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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!asuvax!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Robert G Halvorson <norml@henson.cc.wwu.edu>
- Subject: The Weed That Would Save The Planet
- Message-ID: <1992Nov12.091537.14687@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Thu, 12 Nov 1992 09:15:37 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 217
-
- Subject: Fwd: The Weed That Would Save the Planet
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- [Reposted From Various Sources]
-
- The Weed That Would Save the Planet
- Alison Bowman
- This is reprinted without permission from the Santa Cruz Comic
- News' "Hempicenter" foldout (June 6, 1991)
- The Comic News says they've got extra copies of this foldout,
- you can write to them at PO Box 8543, Santa Cruz, CA, 95061.
- The phone number is (408) 426-0113.
- Subscriptions are $20 yearly(24 issues), "anywhere in the US",
- write to Comic News Subs, same address as above.
-
- Commonly known for its illicit use as smoking material,
- the marijuana plant provides environmentally safe paper, fuel,
- food, and health products. It may sound like some stoner's
- pipedream, but advocates have a clear case that the versatile
- cannabis weed may be the crop that saves the planet.
- Current timber, cotton, petroleum, pesticide and
- pharmaceutical industries all have excellent reasons to keep
- the hemp plant stigmatized. Because marijuana, which has been
- a crop central to human civilization since 1000 BC, offers an
- alternative to these industries' product that would involve less
- chemicals, less pollution, and fewer health side-effects, and a
- more independent US economy, say advocates.
- "Right now, people are saying they'd rather see the
- planet die than see their children get high," says Jack Herer,
- author of _The Emperor Wears no Clothes_, a comprehensive book
- on the history of hemp. "In any sane society knowing what we
- know we would reward citizens for using pot." Herer, who legally
- smokes marijuana as part of a long-term research project at
- UCLA, is an outspoken advocate of hemp production to cure
- environmental and health ills.
- Advocates' most astounding claim is that energy from
- hemp plants could replace fossil fuels and thus alleviate the
- Greenhouse Effect. When fuel is burned, it creates carbon
- dioxide, which scientists believe is the main gas responsible
- for planetary warming. If plants are grown for conversion to
- fuel, they naturally absorb much of the CO2 released in the
- burning process, according to Santa Cruz Ecology Action's
- Christopher Williams, a student of renewable energy. In addition
- to possibly reversing the causes of planetary warming, burning
- hemp fuel would release no heavy metals or sulphurs- emissions
- responsible for problems like acid rain. It's no wonder that
- many environmentalists and farmers support the concept of
- growing cannabis for fuel.
- While several plants are candidates for "energy
- farming," hemp is ideal for this use, say advocates. It is
- "the number one biomass producer on planet earth," growing
- several times more organic matter per acre per month than
- comparable plants like sugarcane or corn stalks, according
- to Lynn Osburn, a writer for _Energy Farming In America_.
- Osburn claims that if six percent of continental
- America grew hemp for conversion to energy, the US could
- end its dependency on fossil fuel. In addition to growing
- like crazy, hemp thrives on marginal farmlands, withstands
- drought and requires little if any pesticide use. Osburn
- is not alone in prescribing a hemp crop for farmers in
- economically-depressed dry regions.
- Hemp production has also been touted as the
- environmentally correct alternative to crops like cotton
- that require heavy chemical pesticides and processors.
- Hemp can be harvested to make clothing, cordage, and
- paper products that,in addition to being better for the
- land, cost less to grow and produce than comparable crops.
- Hemp advocates see their product replacing the
- recently-sensationalized timber industry's practises that
- often cause irreversible damage to forest ecology and
- contributes to the Greenhouse Effect by cutting down trees.
- In addition to leaving wild stands of forest alone, hemp
- harvesting for paper would circumvent the chlorine bleaching
- process necessary to make paper from wood.
- Williams explains that wood's lignin content must be
- broken down to make pulp for paper, "rendering the whole mixture
- a black goop, so you have to bleach it to make coffee filters or
- whatever." In addition to being released into the environment
- (usually a river) around the factory, poisonous dioxin residue
- often remains on the paper cups, toilet paper, milk cartons,
- etc., for public consumption.
- Because hemp contains very little lignin, the above
- process is avoided and its pulp can be bleached with harmless
- hydrogen peroxide. Paper made from hemp pulp lasts several times
- longer than wood paper and can be made at a fourth the cost,
- says Herer. For these reasons, many countries print their money
- on hemp paper.
-
- Hemp-fu
- -------
- As if the above environmental benefits of hemp
- production weren't mind-boggling enough, cannabis blows away
- all other crops in the category of nutrition except possibly
- the soybean. The hemp seed has nearly the same protein content
- as soybeans but is more easily digested, says Herer, who bases
- this information on a 1972 US Agriculture Index report entitled
- "The Marijuana Farmers". European studies have found that
- marijuana's enzymes and endistins help break down food
- nutrients, easing digestion for humans and allowing for higher
- absorbtion of food nutrition.
- Hemp margarines, tofu-like curd (or hemp-fu), and seed
- burgers are all high protein hemp seed products that Herer says
- would cost less than soybean alternatives. The nutritional
- benefits are most easily obtained by sprouting the seeds-
- soaking them overnight and then rinsing them daily as one
- would to sprout alfalfa seeds, according to No Guns, a Santa
- Cruz advocate for the legalization of hemp.
