The issues surrounding of the plight of the hemp industry really has me upset. Beyond the fact that I my money ends up overseas so that I might eventually obtain hemp to make purses and bags for my Etsy shop, there is the incredible frustration with our federal laws. As we know it is illegal to grow industrial hemp in the United States. Industrial hemp is NOT marijuana. Hemp is one of the most earth-friendly crops on the planet! Legislators simply do not want to hear it. When evidence is presented...another excuse for the ban is produced. The latest one is that growers will sneak marijuana in their hemp fields and cause a drain on law enforcement. Since the two plants cannot grow together due to totally differing agricultural requirements and the marijuana would contaminate the hemp crop and ruin the production of fiber I fail to see the problem.
Is there a huge cotton lobby in this country? Or in California, for that mattter? California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) last Friday vetoed a bill that would have allowed California farmers to grow industrial hemp. Sponsored by Assemblyman Mark Leno (D-San Francisco), Assembly Bill 1147 would have defined industrial hemp as an agricultural crop, limited its THC content to less than 0.3%, and mandated annual testing of fields to ensure content limits are met.
In his veto message, Schwarzenegger said the measure conflicted with federal law and would have made it more difficult for law enforcement to monitor illicit marijuana crops. While he acknowledged recent successful court battles waged by the hemp industry, Schwarzenegger said "no court has specifically ruled that a live cannabis plant is a non-controlled substance or that farming these plants is not a regulated activity.
Schwarzenegger fell for the standard US police excuse that allowing hemp production would make it more difficult to stop outdoor marijuana grows: "Finally," he said, "California law enforcement has expressed concerns that implementation of this measure could place a drain on their resources and cause significant problems with drug enforcement activities. This is troubling given the needs in this state for the eradication and prevention of drug production."
Oddly enough, police in countries where hemp farming is a legal and productive part of the economy don't seem to have any problem distinguishing between industrial hemp and marijuana. For the abstract of a paper by by David P. West, Ph.D. please follow this link.
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Showing posts with label cannabis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cannabis. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Hemp, from hippie to hip
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Let's Talk About Hemp...
I have introduced a new line of bags in my Etsy shop made from eco friendly and sustainable fabrics such as hemp, linen, organic cotton and bamboo.
I wish to buy hemp. It is not grown or manufactured in the U.S. .....soooo, I need to send my dollars out of the country since our government in it's effort to keep us drug free simply flat out banned the growing and harvesting of cannabis. In researching the fabrics I am using I am learning a lot about growing, harvesting, manufacturing and arcane laws.
Surely no member of the vegetable kingdom has ever been more misunderstood than hemp. For too many years, emotion-not reason-has guided our policy toward this crop. And nowhere have emotions run hotter than in the debate over the distinction between industrial hemp and marijuana. Please read this article which is intended to inform that debate by offering scientific evidence so we can distinguish between myth and reality.
Finally....hemp is one of the easiest and sustainable crops to grow. Anything that can be made from cotton can be made from hemp. Cotton is one of the most environmentally destructive agricultural crops. In pesticide use in the US alone, it is staggering – 125 million kilograms annually. Worldwide, cotton production used 50 percent of the world's pesticides/herbicides.
Pesticides are possibly the greatest toxic threat to contaminating our soil, air, water and natural communities because they are often permanent and they bio-accumulate, ie their toxicity increases as they are consumed up the food chain. Many pesticides are known carcinogens, and can also cause immuno-deficiency disorders. Added to this, pesticides have a petroleum base and their excessive use perpetuates our dependency on oil. (Courtesy: Binhai Times). You may want to take a look at Hemp 101 .
I am more and more tuned into what we, as a family, are doing to work with our environment as well as getting chemically engineered products out of our lives. With my antennae up I am taking in more and more information and adding that to what I already know....which I find was surprisingly little. So I am taking the liberty of chunking up my blog with this information. Sorry, but this little corner of the world is mine.
In the next few weeks, I will pass along information about household cleaners, organic gardening and re-cycling.
Please, if you have something to add...I would welcome it. The comment section is open to everyone. Let's share what we know.
Hemp bags with coconut husk buttons lined with bamboo-cotton.
Surely no member of the vegetable kingdom has ever been more misunderstood than hemp. For too many years, emotion-not reason-has guided our policy toward this crop. And nowhere have emotions run hotter than in the debate over the distinction between industrial hemp and marijuana. Please read this article which is intended to inform that debate by offering scientific evidence so we can distinguish between myth and reality.
Finally....hemp is one of the easiest and sustainable crops to grow. Anything that can be made from cotton can be made from hemp. Cotton is one of the most environmentally destructive agricultural crops. In pesticide use in the US alone, it is staggering – 125 million kilograms annually. Worldwide, cotton production used 50 percent of the world's pesticides/herbicides.
Pesticides are possibly the greatest toxic threat to contaminating our soil, air, water and natural communities because they are often permanent and they bio-accumulate, ie their toxicity increases as they are consumed up the food chain. Many pesticides are known carcinogens, and can also cause immuno-deficiency disorders. Added to this, pesticides have a petroleum base and their excessive use perpetuates our dependency on oil. (Courtesy: Binhai Times). You may want to take a look at Hemp 101 .
I am more and more tuned into what we, as a family, are doing to work with our environment as well as getting chemically engineered products out of our lives. With my antennae up I am taking in more and more information and adding that to what I already know....which I find was surprisingly little. So I am taking the liberty of chunking up my blog with this information. Sorry, but this little corner of the world is mine.
In the next few weeks, I will pass along information about household cleaners, organic gardening and re-cycling.
Please, if you have something to add...I would welcome it. The comment section is open to everyone. Let's share what we know.
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cannabis,
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http://www.etsy.com/shop/SquareBag,
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