Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999 Source: Auburn Journal Copyright: 1999 Auburn Journal Contact: 1030 High St., Auburn, CA 95603 Website: http://www.auburnjournal.com/ Author: Patrick McCartney, Journal City Editor Note: Our newshawk writes: Pat McCartney is a City Editor, in a zero-tolerance county. McCartney shows great skill and patience in educating his audience without offending their local values. He can be reached at Please: see our ALERT "DEA Tries To Kill North American Hemp Industry": http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0130.html Also: http://www.hempembargo.com/ BIRDSEED LATEST VICTIM IN UNENDING WAR AGAINST DRUGS The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has opened a new front in its ever-expanding war against drugs, and the news is not good for your pet parakeet. On Aug. 9, the U.S. Customs Service seized nearly 20 tons of birdseed at the U.S.-Canadian border and continues to hold the contraband in a Detroit warehouse. The reason? The shipment by Kenex Ltd., a Canadian company, consisted entirely of sterilized seeds gleaned from its harvest of industrial hemp. The reason for this bizarre act by the DEA is that hemp can also be cultivated for its intoxicating effect and in that form is known as marijuana, a drug that is currently illegal. When it seized the Kenex shipment, the DEA announced that the birdseed had a THC content - marijuana's psychoactive ingredient - of .0014 percent. Never mind that marijuana has a typical THC content of 5 percent or more. According to an Oct. 3 article by Christopher Wren in the New York Times, a Kenex official said the Customs Service ordered him to recall earlier exports to the United States of hemp oil, horse bedding, animal feed and granola bars, or face more than $500,000 in fines. The seizure came as a blow to Nutiva, a California company based in Sebastapol that distributes Kenex products in the western United States. According to John Roulac, Nutiva's president, the company has lost $40,000 in sales of its popular Nutiva hempseed bar since the seizure. The Sonoma County company sold 100,000 of the nutritious bars in just the last five months, but with the DEA-ordered action, Nutiva has lost some major accounts, including Rite Aid drug stores, Roulac said. "The number one selling hemp products today are body care and food products, and that's what (the DEA) is going after," Roulac said Friday. "It's a major hassle. This is basically an attack on the Canadian hemp industry." Roulac insists that the hemp products he sells have nothing to do with marijuana. "If you smoke (industrial) hemp, you get a headache," Roulac said. "If you smoke more hemp, you'll get a bigger headache." The DEA's rash act undoubtedly will strengthen the hand of those anti-drug-war activists who claim that the 1937 Marijuana Stamp Act was not aimed at any drug problem, but instead was intended to crush the legal hemp industry. Hemp was the world's most important crop for as long as 10,000 years, providing nutritious seeds (the basis of gruel), durable paper and fabric (original Levi jeans) and all the ropes and canvas sails used in the world's sailing fleet. For more than 200 years, colonial Americans could pay their taxes in hemp. But hemp had one principal fault - it required intensive manual labor to separate the fibrous stalks from the nearly pure cellulose "hurds" within the stalks (used as oakum to seal wooden ships). With the invention of the cotton gin in 1793, cotton dropped in price and replaced hemp in popularity in the United States by the mid-19th century. Perhaps it was only coincidental timing, but the equivalent of the cotton gin for hemp was perfected by the mid-1930s, leading Popular Mechanics to trumpet the return of hemp as the most important fiber plant, predicting it would become the world's first billion-dollar crop. Some pro-hemp activists believe that the imminent return of hemp threatened certain entrenched interests, including William Randolph Hearst's wood-pulp paper mills (Hearst demonized "marijuana" in his tabloid papers) and DuPont, which was beginning to produce synthetic fibers from petroleum. (DuPont's banker, Andrew Mellon, appointed his nephew-in-law Harry Anslinger as the nation's first drug czar.) During the 1937 congressional hearings, the sponsors of the marijuana prohibition assured those in the tiny hemp industry that the ban would not affect their trade. In fact, sterilized hemp seeds, hemp oil and meal were specifically exempted from the Marijuana Stamp Act. Until now. Perhaps the real reason for the DEA's action is the current resurgence of interest in industrial hemp, which is occurring on a global scale at the same time AIDS and cancer activists have fought for the right to use higher-THC varieties as medication. There are now 33 countries that allow the cultivation of hemp for industrial uses, including England, Canada, Germany and France. Canada allowed the first crop of industrial hemp to be grown last year, and this year authorized the cultivation of 35,000 acres. Just as it has fought the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, the DEA must consider industrial hemp a threat to its hard-line stance against marijuana. That may explain why it urged Nicaraguan officials to burn the first commercial seed and fiber crop of another Canadian company, Agro Hemp, which had spent five years in Nicaragua developing a tropical strain of industrial hemp. Although a Nicaraguan court failed to find Agro Hemp guilty of wrongdoing, its botanist has languished in a Managua jail for nearly a year. It's enough to make a canary sing the blues. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake