325 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
325 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
THE BENEFITS OF CANNABIS
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The facts cited herein on marijuana are generally verifiable in
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the Encyclopedia Brittanica, which was printed on Cannabis hemp paper for
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150 years. Other facts and anecdotes are source cited in brevity.
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Hempstead, Long Island; Hempstead County, Texas; Hempstead County,
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Arkansas; Hemp Hill, North Carolina, among others, were all so named because
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they were marijuana growing regions. All schoolbooks were made from hemp
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and/or flax paper until the 1880s, and most schoolbooks were still made
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with Cannabis fiber until the early 1900s. (Hemp Paper Reconsidered, Jack
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Frazier, 1974). Seventy-five to ninety per cent of all paper in the world
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was made from Cannabis hemp until 1883. Most books, maps, etc. were made
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from Cannabis hemp fiber. The Declaration of Independence was initinally
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printed on Cannabis hemp linen paper. The California Marijuana Initiative
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asked the U.S. Government Archives, who would be no more specific than to
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answer "linen". Hemp is a perfect archival medium. (U.S. Government
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Archives and U.S. Library of Congress).
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It was legal to pay taxes with Cannabis hemp in the United States
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from 1631 until the early 1800s. (Los Angeles Times, Aug. 12, 1981, and other
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sources). Refusing to grow Cannabis hemp was against the law in the United
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States during the 17th and 18th century; one could be jailed in Virginia for
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refusing to grow hemp from 1763 to 1769. (L.A. Times, Aug. 1981, and Hemp in
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Colonial Virginia, G.M. Herdon).
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George Washington and Thomas Jefferson grew Cannabis, a fact described in
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their diaries and garden books. In 1860 the Ohio State Medical Society
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concurred with biblical scholars that "The gall and vinegar or myrrhed
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wine offered to our Savior immediately before his crucifixion was in all
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probability a preparation of Indian hemp." (reprinted with the transactions
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of the 15th annual meeting of the Ohio Medical Society at White Sulphur
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Springs, June 12 through 14, 1860, page 75-100).
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Cannabis hemp is the longest, most durable, and longest lasting
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natural fiber known to exist on the earth. Ninety per cent of all ships
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sails were made from Cannabis hemp since before Christ until the 1930s. the
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word canvas is the Dutch pronunciation of the Greek word cannabis.
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(Webster's New World Dictionary, and other sources). Virtually all canvas
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paintings were painted on Cannabis hemp linen canvas. Eighty per cent of
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all textiles - fabrics, clothing, linen, drapes, rugs, bedsheets, etc. -
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were made from Cannabis hemp until the 1820s. The national flag itself was
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made from Cannabis hemp. Virtually all stocks and bonds were printed on
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hemp paper until the 1950s. (Jeffries Bank Note Company, Los Angeles, CA).
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By the 1820s, industrial cotton gins allowed cotton to be produced
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at less cost than hand separating hemp fiber which was then hand spun on
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Spinning Jennys. Hemp was the second most used natural fiber in the United
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States until the 1930s, when it was replaced mostly be new Du Pont plastic
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fibers under license of 1936 German patents. Hemp fiber paper was replaced
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by the cheaper wood pulp sulphide process around 1883. Again, Du Pont was
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a recipient of the displaced Cannabis fiber business, with new wood pulp
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sulphide process patents in 1937. Ninety per cent of all rope and twine was
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made from Cannabis hemp until 1937. Hemp rope and twine has been replaced
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mostly by petrochemical fibers, produced principally by Du Pont.
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Marijuana seed was used in porridge, soups, and gruel by virtually
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all the people of the world daily until the twentieth century. Monks were
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required to eat it three times a day, they made their clothing from hemp, and
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printed their Bibles on hemp. (Therapeutic Potential of Marijuana, and
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Research Institute for Study of Man, and Eastern Orthodox Church). Australia
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survived two prolonged famines in the 19th century using virtually nothing
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but marijuana seed for protein and marijuana leaves for roughage. (Australia
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history books, and the Marijuana Farmer, Jack Frazier, 1972).
