Pubdate: Thu, 24 Apr 2003
Source: Japan Times (Japan)
Copyright: 2003 The Japan Times
Contact:  http://www.japantimes.co.jp/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/755
Author: STEPHEN HESSE

OUR PLANET EARTH

Feedback

Dear readers, as you rarely get the last word, this week's column aims to 
put that right.

Two weeks ago, I wrote about the dangers of our society's addiction to oil, 
and noted that much of the world still believes the primary purpose of the 
U.S. invasion of Iraq was to dominate its oil supplies and establish 
regional hegemony. I also outlined some environmental threats posed by 
oil-dependence, and made brief mention of one author's suggestion that we 
look to hemp as a less harmful alternative to oil.

These are excerpts from some of your e-mail responses.

* * *

Thank you so much for your article "Oil dependence: Addiction rages blindly 
on" in The Japan Times. I read it on globalhemp.com and could not quite 
believe I had just come across such a clear and concise commentary on our 
current situation . . .

As a longtime hemp and cannabis activist, it both pains and pleases me to 
see the urgency of so many of our efforts cropping up and crossing over 
into other political arenas. As the illegal aggression in Iraq has 
unfolded, it has become all too clear that the oil fields and refineries 
were the only real objectives: The first announcements from Reuters were 
all about quick incursions to secure key facilities . . . no real interest 
in civil affairs or security has yet been indicated . . . confirmed today 
with the story of the Museum of Baghdad left looted . . . U.S. GIs watched 
as people walked off with arguably the most significant collection of 
cultural antiquities and ancient writings since the destruction of the 
Library at Alexandria . . . ---- Oliver, Oregon

* * *

Ya best quit smokin rope! You'll get to where you think Globbular Warming 
is REAL and hiding under your bed and Hemp can replace cheap OIL!! And Bush 
is not near as good a president, or man as Clinton.

I started to laugh, but I used to know some Hemp Heads. Poor guys. Get some 
Tequila instead!!" ---- Ron, Japan

* * *

Thank you so much for finally linking hemp and the war for oil . . . I was 
beginning to think it taboo to bring up the "marijuana conspiracy," though 
I must disagree with the statement that hemp is a "cousin" to marijuana . . 
. they're the same plant! Hemp is just grown closely so the stalks are 
longer and the males can pollinate the females and produce seeds. ---- 
Sean, Pennsylvania

* * *

Nice job laying out the oil addiction -- and then at the end laying out 
some truths about hemp. I am reminded of [U.S. Vice President] Dick 
Cheney's comments that conservation is a "personal virtue" when they 
released their fossil fuels concentrated energy plan in 2001.

The American political scene is despicable at the moment -- last summer 
they couldn't even get the SUV mileage-per-gallon standard lowered a single 
mile. It boggles the mind what is happening -- our congress did NOT DEBATE 
THE WAR ISSUE -- to them it was that clear that we simply had to go to war 
- -- It is obscene. ---- Marcel, Kyoto

* * *

What's with Republicans?? I've spoken to a few dozen, and they're convinced 
that not only does marijuana cause brain damage, but also is "wrong" in 
every sense of the word. They also claim to be democratic and believe in 
freedom. They KNOW Saddam Hussein is behind 9/11 . . . ---- Sean, 
Pennsylvania (again)

* * *

To get rid of oil we need something else that can be used on a grand scale. 
Don't talk about solar, wind, biomass, etc. They just don't work on the 
scale needed. Don't talk about fuel cells, which consume hydrogen, unless 
you also discuss the source of power needed to create the hydrogen. If it's 
fossil fuel, you've caused more problems than you've solved. There is only 
one realistic choice, as we should get going on it: nuclear power. The 
means exist to make it inherently safe and with a waste disposal that is 
far superior to dumping fossil fuel wastes into the air as we do now. I 
will take my chances with radioactivity, which decays, to toxic chemicals, 
which do not. ---- Bob, New Mexico -- employee of Los Alamos National 
Laboratory

* * *

Thank you for your comments about industrial hemp, marijuana and oil. I've 
known about some of these facts for years, but as a "criminal" user of the 
product for recreational use, I didn't feel free to talk about it in 
public. My smoking got out of control so I had to give it up. . . . As a 
former user, I'm free to talk about hemp in public. I'm hitting the big 60 
this year and am having more fun being an antiwar activist than I ever did 
in my job (retired bureaucrat). ---- John, the United States

* * *

Excellent, excellent article. Thank you for that wonderful gift to humanity.

Now, more fervently than ever, I am holding the vision of any and all 
misqualified and miscreated energy being transformed right here and right 
now. ---- Phyllis, Western Samoa

* * *

Now, like you maybe, I am convinced that the lure or will-of-the-wisp of 
Cheap Oil was the real drive element in Regime Change of Iraq. More likely 
a Pandora's Box of the regional mosaic going into meltdown, but we won't go 
into that. ---- Andrew, England

* * *

I liked this piece. The U.S. commitment to preserving economic growth at 
any cost is a compelling motivation for an invasion of Iraq.

Although you mention the 1970 peak of U.S. oil production, some comments in 
your piece indicate you have not fully integrated the implications of the 
world peak of oil production. In particular, you mention only planetary 
warming and pollution as lethal effects of petroleum addiction. There is an 
even more lethal effect: overshoot of world population created by the 
windfall abundance of petroleum.

As petroleum declines after its world peak of production, the world 
population must decline to 1 or 2 billion by the end of the century. 
Desperate competition to be among the survivors will destroy much carrying 
capacity, with the result that [this] will be much lower after petroleum 
than it was in the middle of the 19th century. ---- David, Canada
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart