|
|||
|
Des Moines:Carl Olsen 515/243-7351
|
|||
|
KENTUCKY
|
|||
|
Louisville:Randy Davis 502/895-7757
|
|||
|
LOUISIANA
|
|||
|
New Orleans:Gary Kohibach 504/899-8417
|
|||
|
MAINE
|
|||
|
Lincoln:Collin Stuart 207/794-6941
|
|||
|
MASSACHUSETTS
|
|||
|
Pittsfield:David Estrom 413/443-4957
|
|||
|
MICHIGAN
|
|||
|
Kalamazoo:Carl Stelter 616/372-7208
|
|||
|
MINNESOTA
|
|||
|
St.Paul:John Birrenbach 612/222-2628
|
|||
|
MISSISSIPPI
|
|||
|
Jackson:Chris Donovan 601/355-4920
|
|||
|
NEW JERSEY
|
|||
|
Stanton:Sally Miller 908/236-2048
|
|||
|
NEW YORK
|
|||
|
Buffalo:Marilyn Craig 716/873-0255
|
|||
|
Staten Island:Ross Elakman 718/273-5649
|
|||
|
OKLAHOMA
|
|||
|
Tulsa:Michael Thompson 918/775-6041
|
|||
|
OREGON
|
|||
|
Portland:Patty Collins 503/289-9298
|
|||
|
Steve Orgel 503/236-9231...232-1128
|
|||
|
Eugene:Cat Hecate 503/485-3579
|
|||
|
SOUTH DAKOTA
|
|||
|
Alexandria:K.C.Hague 605/996-0086
|
|||
|
SOUTH CAROLINA
|
|||
|
Ft.Mills:Richard Wetzel 803/548-4768
|
|||
|
Claude Moore 803/474-2192
|
|||
|
TENNESSEE
|
|||
|
Pulaski:Kenny Breeding 615/565-3898
|
|||
|
TEXAS
|
|||
|
Austin:Tom Thacker 512/825-3317
|
|||
|
VIRGINIA
|
|||
|
Crewe:Sandy Hayer 804/645-8816
|
|||
|
WASHINGTON
|
|||
|
Seattle:Mike Miller 206/481-8830
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SOURCES OF LEGAL,NON-SMOKING HEMP PRODUCTS
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Textiles,Clothing:
|
|||
|
(Free sample w/$10 donation to BACH)
|
|||
|
BACH POB 71093, LA CA 90071-0093
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Stoned Wear(tm) Division of Sativa Creations, Inc
|
|||
|
Order Line: 1-800-544-0577 x 13 (Dealer Inquires Welcome)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Joint Venture Hempery 604/737-8539
|
|||
|
POB 2006 Main Stn.
|
|||
|
Vancouver BC Canada V6B 3P8
|
|||
|
Hemptek Industries 619/436-7835
|
|||
|
POB 27809 Dept HT-4C
|
|||
|
San Diego, CA 92198-1809
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Kashiri Dyeworks 415/647-5046
|
|||
|
Berkeley, CA 94704
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Twine:
|
|||
|
(Free sample w/$10 donation to BACH)
|
|||
|
Wholesale:
|
|||
|
Schermerhorn 213/946-8366 (120 twine balls/carton $72)
|
|||
|
POB 3885
|
|||
|
S.F.Springs,CA 90670
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Norman Supply Co.(#60 Parcel Twine and Spring Twine)
|
|||
|
818/349-3120
|
|||
|
18709 Napa St.
|
|||
|
Northridge,CA 91324
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sterile Hemp Seed:
|
|||
|
(Free sample w/$10 donation to BACH)
|
|||
|
Wholesale/Retail:
|
|||
|
Elmwood Pet Supply
|
|||
|
706 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo, NY 14222
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bloomington Pets, CA 714/877-5391
|
|||
|
Elliot Pets Supply, CA 714/824-5011
|
|||
|
Minn-Dak Ltd, MN 701/746-7453
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Fiber:
|
|||
|
Twinrocker Papermaking Supplies 317/563-3119
|
|||
|
POB 413, Brookston, IN 47923
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Danforth Int. Trade 203/668-7486
|
|||
|
3156 Rt. 88, Point Pleasant, NJ 08792
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CNNP&ABP Import Export Corp:Henan Native Produce Branch
|
|||
|
(Chinese Hemp sacks, yarn, and rope
|
|||
|
No.69 Wenhua Rd., Zhengzhou, China. Tel. 33582, Telex:46047 HNTPB
|
|||
|
CN
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HEMP RESOURCES:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
BACH
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cambridge Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Inc. 617/864-6660
|
|||
|
POB 748 Cambridge, MA 02139
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
H.E.M.P. 213/392-1806...818/377-5886
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
House of Hemp 503/232-1128
|
|||
|
POB 14603/2111 E. Burnside St.
|
|||
|
Portland, OR 97204 FAX:503/232-0239
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Institute for Hemp 612/222-2628
|
|||
|
POB 65130, St.Paul,MN 55165
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Key Fiber Co. 415/647-5046
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NORML 202/483-5500
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NORMLColorado 303/470-1100
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Nature's Way Hempery 201/291-1619
|
|||
|
Sampler $10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
San Diego County N.O.R.M.L.
|
|||
|
Box 171396
|
|||
|
San Diego, CA 92197
|
|||
|
(619) 571-0088
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
What The Law Says:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Custom Regulations of the United States, Official U S Custom
|
|||
|
House Guide, 1987. Marijuana Statutory Provisions
|
|||
|
Sec. 302.58-CR-360.(a)MARIHUANA. The term 'marihuana' means all
|
|||
|
parts of the plant Cannabis sativa(l.), whether growing or
|
|||
|
not,the seeds thereof,the resin extracted from any part of such
|
|||
|
plant:and every compound,manufacture,salt,derivative,mixture or
|
|||
|
preparation of such plant,its seeds or resin;BUT SHALL NOT
|
|||
|
INCLUDE the mature stalks(except the resin extracted
|
|||
|
therefrom),fiber, oil or cake or the STERILIZED seed of such
|
|||
|
plant, which is incapable of
|
|||
|
germination.[Controlled Substances Act USFDA (1970) Chapt.
|
|||
|
22,Sec. 802-15.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5 Things you can do RIGHT NOW to help legalize hemp/marijuana
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
1. Talk about hemp/marijuana today to friends, family, co-workers
|
|||
|
and everybody. Just say you think hemp/marijuana should be made
|
|||
|
legal again. You'll be amazed at how many agree. Talk about
|
|||
|
medical marijuana, free choice and non-smoking commercial hemp
|
|||
|
(rope, paper, fabric, fuel, oil, food, etc.). Be proud of what
|
|||
|
you believe. This is America. Remember, you're in good company:
|
|||
|
Both Washington & Jefferson were hemp farmers. People needing
|
|||
|
legal help should call NORML.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
2. Photocopy Literature to pass out and send with your letters.
|
|||
|
Always keep it handy. You never know who or when somebody will
|
|||
|
want it. Give it out at meetings, events, campuses, etc.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
3. Write letters to your elected officials (see scripts below),
|
|||
|
newspapers, magazines, TV & radio stations. Be brief. Be clear.
|
|||
|
Don't mix issues. Better yet, write at least one letter every
|
|||
|
month, and every time there is an editorial or commentary on
|
|||
|
marijuana or "drugs." Respond to articles and events or just
|
|||
|
state your opinion. They'll read it, even if they don't publish
|
|||
|
it. 4. Help out a local group. Come to meetings. Make phone
|
|||
|
calls, do office work, fold and mail literature, etc. Share your
|
|||
|
special skills (like computer, data entry, research, speaking,
|
|||
|
organizing, art and other talents.) If there is no group, start
|
|||
|
one. It's easier than you think. The groups listed at the bottom
|
|||
|
of this page are glad to help.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
5. Donate money to active groups like NORML, BACH, HEMP, the
|
|||
|
American Hemp Council, Freedom Fighters and others. Contribute
|
|||
|
supplies or postage. All groups need access to free or cheap
|
|||
|
printing service. Donate books and magazine subscriptions to
|
|||
|
schools and libraries, maybe even buy an ad or billboard space to
|
|||
|
get out the message. It's better to spend a little money now to
|
|||
|
re-legalize hemp/marijuana than a lot of money later to stay out
|
|||
|
of jail.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Whatever you do, Start Doing It Right Away! Studies show that if
|
|||
|
you don't get started within a day or two, you might not ever get
|
|||
|
around to it, and we have to act today to build the momentum we
|
|||
|
need to re-legalize hemp/marijuana tomorrow.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Letter/phone scripts:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
President Bush
|
|||
|
1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW,
|
|||
|
Washington DC 20050
|
|||
|
(or)
|
|||
|
Senator___________________:
|
|||
|
Senate Office Bldg.,
|
|||
|
Washington,DC 20510
|
|||
|
(or)
|
|||
|
Representative____________:
|
|||
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
|||
|
Washington, DC 20515
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dear_________________________,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Please take whatever action is necessary to legalize
|
|||
|
personal use of marijuana and see to it that everyone who needs
|
|||
|
it for medicine receives it immediately.
|
|||
|
Also, you must know that the barriers to commercial use of
|
|||
|
hemp for paper, fabrics, fuel and so on hurt our economy, and
|
|||
|
must be removed immediately. It just doesn't make any sense to
|
|||
|
punish farmers and people whose businesses don't have anything to
|
|||
|
do with drugs at all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sincerely,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
|||
|
+
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
State Senator___________________:
|
|||
|
State Senate
|
|||
|
200 East Colfax Avenue
|
|||
|
Denver, Colorado 80203
|
|||
|
(or)
|
|||
|
Representative:__________________:
|
|||
|
House of Representatives
|
|||
|
200 East Colfax Avenue
|
|||
|
Denver, Colorado 80203
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dear_____________________________:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Please act immediately to legalize personal use of marijuana
|
|||
|
and see to it that everyone who needs it for medicine receives it
|
|||
|
immediately.
|
|||
|
Also, you must realize that the barriers to non-drug,
|
|||
|
commercial use of hemp for paper, fabrics, fuel, and so on, hurt
|
|||
|
our businesses and the state economy. They must be removed
|
|||
|
immediately, because if other states do this before we do,
|
|||
|
Colorado will lose its competitive edge in bringing in new
|
|||
|
businesses and the jobs and tax revenues that come with it.
|
|||
|
In addition, it is a waste of tax money to enforce
|
|||
|
prohibition laws when we have so much real crime to deal with.
|
|||
|
You say you are for a strong Colorado and America. Well, do
|
|||
|
something about.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Sincerely,
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=================================================================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Phone Script: Hello, by name is____________________and I'm
|
|||
|
calling to register my opinion with (Senator, Representative,
|
|||
|
etc.)_________________. I think it's time to re-legalize personal
|
|||
|
use of marijuana and see to it that everyone who needs it as
|
|||
|
medicine receives it immediately.
|
|||
|
Laws that block commercial use of hemp for paper, fabrics
|
|||
|
fuel and so on hurt our economy and the environment. They should
|
|||
|
be completely eliminated. It doesn't make sense to punish
|
|||
|
American Farmers and people whose businesses don't have anything
|
|||
|
to do with drugs. I want to know what (Sen.,Rep.,etc.)
|
|||
|
____________________ is doing about this problem.(Give them your
|
|||
|
address and ask for a written reply.)
|
|||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--==-=-
|
|||
|
=-
|
|||
|
Here's a list of local organizations which are glad to help you
|
|||
|
get involved:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NORML Colorado
|
|||
|
137 West County Line Road #500
|
|||
|
Littleton, Co 80126
|
|||
|
303/470-1100
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rocky Mountain Hemp Network
|
|||
|
470-1100 x 611
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hemp Initiative Project
|
|||
|
470-1100 x 511
|
|||
|
Great Tee-shirts, need volunteers for Ballot Initiative Drive
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is the Colorado Hemp Information Hotline. Simply dial from
|
|||
|
your touch-tone phone, and punch in the desired extension for tons
|
|||
|
of great recorded information. Of particular interest is a 10
|
|||
|
minute recording of Hugh Downs ABC 20/20 broadcast about the many
|
|||
|
uses of commercial hemp for paper,fiber,fuel,medicine,food, etc.
|
|||
|
Also contains a brief summary of the 1937 conspiracy which led to
|
|||
|
the current hemp prohibition.(ext.477)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
From your touch-tone phone dial: 303/470-1100 for Hemp Info +
|
|||
|
desired extension:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ext. Message:
|
|||
|
111.......Initial Greeting
|
|||
|
123.......Person with AIDS Speaks Out On Hemp
|
|||
|
124.......Leave YOUR "War On Hemp" Horror Story
|
|||
|
222.......FAX Mailbox
|
|||
|
411.......Information
|
|||
|
422.......How To Leave A Message
|
|||
|
423.......How To Send A FAX
|
|||
|
424.......How To Receive Our FAX Newsletter
|
|||
|
431.......An Introduction To NORML
|
|||
|
441.......How To Get Involved
|
|||
|
*442.......How To Join NORML-Colorado
|
|||
|
*443.......Coming Events
|
|||
|
444.......Chapter Mailing Address
|
|||
|
445.......National Office Information
|
|||
|
446.......Legislative Alert Signup
|
|||
|
447.......Other Organizations
|
|||
|
448.......Recommended Reading
|
|||
|
449.......Chapter Meetings
|
|||
|
451.......Current News
|
|||
|
452.......Marijuana and Medicine
|
|||
|
453.......The HEMP Patrol
|
|||
|
454.......Colorado RoundUp
|
|||
|
456.......WECOF:Freedom Fighter Radio Network
|
|||
|
461.......Legal Information
|
|||
|
462.......Lawyer Referral
|
|||
|
463.......State Laws
|
|||
|
464.......Urine Testing
|
|||
|
471.......Hemp Information
|
|||
|
472.......Marijuana And Health
|
|||
|
473.......Fuel & Energy
|
|||
|
474.......Paper
|
|||
|
475.......Fiber
|
|||
|
476.......Food & Seed Products
|
|||
|
*477.......Hugh Downs' ABC 20/20 Program On Hemp
|
|||
|
481.......General Information
|
|||
|
491......."The Emperor Wears No Clothes" By Jack Herer
|
|||
|
492.......High Times Magazine
|
|||
|
511.......Hemp Initiative Project-Leave A Message
|
|||
|
512.......Hemp Initiative Project:Legalize in '92!
|
|||
|
611.......Rocky Mountain Hemp Network
|
|||
|
711.......Colorado Made Legal Hemp Products (Oils,Foods,etc.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IT'S TIME TO TAX HEMP!
|
|||
|
Look at The Denver Post--Oct. 18.1991
|
|||
|
*"$48 million, 366 jobs hit by state budget ax"
|
|||
|
*"As many as 7,000 more layoffs by 1998"
|
|||
|
*"Higher education funding shaved by 3%"
|
|||
|
*"Gov. Romer advocates tax increase for education"
|
|||
|
*Youthful offenders face more overcrowding,less help"
|
|||
|
*"$200 million education shortfall only months away"
|
|||
|
*"$4 million cut from State Department of Health"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Colorado taxes alcohol, tobacco, lottery, and gambling, BUT ONLY
|
|||
|
DRUG KINGPINS MAKE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN PROFITS ON
|
|||
|
MARIJUANA SALES!
