Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001
Source: WorldNetDaily (US Web)
Copyright: 2001 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc.
Contact:  PO Box 409, Cave Junction, OR  97523-0409
Fax: (541) 597-1700
Website: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/
Author: Joel Miller
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hemp.htm (Hemp)

HEMP TODAY, GONE TOMORROW?

I'm a naughty boy. If the DEA gets its way, I'll be one pretty soon, that is.

You see, yesterday I went to my local health food store and purchased -- 
you might want to remove any children from the room and cease reading if 
you have a heart condition -- hemp. To be more specific, it was a bottle of 
hemp-seed oil, containing all those wonderful omega 3 and 6 fatty acids 
that otherwise would have to be consumed by too many mouthfuls of cod liver.

Right now, hemp seeds and oil are perfectly legal for human consumption, 
which is nice because a squad of DEA agents swooping down from the rafters 
to arrest me and confiscate my salad dressing is none to pleasant a thought.

Unfortunately, as I warned a few months ago, it may not remain legal much 
longer. Better hide that salad dressing, after all.

The latest word on this comes from Roberta Rampton in the Jan. 4 edition of 
the Canadian agricultural weekly Western Producer. Seems our good friends 
at the U.S. Department of Justice plan to announce -- by bureaucratic fiat 
- -- a new set of administrative rules which will place hemp products in the 
hands-off category.

Whatever for?

Citing concern that the ever-growing use of hemp products is "confounding 
our federal drug control testing programs," retiring federal drug czar Gen. 
Barry McCaffrey announced his perturbation with pot's nonpsychoactive 
botanical cousin in a June 10, 2000, letter to Hawaiian Congresswoman Patsy 
T. Mink. Because these products "are of significant concern," explained 
McCaffrey, "we are discussing an appropriate solution within the 
Departments of Justice and Treasury."

As for the so-called appropriate solution, according to the Drug Reform 
Coordination Network, the DEA wants to stretch its interpretation of a 
63-year-old law to include hemp products in the Controlled Substances Act. 
The new rules will bar "'hemp' products that result in THC entering the 
human body," says DEA. "In this manner, it will remain clear that the only 
lawful way THC may enter the human body is when a person is using a 
federally approved drug or when the person is the subject of federally 
approved research."

If these proposed rules goes through, Canadian and other foreign suppliers 
of hemp food products will be stopped at the borders, and hemp consumers 
will be forced to eat birdseed on the sly for their daily dose.

This is for our own good of course. The new rules are being enacted, says 
DEA, "to protect the public health and safety. ..."

Pardon me while laugh my socks off.

While marijuana contains about 5 percent THC by weight (some varieties have 
twice that much and more), hemp -- the near-beer of the cannabis family -- 
contains less than l percent and is cultivated solely for industrial or 
food purposes. Because the presence of THC is so slight, it's easier to die 
of smoke inhalation toking on hemp than it is to get high; the trace 
amounts of THC render hemp effectively nonintoxicant. As a result, it's as 
big a threat to "public health and safety" as lettuce.

Regardless, DEA and its bureaucratic overling, DOJ, are pressing forward 
with banning any products made from hemp that humans might ingest.

The other pretext for barring hemp, as McCaffrey stated, is that hemp 
products are mischievous gremlins for drug testing. Nonsense, of course. 
The trace amounts of THC that might accrue in subject's system should hold 
no sway in testing. The standard dose of hemp oil is about 1-2 tablespoons 
per hundred pounds of body weight; a July 2000 study published by the North 
American Industrial Hemp Council, conducted by Leson Environmental 
Consulting of Berkeley, Calif., had participants ingest three times that 
dose (the amount was so large researchers commented that "Even hemp food 
connoisseurs rarely consume such quantities.") Despite the heightened dose, 
study participants fell beneath the THC threshold that would trigger a 
positive on most drug tests. Similar studies have yielded the same results.

So much for McCaffrey's "green herring," right? Not quite.

The drug warriors in this country don't care about reality. Banning hemp 
products is a symbolic victory over the cannabis culture sprouting up in 
America. While it may be hard to round up street-corner, dorm-room and 
night-club pot sellers, it's pretty easy to stop an 18-wheeler from Canada 
with the words "Hemp Products 'R' Us" emblazoned on the side.

Unfortunately, it won't be easy to put an end to this idiocy. Several 
federal agencies have to approve of DEA's new rules before they to go into 
effect. DOJ has already signed off. The departments of Commerce, Customs 
and Treasury have yet to do so. But don't hold your breath. If this 
administration has proved anything in eight long years it is that it his no 
compunction about running roughshod over the constitutional division of powers.

You say executive bureaucracies are not supposed to make law; that's the 
prerogative of the legislature. Sure. But if you call it "administrative 
rule," then it's just peachy, isn't it? Same goes for executive orders. As 
presidential aide Paul Begala said in July 1998, "Stroke of the pen. Law of 
the land. Kinda cool."

Who needs Congress?

The DEA's hemp ban is a clear breach of constitutional authority and should 
be stopped. Yeah, it's a small thing to those of you who don't use hemp 
products -- probably not worth your time to write an e-mail to your 
congressman, urging him to put a halt to DEA's powergrab. But what are you 
going to do when it's something you do care about?

People's ears and hearts get smaller as Big Brother gets bigger. What are 
you going to do when no one listens to you?

Joel Miller is the commentary editor of WorldNetDaily.
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MAP posted-by: Terry F