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The Marijuana seed, which is technically a fruit, is the second
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most complete protein source known, after soybeans. The enzymes and
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endistins contained in marijuana seed break down food nutrients to allow
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easier digestion and more food value. (The Therapeutic Potential of
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Marijuana, and three European studies). Marijuana seed contains a higher
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percentage of enzymes and amino acids than any other food, including
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soybeans, and like soybeans can be made to taste like chicken, beef, tofu,
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etc. at five to ten per cent the cost of soybean protein. Domestic animals
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could also be fed for less than 20 per cent of current costs. (Marijuana
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Farmer). Marijuana can be grown very poor soil, is an excellent rotation
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crop (USDA), there is no THC content in the seed.
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All good paints and varnisheds were made from Cannabis seed oil
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until 1937. (Sherwin Williams Paint Company testimony before Congress
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against the 1937 Hemp Tax Transfer Law). One hundred sixteen million pounds
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(58 thousand tons) of Cannabis seed were used in the United States for paint
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manufacture in 1935. The Cannabis oil business displaced when Cannabis
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production became illegal went to Du Pont petrochemicals.
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A hemp pulp paper process was invented in 1916 by the U.S.
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Department of Agriculture. The U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1916
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wrote that one acre of Cannabis hemp for pulp would replace 4 and a half
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acres of trees being cut down for pulp, as soon as the technology is
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available. This technology became available in the mid 1930s and is detailed
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in the Feb. 1938 issue of Popular Mechanics Magazine. The Hearst Paper
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Manufacturing Division and Kimberly Clark Co. and other established
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concerns could have been hurt by this development for
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billions of dollars. Hearst Newspaper led the fight to have marijuana
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outlawed in 1936-37 and later admitted to yellow journalism. The testimony
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before Congress in 1937 in favor of making Cannabis illegal consisted
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almost entirely of Hearst Newspaper articles read aloud by Anslinger.
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Anslinger was Director of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics from 1931 to 1961.
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Prior to 1931, Anslinger had been Assistant U.S. Commissioner for
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Prohibition. Anslinger was picked to head the Federal Bureau of Narcotics
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by his uncle-in-law, Andrew Mellon, the Secretary of the Treasury under
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Hoover, and by the owner of Mellon Bank, Pittsburgh, the sixth largest U.S.
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bank, and a banker for Du Pont since 1928.
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In 1937 Anslinger testified before Congress that "Marijuana is the
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most violence-causing drug in the history of mankind." After the 1944 New
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York City La Guardia Marijuana Report refuting marijuana causing violence at
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all, Anslinger changed his tune before Congress by 1948, when he told
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Congress that he no longer thought marijuana violence-causing, but "a much
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more dangerous drug than America than that." He testified that "Marijuana
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causes its users to become so peaceful and pacifistic that in the future
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American boys will not want to fight in our wars." Anslinger also warned
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Congress that "The Communists could use marijuana to sap our will to
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fight." This represents a reversal of the reasoning which originally
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produced marijuana's illegalization in this country in 1937. Anslinger
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retired in 1961. (Omni Magazine, Sept. 1982)
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CANNABIS USE TODAY
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Today China makes very popular hemp/cotton textiles. (The National
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Textile Co., Shanghai, China. Canada, England and others still use hemp
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fiber in their paper money. It lasts three times longer than U.S. money.
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If Cannabis hemp were legal to grow with 20th century technology,
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it would again be the single largest agricultural crop in the United States,
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without even considering recreational smoking. (The U.S. Department of
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Agriculture). If the hemp pulp paper process invented by the USDA in 1916
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were legal today, it would replace 40 to 70 per cent of wood pulp paper,
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and make a better and cheaper paper, with no acid rain produced in its
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manufacture. (The U.S. Department of Agriculture).
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MEDICINAL PROPERTIES OF CANNABIS
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For more than 3,500 years marijuana has been one of the most
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widely used drugs for oriental medicine. From 1850 to 1937 American
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Pharmacopeia prescribed marijuana for more than 100 separate illnesses or
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diseases. From 1842 to the 1880's marijuana was one of the most used drugs
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in the United States to treat the illnesses of adults and children.The
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American Medical Association testified against the 1937 Marijuana Tax Act.
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(Dr. James Woodward, 1937, before Congress). The United States Government
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forbid marijuana research for 30 years from 1931 to 1961. An active
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ingredient of marijuana, Delta-9 THC was isolated in 1964-1965 by Israeli
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scientists. More than 400 of a suspected 1,000 different ingredients of
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marijuana have been isolated since 1964.Recent research (1966 through
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1976) reconfirms marijuana to be the medicine of choice, best and safest,
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for glaucoma, for epilepsy, for muscular spasms, for reduction of tumors,
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for control of nausea in cancer chemotherapy, for emphysema, migraine,
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depression, and anorexia nervosa.Eighty percent of asthmatic - more than
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15 million people are affected - could add two to four years to their
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lifespans, especially children, over the benefits of presently legal and
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toxic medicines, by using marijuana (UCLA 1969-1975, and Therapeutic
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Potential for Marijuana, and Life Insurance Actuarial Rates, 1985). Ninety
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percent of glaucoma victims can benefit from the use of marijuana.
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California eye doctors will tell their patients, discreetly, to use
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marijuana to save their eyes. (Harvard; UCLA; Medical College of Georgia;
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University of North Carolina School of Medicine, 1975; The Therapeutic
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Potential of Marijuana; and the National Eye Institute). Marijuana is two
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to three times as effective as any currently legal medicines for reducing
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ocular pressure, without toxic side effects destroying liver and kidneys,
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toxic effects associated with present legal glaucoma drugs. As far as the
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California Marijuana Initiative can determine, no Californian receives
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marijuana legally for glaucoma, even though California law (1979)
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allows for medicinal use of marijuana. This provision is not implemented
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because of the current Federal Natural Marijuana Prohibition, and past
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California State Attorney General Deukmejians's thwarting of doctors' and
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researchers' ability to acquire legal supplies of marijuana from him
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within the program passed by our legislators. (L.A. Times, 1982; and
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Patrick Mayers). Marijuana is also the supreme dilator of the airways, the
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bronchi, opening them up to allow more oxygen into the blood. Marijuana is
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the best dilator of the little air tubes of the lungs, the bronchioles.
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Marijuana is the best overall bronchiole dilator. (Therapeutic Potential
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of Marijuana, and studies by Taskin at UCLA from 1969 through 1983, and
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the U.S. Costa Rican Studies, 1982). The original Costa rican Report was
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ordered suppressed by the Reagan Administration. A copy was snuck out to
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the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. The Reagan
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Administration and National Institute for Health ordered the Costa Rican
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Report rewritten three times, then finally rewrote the report themselves.
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The N.I.H. ordered only 300 copies to be printed. To read the suppressed
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original Costa Rican Report ordered by the U.S. Government would make you
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cry.
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The extrapolations of health potentials are extraordinary. Medical
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research indicates that light marijuana smoking would be the therapy of
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choice for mild emphysema to allow more fresh areas of the bronchi to
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open up for more oxygen transfer, and increase the quality of life
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greatly for tens of millions of sufferers of emphysema. (UCLA, 1974-1975).
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All research into the oxygen transfer effects caused by marijuana indicates
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that chest pains, shallowness of breath, headaches, etc., which are
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symptomatic of heavy smog exposure are usually alleviated entirely by the
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light smoking of marijuana throughout the day. (Marijuana Pulmonary Research,
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Taskin, UCLA, 1969-1983). Marijuana is the best natural expectorant to void
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lungs of smog. Marijuana completely alleviates most migraine headaches most
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of the time.
