Drop That Granola Bar And Come
Out With Your Hands Up!
DEAs Ludicrous War on Hemp Reported By New York Times Article That Is Carried
Nationally.
USDA Report On Hemp Is "Classified!"
(Marijuananews note: Slightly different versions
of this article, carried by the New York Times wire service, ran in papers around the
country. This is really a PR disaster for the prohibitionists. RC)
See
DEA Seizes "Birdseed" As
Schedule I Narcotic.
Declares War On Canadian Hemp Producers And DEAland Hemp Food Industry.
October 3, 1999
From The New York Times
letters@nytimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com/
http://www10.nytimes.com/comment/
By Christopher S. Wren
(Marijuananews note: Wren is generally mildly prohibitionist.)
BIRD FOOD IS A CASUALTY OF THE U.S. WAR ON DRUGS
What do 40,000 pounds of birdseed have in common with America's war on drugs? Nothing,
says Jean Laprise, an Ontario farmer who shipped the birdseed to his American customers
only to have it seized when it crossed the U.S.-Canadian border.
Everything, say the U.S. government and its critics, but for
altogether different reasons.
The birdseed, nearly 20 tons of it, has been locked in a Detroit warehouse since Aug.
9, when it was impounded by the United States Customs Service. The reason: the seed
consists of sterilized seeds processed from industrial hemp.
Laprise has found himself mired in one of the more bizarre
episodes of Washington's campaign to curb illicit drug use. Hemp and marijuana are
different varieties of the same plant species, Cannabis sativa, though the government
rarely distinguishes between them.
"They say it's a tractor trailer full of drugs," Laprise said. "We say
it's a tractor trailer full of birdseed."
But while smoking marijuana delivers a psychoactive high, smoking hemp gives only a
headache. Tetrahydrocannabinol, known as THC, the psychoactive component in marijuana,
usually varies between 4 and 20 percent of a leaf. Industrial
hemp has a THC below 1 percent.
(Marijuananews note: Wren writes about "drugs" all the
time, but does not know that THC is found primarily in the female flowers! Of course, 20%
THC is very rare.)
The birdseed seized in Detroit had a THC content of barely .0014 percent, which
wouldn't give a bird a buzz.
John Roulac, the president of Nutiva, a company in Sebastapol, Calif., that buys hemp
seeds from Laprise's operation for food products, said that seeds themselves have no THC,
and whatever gets detected comes from contact with leaves of the hemp plant.
Roulac said the amount of THC was "like an olive pit in a railroad boxcar."
Laprise, whose company, Kenex Ltd., grows and processes hemp with the approval of the
Canadian government, said that "all of our other products have no detectable level of
THC. The only shipment with any detectable amount was the birdseed, and it was really
nothing."
Though the U.S. government today views hemp with suspicion, it
was historically an agricultural staple used in everything from ropes and sails to
clothing and the first American flag supposedly sewn by Betsy Ross. It has been virtually
illegal since 1937.
(Marijuananews note: The Times has editorialized in favor of hemp and thanks to the DEA
it is getting to educate more people.)
See
Hemp
Cultivation in DEAland Endorsed By The New York Times!!
Last year, Canada declared hemp a legitimate crop and has granted growers' licenses for
35,000 acres. Britain, France and Germany also have commercial hemp industries. Hawaii,
North Dakota and Minnesota passed laws approving hemp this year as a crop for hard-pressed
farmers.
See and
Kenex's customers, who snap up Laprise's hemp seeds and fibers for everything from food
for animals and people to beauty products and horse bedding, have been outraged by the
seizure in Detroit.
"What in the heck are they doing arresting birdseed?"
said Anita Roddick, the British founder of the Body Shop, whose organic hair- and
skin-care products have used hemp oil produced by Laprise.
(Marijuananews note: Roddick is a formidable foe.)
See
Body Shop Founder
Notes Hemp Beer Being Served On Air Force One;
Sends Clinton Letter, Packet of Hemp Products, And Issues Press Release
Now That Is Marketing!
"It's so Monty Pythonesque," Ms. Roddick said, alluding
to the antic comedians who mocked life's absurdities. "They're chasing around bloody
birdseed. It's making the D.E.A. look stupid."
Federal law enforcement officials defended the seizure. D.E.A. spokesman Terry Parham
said, "Our understanding is there is no legal way for hemp seed to have come in that
contains any quantity of THC."
He explained that no product containing THC could be imported except by a company
registered with the D.E.A., and that no companies are registered.
Drug-policy critics like Ethan Nadelmann, the president of the Lindesmith Center, a New
York group that advocates a more liberal drug policy, reacted to the birdseed seizure with
glee, contending that it shows how dumb the war on drugs can get.
Laprise said the Customs Service also ordered him to recall his earlier exports to the
United States of hemp oil, horse bedding, animal feed and granola
bars, or face more than $500,000 in fines. He cannot comply, he said, because the
products have been used or consumed.
Meanwhile, a report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture assessing the potential of
hemp growing has made the rounds of the federal government. The report's beige cover is
stamped "Classified."
"I can't figure out why they classified this," said a government official who
let a reporter take a peek. The study said there was a limited niche market for hemp
products, like Laprise's birdseed.