- The hemp seed, which contains only trace THC (the
- chemical responsible for pot's psychoactive effects), has
- a remarkably high oil content, says No Guns, who wants to
- experiment on developing cheeses and seed milk from hemp
- seed oil. Because the oil derived from hemp seed is very
- heavy, traditionally it has not been used for cooking.
- However, it has historically been used for oil-burning lamps.
- "This is a perfect food for poorer countries," says No
- Guns. "If you have nothing, you have something with this plant-
- food, oil, cloth, and paper. And it grows anywhere." No Guns
- believes hemp's disappearance from the world's economy is a
- result of the economic independence of such a crop offers to
- nations like China where it has traditionally been grown.
-
- Wonder Drug
- ------ ----
- Marijuana's medicinal property is another traditional
- use suppressed since the plant's criminalization. Relief of
- headaches, nausea, pain, and anxiety remains the most common
- medical use of cannabis, a function that has been replaced by
- more marketable and chemical-laden products like aspirin.
- Self-medicators swear by marijuana to relieve pain. No
- Guns has smoked s mall doses to relieve menstrual cramps and
- headaches for years. "You only take the tiniest toke, too much
- can make your headache worse," she told The Epicenter. She
- began taking regular doses of marijuana cookies instead of
- Tylenol after a serious injury in a car accident.
- What people like No Guns know from experience,
- researchers explain as marijuana's effect on the brain's cover.
- "Marijuana causes a very curious localized dilation of blood
- vessels," says Dr. Tod Mikuriya, MD, a Berkeley psychiatrist and
- author of the book _Marijuana Medical Paper_. This effect causes
- the red eyes associated with marijuana smoking and makes the
- plant especially good for reliving migraine headaches.
- Pain relief only tops the list of cannabis' medical
- uses. The herb is kn own to alleviate nausea, especially that
- has been associated with chemotherapy. It has been found to calm
- patients experiencing asthma, epilepsy, multiples sclerosis,
- and many other diseases. Many doctors believe it can slow the
- irreversible blinding effects of glaucoma. Although a federal
- judge in 1988 acknowledged the valid medical uses of cannabis,
- marijuana remains categorized under the Drug Enforcement
- Agency's Schedule One- the most strict level of control. In
- one significant counterattack on the war on drugs, an appeal
- has been filed on DEA commissioner John Lawn's decision to
- keep marijuana unavailable to US citizens with medical needs.
- Only two people in the US can legally obtain maryjane for
- medical reasons, according to Herer. Meanwhile, doctors
- across the country quietly prescribe expensive street-bought
- pot to patients who need it.
- In any list of hemp plant uses, one must not forget the
- psychoactive effects of marijuana. Although the culturally-
- condemned "high" associated with the plant is used to justify
- its criminal status, advocates say getting stoned is as valid
- a use for the plant as any other.
- Stress and tension disperse when one smokes hemp leaves
- or bud. "I use it when I'm angry to calm down and be more
- human," says No Guns. "People have always used it this way."
- Herer believes that reduced stress helps the immune system and
- contributes to a longer life span. He attributes the outlawing
- of positive research on marijuana-a result of a 1976 federal
- law-to a fear by some in the government that marijuana would be
- found to be a "miracle drug."
- Pharmaceutical companies have tried for decade to
- isolate the marijuana bud's pain-killing and tension-relieving
- effects from its euphoria-causing property with limited success
- and profit. Unfortunately for an industry in which profits
- depend on processing of raw materials, marijuana is best smoked
- whole and unadulterated, says Herer.
-
- Future Research
- ------ --------
- Whether marijuana actually extends one's life span must
- be answered by future research(which has been all but stopped
- in the US). What can be said definitely is that alcohol and
- cigarettes, substances that fill similar needs for humans as
- recreational pot smoking, are no less harmful than cannabis and
- in many ways are far more destructive. For example, alcohol
- often aggravates anger and stress and it is notorious for
- wreaking havoc on the digestive tract and brain cells. Today's
- cigarettes include a waste-dump's worth of chemical additives-
- including radioactive particles, according to a March 1986
- _Reader's Digest_ article.
- Marijuana, on the other hand, doesn't require pesticides
- or processing chemicals. Contrary to popular knowledge, pot was
- found not to damage brain cells by a St. Louis Medical School
- research group, according to an _Omni Magazine_ August 1989
- article. In his recommendation to make marijuana available for
- medical use, Federal Administrative Judge Francis Young said pot
- "is far safer than many foods we commonly consume," and noted
- that not a single death caused by the drug's effect has ever
- been documented.
- In spite of all this, many officials still believe the
- drug's bad effects overwhelm its good ones. "I'd have to be a
- jerk to believe the politicians and a nasty person not to tell
- people to self-medicate themselves," says Herer. He says
- marijuana has been smoked for some 6000 years by humans-
- including many religious users seeking enlightenment. As the
- war on drugs rages on, legalization seems like a hazy and
- vague possibility. But Herer, who travels around the nation
- spreading the word of hemp, thinks "it's only a matter of
- time before reefer madness becomes reefer gladness."
-
- End of newsgroup alt.save.the.earth.
-
- --- FD 1.99c
-
- Origin: EARTH*Net*Home:SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE ECHO*919-929-0677 (1:151/502)
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