Pubdate: Fri, 20 Oct 2000 Date: 10/20/2000 Source: Otago Daily Times (New Zealand) Author: J. Kearney EVAN BLACKIE (28.9.00) is mistaken in believing that the medicinal and industrial uses of cannabis are separate issues to the debate about its use as a recreational drug. The 1937 Marijuana Tax Act in the United States was designed to sabotage a resurgent hemp industry, and its environmentally-friendly science called chemurgy, using bureaucracy under the guise of protecting society from the newly fabricated "marijuana menace". The medical profession protested against this vociferously until the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (a tax department no less) prosecuted thousands of doctors for prescribing cannabis. Mr Blackie is also mistaken for thinking that hemp crops could be to camouflage the growing of the "real thing". Industrial cannabis is planted at a density of 400 plants per square metre whereas only two marijuana plants are grown per square metre. Hemp is stalky and grows tall whereas marijuana is bushy and shorter. Marijuana growers would not grow their plants near hemp, anyway, because of the risk that pollination would ruin their seedless sinsemella (the seeds are very nutritious but non-psychoactive). Mr Blackie is not mistaken, however, for alluding that the debate should not progress to examining what form of decriminalisation should be employed, as every major study into cannabis and its use, from the Indian Hemp Commission's in 1894, to the New Zealand Health Committee's in 1998, has found that cannabis prohibition is far more harmful than cannabis use. J. Kearney, Dalmore