Source: The Louisville Courier-journal Author: Mark Schaver Pubdate: 11 March 1998 Contact: http://www.courier-journal.com/cjconnect/edletter.htm Website: http://www.courier-journal.com/ MCCAFFREY BLASTS ANY COMMERCIAL USE OF HEMP As a four-star general, Barry R. McCaffrey helped wage war on drugs as head of the nation's military operations in Latin America. As the nation's drug czar, McCaffrey now coordinates the fight to keep drugs from invading the nation and to get treatment for the people addicted to them. Yesterday the nation's top drug fighter ridiculed contentions of "noted agronomists like (actor) Woody Harrelson" that what Kentucky farmers need to replace tobacco is the right to grow hemp, which more than a century ago was one of the commonwealth's leading crops when it was used to make rope cloth and other products. "The cultivation of hemp is economically not feasible in the United State," McCaffrey said in an interview after appearing at a drug summit at Louisville's Commonwealth Convention Center. "What it would do is completely disarm all law enforcement. . . from enforcing ant-marijuana production laws," he said. "The bottom line is a thinly disguised attempt. . to legalize the production of pot." McCaffrey is the director of the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy but is better known as the nation's drug czar. He gave the keynote speech during the summit sponsored by Mayor Jerry Abramson and the University of Louisville to discuss better ways to treat alcohol and drug abusers. Abramson proposed the summit last year as part of this strategies for a Safe City, which was a response to a sharp rise in Louisville's homicide rate. In his speech, McCaffrey said there is a clear link between substance abuse and crime. He said there are about 1.7 million people in jails and prisons in the United States - an "internal gulag" larger than the number of people in the armed forces. The majority suffer from alcohol and drug addictions but can't get treatment, he said. McCaffrey contended that the most effective way to fight such abuse is to combine "stiff, unreneging law enforcement" with effective treatment programs. He said there are many studies showing substance abuse leads to crime, and that the desire to commit crimes goes away when the addiction is broken. But he said the vast majority of addicts in prison don't have access to treatment, and state and local lawmakers must be persuaded to provide more by sound arguments laying out evidence that treatment works. McCaffrey said that while the percentage of Americans who say they are regular drug users has dropped to about 6 percent from 14 percent in 1979, there has been an alarming increase in teen-age drug use. He said one survey found there is more heroin use among eighth-graders than 12th-graders. The best way to head off the addiction is to educate the nation’s children to reject drugs, he said. His office is now testing a $195 million anti-drug campaign in 12 cities that will eventually be expanded nation-wide. He said the most dangerous drug for the young is marijuana, because it serves as a gateway to other drugs. When interviewed, McCaffrey said efforts to legalize hemp undercut efforts to fight marijuana use. He said hemp and pot are indistinguishable, differing only in how they are grown and in the level of a drug "high" they produce. He said the argument that hemp could be an alternative to raisin tobacco sounds "silly," but he said he's open to new evidence that proves otherwise. During his two years as the drug czar, he said he has reviewed studies from the University of Iowa, the University of Kentucky and the U.S. Department of Agriculture showing that hemp is not a viable cash crop. The use of hemp in the United States disappeared before World War II because there was no market for it, and in the last decade, worldwide production ahas declined 25 percent, he said. McCaffrey contended hemp production is uneconomical unless workers are paid very low wages, and there are better sources of fiber - such as flax and cotton - that are more easily turned into textiles. He said hemp doesn't even make good a cloth. "It doesn't even hold a crease," he said. He compared hemp advocates to those who advocate legalizing marijuana as a pain-relieving medicine, as was done in California. McCaffrey, who earned three Purple Hearts in combat in places such as the Dominican Republic, Vietnam and Iraq, and spent years in the hospital recovering from his wounds, said there are many other drugs that are more effective pain relievers that marijuana. He said if he was hospitalized with prostate cancer it would be "unlikely my pain-management device will be a giant 'blunt' stuck in my lips."