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Hemp vs. Marijuana
- Myths and Realities
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The abstract below is
copied in part from: Dr. Dave West''s Industrial Hemp Archives, Hemp and
Marijuana: Myths & Realities. This is a must read for anyone who is wants to
learn the facts about Industrial Hemp!
Abstract
Surely no member of the
vegetable kingdom has ever been more misunderstood than Hemp. For too many
years, emotion
-not reason - has guided our policy
toward this crop. And nowhere have emotions run hotter than in the debate
over the distinction between industrial Hemp and marijuana. This paper is
intended to inform that debate by offering scientific evidence, so that
farmers, policymakers, manufacturers and the general public can distinguish
between myth and reality.
Botanically, the genus Cannabis is composed of several variants.
Although there has been a long-standing debate among taxonomists about
how to classify these variants into species, applied plant breeders
generally embrace a biochemical method to classify variants along
utilitarian lines.
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Cannabis is the only plant
genus that contains the unique class of molecular compounds called
cannabinoids. Many cannabinoids have been identified, but two preponderate:
THC, which is the psychoactive ingredient of Cannabis and CBD, which is an
anti-psychoactive ingredient. One type of Cannabis is high in the
psychoactive cannabinoid, THC and low in the anti-psychoactive cannabinoid,
CBD. This type is popularly known as marijuana.
Another type is high in
CBD and low in THC - this is called Industrial Hemp. In the United States,
the debate about the relationship between Hemp and Marijuana has been
diminished by the dissemination of many statements that have little
scientific support. This report examines in detail ten of the most pervasive
and pernicious of these myths.
Myth: United States
law has always treated Hemp and Marijuana the same.
Reality: The
history of federal drug laws clearly shows that at one time the U.S.
government understood and accepted the distinction between Hemp and
marijuana.
Myth: Smoking
Industrial Hemp gets a person high.
Reality: The THC
levels in Industrial Hemp are so low that no one could get high from smoking
it. Moreover, Hemp contains a relatively high percentage of another
cannabinoid, CBD, that actually blocks the marijuana high. Hemp, it turns
out, is not only not marijuana; it could be called "anti-marijuana".
Myth: Even though
THC levels are low in Hemp, the THC can be extracted and concentrated to
produce a powerful drug.
Reality:
Extracting THC from Industrial Hemp and further refining it to eliminate the
preponderance of CBD would require such an expensive, hazardous and
time-consuming process that it is extremely unlikely anyone would ever
attempt it, rather than simply obtaining high-THC marijuana instead.
Myth: Industrial
Hemp fields would be used to hide Marijuana plants.
Reality:
Industrial Hemp is grown quite differently from Marijuana. Moreover, it is
harvested at a different time than marijuana. Finally, cross-pollination
between Hemp plants and marijuana plants would significantly reduce the
potency of the marijuana plant.
Myth: Legalizing
Hemp while continuing the prohibition on Marijuana would burden local police
forces.
Reality: In
countries where Hemp is grown as an agricultural crop, the police have
experienced no such burdens.
Myth: Feral Hemp
must be eradicated because it can be sold as Marijuana.
Reality: Feral
Hemp, or ditchweed, is a remnant of the Industrial Hemp once grown on more
than 400,000 acres by US farmers. It contains extremely low levels of THC,
as low as .05 percent. It has no drug value, but does offer important
environmental benefits as a nesting habitat for birds. About 99% of the
"marijuana" being eradicated by the federal government-at great public
expense-is this harmless ditchweed. Might it be that the drug enforcement
agencies want to convince us that ditchweed is Hemp in order to protect
their large eradication budgets?
Myth: Those who
want to legalize Industrial Hemp are actually seeking a backdoor way to
legalize marijuana.
Reality: It is true
that many of the first Hemp stores were started by Industrial Hemp advocates
who were also in favor of legalizing marijuana. However, as the Hemp
industry has matured, it has come to be dominated by those who see Hemp as
the agricultural and industrial crop that it is and see Hemp legalization as
a different issue than marijuana legalization. In any case, should we oppose
a very good idea simply because some of those who support it also support
other ideas with which we disagree?
Myth: Hemp Seed Oil
is a source of THC
Reality: Hemp Seed
Oil is an increasingly popular product, used for an expanding variety of
purposes. The washed Industrial Hemp seed contains no THC at all. The tiny
amounts of THC contained in Industrial Hemp are in the glands of the plant
itself. Sometimes, in the manufacturing process, some THC- and CBD-containing
resin sticks to the seed, resulting in traces of THC in the oil that is
produced. The concentration of these cannabinoids in the oil is minuet -
usually less than 0.03% which is less than 4 parts per million. No one can
get high from using Hemp Seed Oil.
Myth
: Hemp Seed Oil & "Hemp Oil" is the same thing
Reality : There is a new "cancer cure all" that is being sold as "Hemp
Oil". This is not an oil and is not Hemp. It is a tincture which is derived
by extracting the resinous substance from Marijuana flowers. Hemp Seed Oil
is extracted via cold pressing the seed of the Hemp plant - and is an Omega
supplement.
Myth: Industrial
Hemp is not economically viable and should therefore be outlawed.
Reality: The market
for Industrial Hemp products is growing rapidly. But even if it were not,
when has a crop ever been outlawed simply because government agencies
thought it would be unprofitable to grow?
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