|
|||
|
The government's war on hemp has turned millions of law-abiding
|
|||
|
Americans into criminals with the stroke of a pen. As a result,
|
|||
|
America now has the HIGHEST number of prisoners per capita than any
|
|||
|
other nation on earth! Advocates of Omnibus Crime Bill pending in
|
|||
|
Congress promise to DOUBLE the number of prisoners in the next 20
|
|||
|
years! Will we continue to build prisons instead of schools,
|
|||
|
subsidize deadly tobacco while we criminalize harmless hemp, waste
|
|||
|
hundreds of millions of tax dollars on police arresting marijuana
|
|||
|
users while essential services are cut?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Facts About Hemp:
|
|||
|
*Hemp is the oldest known cultivated plant on Earth, grown for over
|
|||
|
12,000 years.
|
|||
|
*George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew hemp for medicine,
|
|||
|
food and fiber.
|
|||
|
*The Bill of Rights and the Declaration of Independence were
|
|||
|
written on paper made from hemp.
|
|||
|
*Hemp is a medicinal herb effective in
|
|||
|
treating:glaucoma,epilepsy,migraines,AIDS wasting syndrome
|
|||
|
Chemotherapy side effects, MS, MD, Anorexia, etc
|
|||
|
*One acre of hemp produces 4.1 times the amount of paper as one
|
|||
|
acre of trees and with far less pollution.
|
|||
|
*Half the world's trees are cut down for paper.These trees are
|
|||
|
needed to replenish the ozone layer.
|
|||
|
*Hemp seed is second only to soy beans in percentage of protein.
|
|||
|
Diesel engines run on hemp seed oil.
|
|||
|
*Hemp prohibition is an attempt by petrochemical and pharmaceutical
|
|||
|
monopolies to eliminate the world's premier renewable resource for
|
|||
|
medicine,food,fuel,fiber,paper,and energy.
|
|||
|
*Read"The Emperor Wears No Clothes" By Jack Herer for the
|
|||
|
authoritative historical record on hemp.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Get Involved. Join NORML! Call Our Free Hempline 303/470-1100. Hear
|
|||
|
more about the Colorado Hemp Initiative. Call 470-1100 then press
|
|||
|
512.To Volunteer to become a Petitioner for the Hemp Initiative
|
|||
|
Project press 511 and leave a message. We only need 50,000
|
|||
|
signatures to get hemp on the November '92 ballot! We can do it!
|
|||
|
55% of Coloradans favor re-legalization now! Wait until they learn
|
|||
|
the truth about hemp for paper-fiber-fuel-food-medicine!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How Dangerous is Marijuana Compared to Other Substances?
|
|||
|
# of Deaths Per Year
|
|||
|
Tobacco................................340,000 to 425,000
|
|||
|
Alcohol................................150,000+
|
|||
|
Aspirin................................180 to 1,000
|
|||
|
'Legal'Drug Overdoses..................14,000 to 27,000
|
|||
|
MARIJUANA..............................0
|
|||
|
(Figures from 1988 federal Bureau of Mortality Statistics)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Prohibition...goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts
|
|||
|
to control a man's appetite by legislation and make a crime out of
|
|||
|
things that are not crimes...A prohibition law strikes a blow at
|
|||
|
the very principles upon which our government was founded."
|
|||
|
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, December 1840
|
|||
|
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|||
|
Please print this and make copies...pass it on to friends...Post
|
|||
|
copies on public bulletin boards in supermarkets, laundromats, etc.
|
|||
|
And upload it to every BBS you can! Let's spread the word about
|
|||
|
hemp!
|
|||
|
-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=--=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
DEBATING MARIJUANA LAW: The most common arguments against ending
|
|||
|
marijuana prohibition are as easy to refute as they are to
|
|||
|
summarize:
|
|||
|
1. Marijuana alters consciousness.
|
|||
|
2. We have so much trouble with alcohol, tobacco and bad driving;
|
|||
|
why make matters worse?
|
|||
|
3. Ending prohibition will "send the wrong message."
|
|||
|
4. Some people just can't cope with marijuana use.
|
|||
|
5. Marijuana smokers have no motivation.
|
|||
|
6. What about the children?
|
|||
|
Anyone who advocates hemp/marijuana reform will hear these
|
|||
|
statements time and again. But these engaging yet specious
|
|||
|
arguments cannot hold up to rational scrutiny. Let's look at them
|
|||
|
individually:
|
|||
|
1."Marijuana alters consciousness."
|
|||
|
Granted;but how is that bad? People who argue against getting
|
|||
|
on this natural herb often suggest getting "high on life" or "high
|
|||
|
on God." This says that getting high is not, in itself, wrong.
|
|||
|
The real issue is freedom of thought. Eating chocolate,
|
|||
|
drinking coffee, watching TV, drinking beer, smoking cigarettes,
|
|||
|
even prayer and meditation alter consciousness. Who gave
|
|||
|
prohibitionists the power to dictate to the rest of us what we can
|
|||
|
or cannot do for fun? Will they ban these pastimes one day, too?
|
|||
|
Neither the U.S. Constitution nor the Bible prohibits
|
|||
|
marijuana use. In fact, the Bible says God gave man "all" the seed
|
|||
|
bearing plants to use and the Declaration of Independence
|
|||
|
specifically declares that we have a right to the "pursuit of
|
|||
|
happiness." But people who make certain choices are now persecuted
|
|||
|
for doing so.
