Industrial Hemp Links

Hemp Evolution: Cannabis Activist Information & Marijuana Resources
NORML: (The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws): Working to reform marijuana laws
University of Tennessee at Knoville NORML: (The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) Chapter
The Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition : (MASS CANN), the state affiliate of the National Organization for the Reform of the Marijuana Laws (NORML)
DRCNet Online Library of Drug Policy:
Schaffer Library of Drug Policy:
Drugs, The Law, and The Future:
Drug Law Timeline: Significant Events in the History of our Drug Laws
The Drug Reform Coordination Network:
Drug Policy Alliance:
Marijuana Policy Project:
Drug War Facts:
DrugSense:
Drug War Clock:
Human Rights and the Drug War
Basic Facts about the War on Drugs
Drug War
Drug Policy and Program
Narco News
Mad Cow Morning News
Crime and the Drug War
The war on (certain) drugs
Prohibition: The So-Called War on Drugs - Page One
Prohibition: The So-Called War on Drugs - Page Two
<i>Drugs, Oil, and War</i>: Preface
Cocaine Importing Agency
The CIA: America's Premier International Terrorist Organization
'Traffic': How the Drug War Became Big Business
drug wars
War on Drugs
Information on 50 Years of CIA Drug Trafficking-And Other Subversive Activities
excerpted from "Drug Fallout" by Alfred McCoy <i>Progressive</i> magazine, August 1997
War on Drugs: Military Perspectives and Problems
Perilous Panacea: The Military in the Drug War
Militarization of Drug Enforcement
Outsourcing War: Colombia Military Aid From The Private Sector
The DEA, CIA, DoD, & Narcotrafficking: Another round of lunacy in the war on drugs
<i>Reefer Madness!</i> : The Beginning
The marijuana laws were racist from the start:
Hall Of Conspiracy: The Men Who Conspired To Make Hemp Illegal
The Great Marijuana Conspiracy:
The Truth About Marijuana:
Shadow Of The Swastika: The Real Reason the Government Won't Debate Medical Cannabis and Industrial Hemp Re-legalization
Marijuana - The First Twelve Thousand Years
History of Cannabis:
Hemp: (Marijuana)
Marijuana & Cannabis Information:
Cannabis, Marijuana, and Hemp Information:
Cannabis:
Marijuana:
Guide to the Upcoming Rebellion: Part 4: Hemp Through A Lucid Lens
Henry Ford's Hemp Body Car:
Henry Ford and His Magic Beanstalk:
Global Hemp Website: (formerly Hemp Food Industries Association)
Hemp Food:
Hemphasis.net:
FDA Warns About Antidepressants, Suicide:
4th Leading Cause of Death in U.S. Prescription Drugs:
Death Rates From Prescription Drugs Explode at the Beginning of Each Month:
Death by Medicine Gary Null PhD, Carolyn Dean MD ND, Martin Feldman MD, Debora Rasio MD November 200:
Hempology.Org: The Boston Hemp Co-Op's Digital Library and Museum
Lakota Indians Defying DEA; Accepts KY Co-op's Offer to Replace Destroyed Hemp Crop
Hemp could be crop of the future
Sioux Indians vote to challenge DEA on hemp:
White Plume Hemp Crop Destroyed Again:
Drugs, prohibition and human nature:
What is hemp?
Hemp Products:
Hemp Products:
Hemp Plastic:
Global Hemp Store:
Manitoba Harvest:
Organic Cotton, Linen, & Hemp Clothing + Home Products:
Hemp Oil Canada Inc.:
Hemp Food.ca:
Hungry Bear Hemp Foods:
MotherHemp Ltd.:

Industrial Hemp Links 2

NORML (The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws):Working to reform marijuana laws
University of Tennessee at Knoville NORML (The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) Chapter:
HEMPTECH: The Industrial Hemp Information Network:
Colorado Farm Bureau Endorses Industrial Hemp:
Update: Industrial hemp in Germany:
Hemp's Half Acre. Grower's Sanctioned Field Plowed Under:
Industrial Hemp Promoted:
Industrial Hemp:
ONDCP Statement on Industrial Hemp:
Industrial Hemp Page:
North American Industrial Hemp Forum becomes NAIHCouncil at Minnesota Meeting:
Industrial Hemp article from Lebanon Enterprise:
Conference report - Industrial hemp: Economic opportunities for Canada:
Eddie's Australian Hemp Information:
Canadian Industrial Hemp Council:
North American Industrial Hemp Council, Inc.:
Kentucky Hemp Growers Cooperative Association :
Hemp as an Industrial and Food Resource:
Industrial Hemp Archive :
Industrial Hemp Information :
Overview of Industrial Hemp:
Colorado Hemp Initiative Project :
HEMP South Australia :
WestHemp Canada :
Industrial Hemp in Iowa:
Gale Glenn: Kentucky and U.S. lag behind in development of legal hemp :
Colorado Bill goes to Senate :
Celebrity draws crowd to museum for hemp:
American Farm Bureau Supports Industrial Hemp Research :
CVP Hemp Editorial :
Hemp: A Crop for the 21st Century, ILSR Speech to the Industrial Hemp Conference May 1996:
Hemp Monthly Updates:
Industrial Hemp Movement Growing :
A Closer Look at Industrial Hemp:
HB0283I-Introduced Bill Text :
coopecon: Hemp News - Farmers Support Hemp :
Queensland Industrial Hemp:
House panel approves hemp research - 3/10/97:
The Australian New Crops Newsletter. Issue No 4, July 1995:
Planet Hemp - Saving the Planet in Style!:
Marijuana and Hemp Story: Why Was Marijuana/Hemp Banned? :
A Brief History of Cannabis Prohibition :
Hemp Times Magazine - Library - Hemp FAQ:
Kansas Environmentalists for Commerce in Hemp :
In Hemp: Lifeline to the Future : Reprint of Brain/Mind Bulletin; Los Angeles, CA; August, 1994 issue
Farmers sue government to get ban on hemp lifted:
Cannabis prohibition, a disaster, a conspiracy, a lie :
The time is right for Industrial Hemp:
Transcript from CBS This Morning, June 16th 195 (W27AQ):
A Cannabis Campaigner's Guide By the CLCIA: Index:
HEMP, THE PLANT THAT CAN SAVE MOTHER EARTH: Footnotes 4 and 5:
Industrial Hemp Fact Sheet:
Totally Hemp:
THE TOXIC ALTERNATIVE TO NATURAL FIBERS:
Hemp Bits:
Hemp in the News:
H.E.M.P. North 2000 - The History of Hemp:
Hemp Industry Finding Fertile Ground in Foreign Countries:
Hemp History - Kentucky Hemp Outfitters:
History of Hemp:
Hemp - Pulling the U.S. out of it's economic & environmental woes:
The Environment Centre of WA - Hemp FAQ:
Important Facts Concerning Hemp:
Fiber Wars, Chapter 7, The New Deal:
HIGH TIMES - Hemp History:

The    Past,    Present,    and    Future    Use    of    Industrial    Hemp

        Industrial hemp and marijuana are from the same plant species, Cannabis sativa L., but 
they are cultivated for different products and uses, and also have different physical 
characteristics.  Industrial hemp should be legalized and grown in Kentucky because of its rich 
history of a myriad of uses and the products that can be produced from it.  
	Industrial hemp and Indian hemp (the type of hemp that yields marijuana) are not 
the same plant, even though they are both of the same species, as stated above, and true industrial 
hemp is sometimes mistakenly called Indian hemp.  There are distinct differences between the two 
plants that should be distinguished first.  Industrial hemp has only minuscule amounts of 
delta-9tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is the psychoactive ingredient that produces the 
hallucinogenic and pleasure-giving effects of marijuana (a high).  Marijuana, of course, has a 
much higher level of THC than industrial hemp and is also grown for different uses.  The THC in 
marijuana is concentrated in the flowering tops of it.  Marijuana is a mixture of the leaves, stems, 
and flowering tops of the Indian hemp plant, which can be smoked or eaten to reach a high.  You could 
smoke industrial hemp for any amount of time and you would not get a high from it.  A biologist in 
the Woody Harrelson trial testified, in court, that mature stems from the industrial hemp plant and 
Indian hemp plant are distinguishable and distinctive, even from the air or far away, and they don't 
look similar whatsoever.
	Indian hemp or hemp dogbane, commonly called marijuana, is a branched perennial that grows 
up to five feet tall, while industrial hemp is an annual herb that grows from three feet to fifteen feet.  
Marijuana was grown as early as 3000 B.C. in Central Asia and China and was first used as a folk medicine.  
Since then, marijuana has also been used as a sedative and analgesic.  True hemp or industrial hemp was 
originally cultivated in Central Asia around 2800 B.C. for its fibers.   Indian hemp is chiefly germinated 
to produce marijuana for its intoxicating effects while hemp is grown mainly for its fibers and seeds to 
produce a myriad of products from bird food to cordage.  
	Hemp is the common name for a coarse, tall, and hairy annual herb, a  native of Central Asia and 
for the strong, durable fibers made from the stems of the plant.  The fibers, from the fibrous inner bark 
of the hemp stems, have a variety of uses in textile products and other products because of their great 
strength and durability.  Examples of products made from the fibers are: cloth, rope, twine, carpet thread, 
carpet yarn, sailcloth, yarn, cable, string, paper, coarse sheeting, clothing, pressed board, cord, shoes, 
horse bedding, and toweling.  Hemp can also be used in the making of artificial sponges and such coarse 
fabrics as sacking, packing cloth, and canvas.  Examples of clothing made from hemp fibers are pants, shirts, 
shoes, and caps.  The waste fiber of hemp, called oakum, is often used in the production of caulking.    	 
	The soft fibers of the hemp stems are used in making clothing fabrics in Asia.  These fibers are 
obtained from the inner bark which is harvested at the time of pollination.    The strong, coarse fibers are 
used to produce coarse fabrics such as cordage and rope; those fibers are obtained from the fibers of the more 
mature hemp stems.  
  	Hemp seeds contain about thirty percent oil, which makes it a good source for different types of oil.  
The seed of hemp is commonly used as a caged-bird seed.  Another product made from hemp seed is a drying oil, 
called oil of hemp, and it's used in the manufacturing of soap, varnish, edible oils, oil paints and also other 
types of paints.  
	Hemp originated in China, most likely for the cultivation of its fibers, recorded there about 2800 B.C.  
It was then adopted and grown in the Mediterranean countries of Europe around 200 B.C., spreading throughout the 
rest of Europe during the Middle Ages.  In the Americas, it was planted in Chile in the 1500's, and a century 
later in the British colonies of North America.  Hemp remained the standard material for rope and cordage until 
the Nineteenth Century, when it was replaced by Manila hemp, an unrelated plant from the Philippines.  
	There was a rise in the production of hemp for its natural fibers to make rope during World War II.  
Kentucky was one of the main states growing hemp at that time.  Tillage of hemp was then outlawed by the federal 
government and state governments ensuing World War II, because of its association with marijuana.  In most countries, 
hemp was and still is grown primarily for its fibers with a total world production of 298,000 metric tons in 1970.  
Adidas has a new shoe out on the market, called "The Hemp".  The new shoe's top is made of hemp, instead of leather, 
while the sole is made from recycled rubber.  The shoe was developed in response to increasing demand by consumers for 
an environmentally friendly shoe. 
  	Hemp is now widely cultivated throughout many countries of the world, such as the United States (only with a 
government permit), Chile, Europe, Canada, Chile, and Asia, as well as other places throughout the world, for a 
variety of purposes as shown above.  It needs no pesticides or herbicides, so hemp is environmentally friendly and is 
also easily cultured.  
	A task force established by Governor Brereton Jones of Kentucky, in 1994,  swiftly concluded that hemp had no 
future in Kentucky.  Hemp is still outlawed in this country without a government permit.  People's views have changed 
little since marijuana and hemp were first outlawed.  As a result, according to Kentucky law, still, hemp and marijuana 
are the same and both are illegal in this state.  The existing statute does not recognize any difference between the two 
plants because it chooses not to.    	 
	Other American states and foreign countries, that have not done so already, are exploring hemp as an alternative 
source of fiber for cloth, paper, etc.  Legislatures in Vermont and Hawaii have both asked their state universities to 
conduct research on the hemp plant.  The American and Kentucky Farm Bureau now are officially supporting research into 
hemp's potential as a cash crop.  It is cheaper to grow hemp in the United States, than to import products made from it 
or hemp itself.  Since Kentucky is the most famous place in the world for horses after England, and horse bedding can be 
made from hemp, it makes good sense that hemp should be grown here in Kentucky.  Many supporters of hemp say that 
Kentucky's agriculture policy should be more receptive to learning more about the crop, as an alternative to tobacco.  
Kentucky farmers could produce hemp better than any other farmers in the Western hemisphere.  An expanded tax base from 
the hemp industry could provide for better education for Kentucky citizens and could also further develop the people in 
Kentucky as well.  In order for Kentucky to become a more industrialized and self-sufficient state and for this country 
to do the same, then we must first look at industrial hemp more seriously and its potential to bring us forward into the 
Twenty-first Century as a leading producer, and not a principal importer.

                      
	










		Bibliography for The Past, Present, and Future of Industrial Hemp

Editorial.  "Hemp Crops Up Again: Kentucky Should Get Serious about Possible 	       	     	     
Enterprise."  Lexington Herald-Leader.

"Hemp," "Rope," "Cannabis," "Marijuana" Microsoft Encarta.  Copyright 1994 Microsoft 	   
Corporation.  Copyright 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.

Haskew, Mark.  "Hemp Shoes: Ecological or Hypocritical?"  Lexington Herald-Leader,  9 	   
February 1996, pp. A9.

"Hemp: Teacher is Investigated For Having Talk By Harrelson."  Lexington Herald-        	 
Leader,  30 June 1996, pp. B5.	

Mead, Andy.  "Harrelson Holds Hemp Show-and-Tell."  Lexington Herald-Leader,  31                 	
May 1996, pp. A1, A4.

"Hemp."  The World Book Encyclopedia.  1984 ed.

"Hemp." The New Encyclopaedia Britannica.  1980 ed.

"Kentucky Might Miss the Boat in Hemp Production."  Lexington Herald-Leader,  24 	  	     
May 1996, pp. A10.




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The   Past,   Present,   and   Future   Use   of   Industrial   Hemp   Essay

        Industrial hemp and marijuana are from the same plant species, Cannabis sativa L., 
but they are cultivated for different products and uses and also have different physical 
characteristics.  Industrial hemp should be legalized and grown in Kentucky because of 
its rich history of a myriad of uses and the products that can be produced from it.  
	Industrial hemp and Indian hemp (the type of hemp that yields marijuana) are not 
the same plant, even though they are both of the same species, as stated above, and true 
industrial hemp is sometimes mistakenly called Indian hemp.  There are distinct differences 
between the two plants that should be distinguished first.  Industrial hemp has only 
minuscule amounts of delta-9tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is the psychoactive 
ingredient that produces the hallucinogenic and pleasure-giving effects of marijuana (a high).  
Marijuana, of course, has a much higher level of THC than industrial hemp and is also grown for 
different uses.  The THC in marijuana is concentrated in the flowering tops of it.  Marijuana is 
a mixture of the leaves, stems, and flowering tops of the Indian hemp plant, which can be smoked or 
eaten to reach a high.  You could smoke industrial hemp for any amount of time and you would not get 
a high from it.  A biologist in the Woody Harrelson trial testified, in court, that mature stems from 
the industrial hemp plant and Indian hemp plant are distinguishable and distinctive, even from the 
air or far away, and they don't look similar whatsoever.
	Indian hemp or hemp dogbane, commonly called marijuana, is a branched perennial that grows up 
to five feet tall, while industrial hemp is an annual herb that grows from three feet to fifteen feet.  
Marijuana was grown as early as 3000 B.C. in Central Asia and China and was first used as a folk medicine.  
Since then, marijuana has also been used as a sedative and analgesic.  True hemp or industrial hemp was 
originally cultivated in Central Asia around 2800 B.C. for its fibers.  Indian hemp is chiefly germinated 
to produce marijuana for its intoxicating effects while hemp is grown mainly for its fibers and seeds to 
produce a myriad of products from bird food to cordage.  
	Hemp is the common name for a coarse, tall, and hairy annual herb, a native of Central Asia and 
for the strong, durable fibers made from the stems of the plant.  The fibers, from the fibrous inner bark 
of the hemp stems, have a variety of uses in textile products and other products because of their great 
strength and durability.  Examples of products made from the fibers are: cloth, rope, twine, carpet thread, 
carpet yarn, sailcloth, yarn, cable, string, paper, coarse sheeting, clothing, pressed board, cord, shoes, 