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It is estimated that, if legal, marijuana would replace more than fifty
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percent of Valium, Librium, Stellazine, etc. (Therapeutic Potential of
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Marijuana). Marijuana is the best way presently known to dry the mouth's
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saliva, in dentistry. If legal, it would replace the highly toxic
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Probanthine, manufactured by Searle & Co. Marijuana is also the best
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relaxant and back spasm medicine available short of morphine.Marijuana is
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the best herb known for reducing malignant and benign tumors. Until 1937
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virtually all fistula, corns, and fibrosis were treated with poltices made
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from or treated with marijuana extracts. (The Therapeutic Potential of
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Marijuana and Marijuana Medical Papers, 1972).Sixty percent of epileptics
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can benefit from the use of marijuana. It is considered to be the best
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medication for many types od epilepsy, and for most victim's post seizure
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trauma.
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(The Therapeutic Potential of Marijuana, Cohen/Stillman, UCLA, 1976).
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The Drug Enforcement Administration and the U.S. Government ordered (then
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ordered suppressed) studies done at the Medical College of Virginia. After
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notable success in the research, orders were given by the DEA and the
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National Institute of Health, to cease all research and reports in 1975.
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(The Therapeutic Potential of Marijuana, and personal interviews with the
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doctors and researchers who conducted the research, by the California
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Marijuana Initiative in Washington, D.C., Nov. 1982). This study was
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ordered originally on the premise that marijuana would harm the immune
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system, based on studies done by Dr. Gabriel Nahas, Columbia University,
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1972. The same Dr. Nahas who said marijuana created chromosome damage, etc.
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Nahas is still the favorite of DEA and National Institute of Drug Abuse,
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yet no anti-marijuana studies done by Nahas have ever been replicated in
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six other university researches. Columbia University disassociated
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themselves, specifically, from Nahas researches in a University Press
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Conference in 1975. Old, discredited Nahas studies are still trotted out
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and used by the DEA today to give unknowledgeable parents, PTA, etc. as
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valid research regarding marijuana.Marijuana is the best agent for control
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of nausea in cancer chemotherapy. (UCLA, Dr. Thomas Underleider, head of
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California's Marijuana for Cancer Research Project, 1979-1983). Patrick
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Mayers in 1979 was instrumental in getting the California Legislature to
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pass legislation allowing for medical use of marijuana in California.
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Mayer's life was saved in 1976 when his doctor advised him, to illegally
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to use marijuana for his chemotherapy nausea. At the time Mayer's weight
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was down to 93 pounds.
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Mayers was shocked in 1981 when Deukmejian, then Attorney General, in charge
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of the medical supply program, was absolutely refusing to supply the
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confiscated marijuana he had been legally authorized to dispense to doctors
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prescribing marijuana for their patients. At this point Mayers convinced
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the L.A. Times and other public media to demand implementation of the
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1979 California Medicine Law.It is estimated by the National Organization
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for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) and by Omni Magazine that Eli
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Lilly Company; Abbot Laboratories; Smith, Kline, and French, Inc.; etc.
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would lose hundreds of millions to billions of dollars if marijuana were
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made legal. U.S. drug companies successfully lobbied the federal
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government to ban all positive research into marijuana in 1976. In return,
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the drug companies would take over research into analogues of synthetic
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THCs, CBSs, CBNs, etc. Eli Lilly Co. came out with Nabilone, a synthetic
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cousin of Delta-9 THC, promising great results. Nabilone is presently
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legal to prescribe only in Canada. Omni Magazine states that after nine
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years Nabilone is still considered virtually useless when compared with
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real marijuana THC.