|
|||
|
2."We already have so much trouble with alcohol, tobacco and bad
|
|||
|
driving; why make matters worse?"
|
|||
|
If you think we have an alcohol problem today, just remember
|
|||
|
the "Roaring Twenties," when competing liquor outlets used to send
|
|||
|
carloads of gangsters out with machine guns to settle their
|
|||
|
differences.
|
|||
|
The criminal violence caused by Prohibition (the 18th
|
|||
|
Amendment) were so much worse than the effects of drinking that the
|
|||
|
American people soon voted in the 21st Amendment, and liquor was
|
|||
|
re-legalized.
|
|||
|
Society has since learned to cope with alcohol use, just as we
|
|||
|
have accepted marijuana use for thousands of years. People are
|
|||
|
quick to adapt, and most knowledgeable sources agree that marijuana
|
|||
|
smokers are generally peaceful, law-abiding people. In fact, they
|
|||
|
are often among the nicest people you'll meet.
|
|||
|
Drinking can lead to reckless driving. You shouldn't drive
|
|||
|
when using common medicines like antihistamines, either. This is a
|
|||
|
matter of common sense and personal responsibility. No one should
|
|||
|
ever drive if they are not fully alert and capable of doing so.
|
|||
|
Also affecting public safety, alcohol and tobacco carry health
|
|||
|
risks that marijuana does not have. Some 500,000 people a year die
|
|||
|
from using tobacco or alcohol, but not one single person ever died
|
|||
|
from smoking marijuana in all of history. In fact, cannabis has
|
|||
|
hundreds of proven medical uses. Society might set age limits on
|
|||
|
marijuana use, as we have for alcohol and tobacco, but it is
|
|||
|
criminal to have set prison terms.
|
|||
|
3."Ending marijuana prohibition 'sends the wrong message'--that we
|
|||
|
condone drugs."
|
|||
|
Prohibition is not about sending messages: It's about sending
|
|||
|
people to jail. And prison cannot rehabilitate patriotic Americans
|
|||
|
who believe that the marijuana law is unconstitutional and immoral.
|
|||
|
Marijuana is not a manufactured drug: It's a natural herb.
|
|||
|
Some people enjoy smoking, others don't. It's just a matter of
|
|||
|
taste. A difference of opinion: And that's what democracy is all
|
|||
|
about. Experts predict that marijuana use will level off soon after
|
|||
|
prohibition ends and people will reduce their use of hard drugs.
|
|||
|
So, the real message of prohibition is this: Despite all the
|
|||
|
safeguards in the Constitution, petty tyrants still spread lies and
|
|||
|
take away the freedoms of others.
|
|||
|
If we want society to send the "right" message, we must do it
|
|||
|
through honest educational programs about personal freedom and
|
|||
|
responsibility. Ending prohibition will be the first part of that
|
|||
|
lesson.
|
|||
|
4. "Some people just can't cope with marijuana use."
|
|||
|
That;s right: About 10% of Americans have addictive
|
|||
|
personalities and they should avoid marijuana.
|
|||
|
Each of us has the right to say "no" to marijuana: But the 90%
|
|||
|
of us who can control our appetites also have a right to say "yes,"
|
|||
|
if we so desire.
|
|||
|
Let's not ruin our lives with hysterical laws that do nothing
|
|||
|
to solve the real problems facing society.
|
|||
|
5."Marijuana smokers have no motivation."
|
|||
|
Blaming marijuana is just a cop out. The Beatles wrote many of
|
|||
|
their finest tunes while being quite open about smoking pot. Judge
|
|||
|
Douglas Ginsburg was nominated for the Supreme Court and many
|
|||
|
members of Congress, as well as successful professionals and
|
|||
|
working people have smoked marijuana.
|
|||
|
When a person loses motivation, there are usually many factors
|
|||
|
to consider. They need our understanding and help. Arresting them
|
|||
|
and putting them in prison does not solve these problems: It makes
|
|||
|
matters worse.
|
|||
|
Most people prefer to smoke marijuana for relaxation or
|
|||
|
creative inspiration during leisure hours--not when they have work
|
|||
|
to do. And if marijuana smokers are so unmotivated, how come it
|
|||
|
takes urine tests, blood samples and hair analysis to tell who
|
|||
|
smokes it?
|
|||
|
The simple fact is that most marijuana smokers are highly
|
|||
|
motivated and productive citizens.
|
|||
|
6."What about the children?"
|
|||
|
An excellent question. What kind of world are we making for
|
|||
|
our children: One full of prisons, secret police and intrusive laws
|
|||
|
that encourage them to spy on their own parents. I say, let's build
|
|||
|
them a world that respects each individual while it educates them
|
|||
|
about the responsible use of freedom.
|
|||
|
This is precisely why we must repeal prohibition. Not only
|
|||
|
will it protect the rights and liberties that generations of
|
|||
|
Americans have fought and died for: Hemp will also provide our
|
|||
|
children with a healthy environment and a sustainable economy to
|
|||
|
live in.
|
|||
|
Throughout history, hemp has been a help to our human society.
|
|||
|
It now holds the key to our future.
|
|||
|
HEMP FOR HEALTH
|
|||
|
Compiled by the Business Alliance for Commerce in Hemp (BACH)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HEMP HAS A LONG, PROUD HISTORY OF MEDICAL USE AND HUNDREDS OF
|
|||
|
THERAPEUTIC APPLICATIONS.
|
|||
|
For more than 3,500 years, Hemp has been (depending on the
|
|||
|
culture or nation) either the most used or one of the most widely
|
|||
|
used plants for medicines. This includes: China, India, the Middle
|
|||
|
and Near East, Africa and Europe. From 1850 to 1937, Hemp was
|
|||
|
America's prime medicine for more than 100 separate illnesses or
|
|||
|
diseases.
|
|||
|
Research by Dr. Raphael Mechoulam, etc. indicates that when
|
|||
|
Cannabis Hemp is legally available, it will directly replace some
|
|||
|
10%-20% of all prescription pharmaceutical drugs and that probably
|
|||
|
40%-50% of all medicines could use derivatives of the cannabis
|
|||
|
plant.
|
|||
|
_______________________
|
|||
|
HEMP FOR HEALTH-Medical uses of Hemp include treating back pain,
|
|||
|
asthma, glaucoma, epilepsy, cancer, muscle spasms, migraines,
|
|||
|
tumors, stress, depression and anorexia. It is an antibiotic and
|
|||
|
expectorant, useful in muscle ointments and to treat arthritis and
|
|||
|
rheumatism. Hundreds of other therapeutic uses are likely, but
|
|||
|
hard-to-get permits are required to use it, and the federal
|
|||
|
government banned research into medical use of Hemp, so millions of
|
|||
|
people continue to suffer needlessly, and a valuable herbal
|
|||
|
medicine with minimal side-effects is held hostage by out-of-date-
|
|||
|
laws.
|
|||
|
Cannabis users statistically live one or two years longer than
|
|||
|
non-users. Hemp offers affordable health care for America.
|
|||
|
________________________
|
|||
|
HEMP HELPS ASTHMA-Medicines based on hemp would be most beneficial
|
|||
|
to young people, bringing a lifetime of relief and adding years to
|
|||
|
their lives. Asthma symptoms could be permanently reduced. Hemp
|
|||
|
eases the symptoms of epilepsy and prevents glaucoma from
|
|||
|
developing, bringing effective relief to those unfortunate enough
|
|||
|
to suffer from these illnesses.
|
|||
|
_________________________
|
|||
|
HEMP FOR CANCER-Hemp reduces the nausea suffered by chemotherapy
|
|||
|
patients. This same characteristic has also recently been utilized
|
|||
|
by AIDS patients and is sometimes indicated for motion sickness
|
|||
|
(sea sickness.)
|
|||
|
__________________________
|
|||
|
HEMP SAVES EYES- Medical Hemp would benefit some 90% of victims of
|
|||
|
glaucoma, a blinding disease. Cannabis does not cure it or reverse
|
|||
|
the loss of vision, but can halt the glaucoma sufferer's
|
|||
|
progressive deterioration of eyesight.
|
|||
|
___________________________
|
|||
|
HEMP FOR ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATISM-A traditional treatment for these
|
|||
|
ailments is to soak cannabis in alcohol and apply it locally in a
|
|||
|
poultice.
|
|||
|
____________________________
|
|||
|
HEMP RELIEVES STRESS-Cannabis reduces mental agitation and ulcers.
|
|||
|
One out of two American marriages end in divorce and domestic
|
|||
|
violence is on the increase. Studies indicate that these problems
|
|||
|
often result from the stress and depressed sex drive associated
|
|||
|
with the fast pace of modern life. Hemp is well known for its
|
|||
|
ability to reduce stress and promote relaxation, and has long been
|
|||
|
regarded as an aphrodisiac, yet it is not available on the open
|
|||
|
market.
|
|||
|
_____________________________
|
|||
|
CANNABIS WAS WITHDRAWN FROM THE AMERICAN PUBLIC in 1938 against the
|
|||
|
advice of the medical community. Hemp was moved from the Class 2
|
|||
|
schedule of drugs (having demonstrated medical value) and listed as
|
|||
|
Class 1 (dangerous substance with no known medical value) by the
|
|||
|
Nixon administration in 1970-despite all evidence to the contrary-
|
|||
|
and was retained as Class 1 by the Bush administration in 1989.
|
|||
|
In 1972 the Nixon-appointed Shafer Commission urged that
|
|||
|
cannabis be re-legalized, which was not done. Still, medical
|
|||
|
research continued--often with remarkable results. Cannabis was
|
|||
|
shown to help treat numerous health problems with very few side
|
|||
|
effects.
|
|||
|
Eleven states went on to adopt laws authorizing prescription
|
|||
|
use of medical marijuana.
|
|||
|
______________________________
|
|||
|
MORE RESEARCH IS NEEDED--At the 1975 National Institute of Drug
|
|||
|
Abuse (NIDA) Asilomar Conference, participants were amazed at the
|
|||
|
documented results of marijuana research and agreed that a massive
|
|||
|
national research project was in order. Instead, all federal
|
|||
|
research grants were terminated in 1976 and subsequent private
|
|||
|
research has been heavily restricted.
|
|||
|
By late 1983 the Reagan/Bush administration had destroyed
|
|||
|
large amounts of data compiled in government sponsored marijuana
|
|||
|
research and put out a feeler to private and state universities to
|
|||
|
destroy their own records. Most refused to do so.
