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