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After spending millions of dollars in research over the last eight years,
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U.S. drug companies have been unable top synthesize the therapeutic
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qualities of natural marijuana THC. (Omni Magazine).NORML concludes
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that the reason drug companies want only synthetic THCs to be legal
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is to prevent anyone extracting and marketing the natural ingredients of
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marijuana, interfering with their own monopoly-protected profit. Eli Lilly
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Co. would stand to lose a third of their patented monopoly, including
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Darvon, Tuinal and Seconal patented line.
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The U.S. drug companies presently supply almost half of all funding for
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the 4,000 "Families Against Marijuana" type organizations in the U.S.
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The other half of the funding is from ACTION, a federal VISTA agency.It
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is interesting to note President Bush's anti drug stance. Bush is one of
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Eli Lilly Co.'s largest stockholders, and was director of the Eli Lilly Co.
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from 1977 to 1979. Bush's family owns controlling interest in Eli Lilly
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Company. (Internal Revenue Service).
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THE POLITICS OF MARIJUANA AND A SCENARIO
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The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) is still pressuring Latin
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American countries to use paraquat, a deadly herbicide. Mexico has been
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spraying fields with paraquat, much of this sprayed marijuana makes its way
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to the United States. Science Digest (a Hearst Publication) June 1983,
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NORML, L.A. Times, USA Today, and others state that paraquat is a very
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dangerous chemical and a singularly hideous way to die. It is a heinous
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crime for any government to allow paraquat to its people and its lands.
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The president of Chevron, the U.S. manufacturer of paraquat, has begged
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the U.S. Government, the U.S. State Dept., and the DEA to not use paraquat
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in this manner, as it may kill thousands of innocent people, and constitute
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other grave dangers. (Science Digest, June 1983).
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In July of 1983 the Federal Center for Disease Control in Atlanta,
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Georgia stated that as many as 9,000 Americans may have been poisoned and
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experience dramatically shortened lives because of the use of paraquat in
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marijuana control. In 1978 NORML was able to get the use of paraquat
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stopped, but Reagan prevailed upon Congress in 1981 to reauthorize paraquat
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use in marijuana control, this was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in June
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1983. Seventy percent of all federal, state, and local tax dollars for
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narcotic and drug enforcement is being spent for marijuana enforcement.
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In 1989 there were 327,000 arrests for simple possession of marijuana.
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Operation Green Merchant, which took place in the fall of 1989, was aimed
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at garden stores. Over 440 people were arrested and more than $9 million
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of property was seized. Advertisers in magazines such as High Times were
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targeted and mail-order catalog lists were siezed. About 150 times more
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money is spent on marijuana enforcement than on alcohol enforcement.
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(1981 FBI crime statistics).
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Isn't it interesting that a substance so useful and applicable to so many
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applications is so heavily suppressed by our government? Despite years of
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research and valuable applications marijuana was recently denied an upgrade
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in drug classification which would have still made it illegal except for a
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few specific medical uses (such as anti-nausea during chemotherapy) and
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is still considered a "dangerous substance with no medical use".
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Here is a possible scenario reconstructed from facts which are
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public record. The Hearst Publishing Company can see it coming - heavy
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losses in the companies wood pulp paper holdings. The U.S. Dept. of
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Agriculture itself had in 1916 invented a hemp pulp paper process which
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it proclaimed would, as soon as the technology became available, make
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paper both superior and cheaper than wood pulp paper. This technology
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becomes available in the 30's. At the same time Du Pont, an industry
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directly competing with Cannabis seed oil in paint and other petrochemical
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products, is able to put of their own men into the Federal Bureau of
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Narcotics. This man, Anslinger, then testifies before Congress in 1937,
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mostly reciting Hearst newspaper articles. The result was the 1937 Hemp
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Tax Transfer Law, which made marijuana illegal. Du Pont goes on to become
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a major player in the petrochemical/plastics industry, and secures use of
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their wood pulp paper process and the circle of self-interest is closed.
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It's up to us to re-open the discussion.
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Source:Peacenet
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