|
|||
|
In September, 1988, DEA Administrative Judge Francis Young
|
|||
|
concluded that cannabis should be rescheduled as Class 2 and made
|
|||
|
available for medical use. It has not been. Write to your
|
|||
|
representatives and ask that Hemp be re-legalized for use in
|
|||
|
America.
|
|||
|
There are thousands of other uses for Hemp: textiles, paper,
|
|||
|
fiber, food, fuel, medicine and more.
|
|||
|
______________________________
|
|||
|
FOR MORE INFORMATION we recommend that you read "The Emperor Wears
|
|||
|
No Clothes," by Jack Herer and "The Medical Marijuana Papers" by
|
|||
|
Dr. Tod Mikurya. For more information on hemp or to support the re-
|
|||
|
legalization of hemp/marijuana, send $1 + SASE to:Business Alliance
|
|||
|
for Commerce in Hemp (BACH) P.O.Box 71093, L.A. CA 90071-0093. THE
|
|||
|
EMPEROR is available at HEMP etc. 1090 S Wadsworth, Unit D,
|
|||
|
Lakewood. They also have a nice line of legal non-smoking Hemp
|
|||
|
products such as clothing, hemp-oil, hemp based foods, etc.
|
|||
|
For More Information Call 303/470-1100.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HARVARD MEDICAL REPORT ON MARIJUANA
|
|||
|
--excerpted from the Harvard Medical School Mental
|
|||
|
Health Letter, November 1987
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although still illegal, marijuana has become a commonplace
|
|||
|
part of the American social scene, used regularly by millions and
|
|||
|
occasionally by millions more. A realistic view of this drug is now
|
|||
|
more important and easier to achieve.
|
|||
|
The use of marijuana reached a high point in the late 1970's
|
|||
|
and early 1980's, and has been declining ever since. In a 1978
|
|||
|
survey, 37% of high school seniors said they had smoked marijuana
|
|||
|
in the last 30 days, and 11% said they used it daily. By 1986 the
|
|||
|
number who said they had smoked it in the last 30 days had fallen
|
|||
|
to 23%--lower than in 1975--and the proportion of daily users had
|
|||
|
dropped steadily to 4%. The trend among people\ aged 18 to 25 is
|
|||
|
similar. More people over 25 may now be using it occasionally, and
|
|||
|
young people are still experimenting with it.
|
|||
|
The main active ingredient of cannabis is delta-9-
|
|||
|
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). one of more than 60 related chemicals
|
|||
|
found in the resin that covers the flowers and top leaves of the
|
|||
|
cannabis (hemp) plant. Leaves and flowers can be ground up in
|
|||
|
drinks or food, but are more often dried and smoked in a cigarette
|
|||
|
or pipe. The pure resin, known as hashish, can also be smoked,
|
|||
|
eaten or drunk. New breeding and cultivation techniques have raised
|
|||
|
the THC content of marijuana smoked in the United States as much as
|
|||
|
10 times over the last 20 years, from an average of 0.4% to 4%.
|
|||
|
EFFECTS: The effects last two to four hours when marijuana is
|
|||
|
smoked, and five to 12 hours when taken by mouth. Although
|
|||
|
intoxication varies with psychological set and social setting, the
|
|||
|
most common response is a calm, mildly euphoric state in which time
|
|||
|
slows and sensitivity to sights, sounds and touch is enhanced.
|
|||
|
The smoker may feel exhilaration or hilarity and notice a
|
|||
|
rapid flow of ideas with a reduction in short-term memory. Images
|
|||
|
sometimes appear before closed eyes;visual perception and body
|
|||
|
image may undergo subtle changes. It is dangerous to operate
|
|||
|
complex machinery, including automobiles, under the influence of
|
|||
|
marijuana.
|
|||
|
The main physiological effects of cannabis are increased
|
|||
|
appetite a faster heartbeat, and sightly bloodshot eyes.
|
|||
|
NEGATIVE REACTIONS: Although the increased heart rate could be
|
|||
|
a problem for people with cardiovascular disease, dangerous
|
|||
|
physical reactions to marijuana are almost unknown.
|
|||
|
No human being is known to have died of an overdose. Like many
|
|||
|
other drugs, cannabis produces a toxic delirium when taken at very
|
|||
|
high doses, especially by mouth. The symptoms are confusion,
|
|||
|
agitation, disorientation, loss of coordination, and often
|
|||
|
hallucination; the delirium ends when the drug passes out of the
|
|||
|
body. The most common disturbing reaction to marijuana is acute
|
|||
|
anxiety, sometimes accompanied by paranoid thoughts, which may lead
|
|||
|
to panic. The most likely victim of this reaction is an
|
|||
|
inexperienced user inadvertently taking a high dose in an
|
|||
|
unpleasant or unfamiliar setting. The best way to handle the
|
|||
|
anxiety and paranoia is calming support and reassurance.
|
|||
|
Cannabis is less potent than hallucinogenic or psychedelic
|
|||
|
drugs and the user is better able to control its effects.
|
|||
|
LONG TERM EFFECTS: In recent years the psychological and
|
|||
|
physical effects of long-term use have caused the most concern.
|
|||
|
Studies are often conflicting and permit various views of
|
|||
|
marijuana's possible harmfulness.
|
|||
|
Two recognized signs of addiction are tolerance and withdrawal
|
|||
|
symptoms. These are rarely a serious problem for marijuana users:
|
|||
|
almost no one reports an urgent need to increase the dose to
|
|||
|
recapture the original sensation, and there is little evidence that
|
|||
|
withdrawal ordinarily presents serious problems to users, or causes
|
|||
|
them to go on taking the drug.
|
|||
|
People suffering from drug dependence find that they are
|
|||
|
constantly thinking about the drug, or intoxicated, or recovering
|
|||
|
from its effects. The habit impairs their mental and physical
|
|||
|
health and hurts their work, family life, and friendships. They
|
|||
|
often know that they are using too much and repeatedly make
|
|||
|
unsuccessful attempts to cut down or stop. Those problems seem to
|
|||
|
occur in proportionately fewer marijuana smokers than users of
|
|||
|
alcohol, tobacco, heroin or cocaine.
|
|||
|
Most people who develop marijuana dependency would be would be
|
|||
|
likely to develop other dependencies because of anxiety, depression
|
|||
|
or feelings of inadequacy. The troubled teen who smokes cannabis
|
|||
|
throughout the school day certainly has a problem, and excessive
|
|||
|
use may be one symptom.
|
|||
|
BEHAVIORAL EFFECTS: Experiments in the U.S. show no effects of
|
|||
|
fairly heavy marijuana use on learning, perception or motivation
|
|||
|
over periods as long as a year.
|
|||
|
In three major studies, conducted in Jamaica, Costa Rica and
|
|||
|
Greece, researchers compared heavy long-term cannabis users with
|
|||
|
non-users and found no evidence of intellectual or neurological
|
|||
|
damage, no changes in personality, and no loss of the will to work
|
|||
|
or to participate in society.
|
|||
|
Much attention has also been devoted to the idea that
|
|||
|
marijuana smoking leads to use of other illicit drugs: the
|
|||
|
"stepping stone" hypothesis. There is no convincing evidence for or
|
|||
|
against this. What is clear is that at many times and places
|
|||
|
marijuana has been used without these drugs, or these drugs have
|
|||
|
been used without marijuana.
|
|||
|
REPRODUCTION: Most recent studies on the health hazards of
|
|||
|
marijuana concerns its long-term effects on the body. Studies have
|
|||
|
examined the brain, the immune system, the reproductive system, and
|
|||
|
the lungs. Suggestions of long-term damage come almost exclusively
|
|||
|
from animal experiments and other laboratory work. Observations of
|
|||
|
marijuana users and the Caribbean, Greek and other studies reveal
|
|||
|
little disease or organic pathology associated with the drug. If
|
|||
|
there were significant damage, we might expect to find a higher
|
|||
|
rate of these diseases among young people beginning in the 1960's,
|
|||
|
when marijuana first became popular. There is no evidence of that.
|
|||
|
The effects of marijuana on the reproductive system are a more
|
|||
|
complicated issue. In men, a single dose of THC lowers sperm count
|
|||
|
and the level of testosterone and other hormones. Tolerance to this
|
|||
|
effect apparently develops; in the Costa Rican study, marijuana
|
|||
|
smokers and controls had the same testosterone levels. There is no
|
|||
|
evidence that the changes in sperm count and testosterone affect
|
|||
|
sexual performance or fertility.
|
|||
|
In animal experiments, THC has been reported to lower levels
|
|||
|
of female hormones and disturb the menstrual cycle. When monkeys,
|
|||
|
rats and mice have been exposed during pregnancy to amounts of THC
|
|||
|
equivalent to a heavy smoking human's dose, stillbirths and
|
|||
|
decreased birth weight are sometimes reported in their offspring.
|
|||
|
There are also reports of low birth weight, prematurity and even a
|
|||
|
condition resembling the fetal alcohol syndrome in some children of
|
|||
|
women who smoke marijuana heavily during pregnancy.
|
|||
|
The significance of these reports is unclear because controls
|
|||
|
are lacking and other circumstances make is hard to attribute
|
|||
|
causes. To be safe, pregnant and nursing women should follow the
|
|||
|
standard conservative recommendation to avoid all drugs, including
|
|||
|
cannabis, that are not absolutely necessary.
|
|||
|
LUNGS: A well-confirmed danger of long-term heavy marijuana
|
|||
|
use is its effects on the lungs. Smoking narrows and inflames air
|
|||
|
passages and reduces breathing capacity; damage to bronchial cells
|
|||
|
has been observed in hashish smokers. Possible harmful effects
|
|||
|
include bronchitis, emphysema and lung cancer. Marijuana smoke
|
|||
|
contains the same carcinogens as tobacco smoke, usually in somewhat
|
|||
|
higher concentrations, and is inhaled more deeply and held in the
|
|||
|
lungs longer, which increases the danger. On the other hand, almost
|
|||
|
no one smokes 20 marijuana cigarettes a day.
|
|||
|
Higher THC content in cannabis may reduce the danger of
|
|||
|
respiratory damage, because less smoke is required for the desired
|
|||
|
effect. This is only true as long as no significant tolerance
|
|||
|
develops and users do not try to get proportionately more intense
|
|||
|
effect from a stronger form of the drug.
|
|||
|
END
|
|||
|
|