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Farmers sue DEA for right to grow industrial hemp

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Farmers sue DEA for right to grow industrial hemp
By Eliott C. McLaughlin CNN
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(CNN) -- The feds call industrial hemp a controlled substance -- the same as pot, heroin, LSD -- but advocates say a sober analysis reveals a harmless, renewable cash crop with thousands of applications that are good for the environment.


Industrial hemp, left, looks a lot like its cousin in the cannabis family, marijuana.

1 of 3  Two North Dakota farmers are taking that argument to federal court, where a November 14 hearing is scheduled in a lawsuit to determine if the Drug Enforcement Administration is stifling the farmers' efforts to grow industrial hemp. The DEA says it's merely enforcing the law.

Marijuana and industrial hemp are members of the Cannabis sativa L. species and have similar characteristics. One major difference: Hemp won't get you high. Hemp contains only traces of delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the compound that gets pot smokers stoned. However, the Controlled Substances Act makes little distinction, banning the species almost outright.

Marijuana, which has only recreational and limited medical uses, is the shiftless counterpart to the go-getter hemp, which has a centuries-old history of handiness.

The February 1938 issue of Popular Mechanics magazine heralded hemp as the "new billion-dollar crop," saying it had 25,000 uses. Today, it is a base element for textiles, paper, construction materials, car parts, food and body care products.

It's not a panacea for health and environmental problems, advocates concede, but it's not the menace the Controlled Substances Act makes it out to be.  Watch why a North Dakota official thinks the U.S. should be in the hemp business »

"This is actually an anti-drug. It's a healthy food," explained Adam Eidinger of the Washington advocacy group Vote Hemp. "We're not using this as a statement to end the drug war."

Rather, Eidinger said, Vote Hemp wants to vindicate a plant that has been falsely accused because of its mischievous cousin.

North Dakota farmers Wayne Hauge and Dave Monson say comparing industrial hemp to marijuana is like comparing pop guns and M-16s. They've successfully petitioned the state Legislature -- of which Monson is a member -- to authorize the farming of industrial hemp.
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Umpteen years ago, hemp was a major component in the making of hawsers for shipping.

Would venture to think that the cops don't want to have to "prove" that the crop they are confiscating is of the illicit kind every time they conduct a raid.
 
My first thought was that a legal hemp crop would be a perfect place to hide illicit crops of Marijuana, but in fact they are different colors and the leaves are different but similar.

They grow it here in Manitoba....and you can just see the potheads salivating as they drive by.....
 
I believe that the two hemp crops radiate different levels of heat.  Air surveillance should be able to differentiate BUT you have to have air surveillance I guess...
 
You know, industrial hemp sounds like a really good idea.  I've seen the products you can make from it, and it makes the best rope.  The problem with legalizing hemp is that it seems that only pot-heads are part of the grand "movement" to legalize it...which kinda detracts from the credibility of its legitimate uses...

But try to explain that to pot-heads.  /roll
 
It's surprising, considering hemp is popular to mix in with tobacco crops.  It's a natural way to keep the bugs away.  Ever wonder why some brand of smokes have a slight pot smell to them?
 
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