horse bedding, and toweling.  Hemp can also be used in the making of artificial sponges and such coarse 
fabrics as sacking, packing cloth, and canvas.  Examples of clothing made from hemp fibers are pants, shirts, 
shoes, and caps.  The waste fiber of hemp, called oakum, is often used in the production of caulking.    	 
	The soft fibers of the hemp stems are used in making clothing fabrics in Asia.  These fibers are 
obtained from the inner bark which is harvested at the time of pollination.  The strong, coarse fibers are 
used to produce coarse fabrics such as cordage and rope; those fibers are obtained from the fibers of the more 
mature hemp stems.  
  	Hemp seeds contain about thirty percent oil, which makes it a good source for different types of oil.  
The seed of hemp is commonly used as a caged-bird seed.  Another product made from hemp seed is a drying oil, 
called oil of hemp, and it's used in the manufacturing of soap, varnish, edible oils, oil paints and also other 
types of paints.  
	Hemp originated in China, most likely for the cultivation of its fibers, recorded there about 2800 B.C.  
It was then adopted and grown in the Mediterranean countries in Europe around 200 B.C., spreading throughout 
the rest of Europe during the Middle Ages.  In the Americas, it was planted in Chile in the 1500's, and a century 
later in the British colonies of North America.  Hemp remained the standard material for rope and cordage until the 
Nineteenth Century, when it was replaced by Manila hemp, an unrelated plant from the Philippines.  
	There was a rise in the production of hemp for its natural fibers to make rope during World War II.  
Kentucky was one of the main states growing hemp at that time.  Tillage of hemp was then outlawed by the federal 
government and state governments ensuing World War II, because of its association with marijuana.  In most countries, 
hemp was and still is grown primarily for its fibers with a total world production of 298,000 metric tons in 1970.  
Adidas has a new shoe out on the market, called "The Hemp".  The new shoe's top is made of hemp, instead of leather, 
while the sole is made from recycled rubber.  The shoe was developed in response to increasing demand by consumers for 
an environmentally friendly shoe. 
  	Hemp is now widely cultivated throughout many countries of the world, such as the United States (only with a 
government permit), Chile, Europe, Canada, Chile, and Asia, as well as other places throughout the world, for a 
variety of purposes as shown above.  It needs no pesticides or herbicides, so hemp is environmentally friendly and 
is also easily cultivated.  
	A task force established by Governor Brereton Jones of Kentucky, in 1994, swiftly concluded that hemp had no 
future in Kentucky.  Hemp is still outlawed in this country without a government permit.  People's views have changed 
little since marijuana and hemp were first outlawed.  As a result, according to Kentucky law, still, hemp and marijuana 
are the same and both are illegal in this state.  The existing statute does not recognize any difference between the two 
plants because it chooses not to.    	 
	Other American states and foreign countries, that have not done so already, are exploring hemp as an alternative 
source of fiber for cloth, paper, etc.  Legislatures in Vermont and Hawaii have both asked their state universities to 
conduct research on the hemp plant.  The American and Kentucky Farm Bureau now are officially supporting research into 
hemp's potential as a cash crop.  It is cheaper to grow hemp in the United States, than to import products made from it 
or hemp itself.  Since Kentucky is the most famous place in the world for horses after England, and horse bedding can be 
made from hemp, it makes good sense that hemp should be grown here in Kentucky.  Many supporters of hemp say that 
Kentucky's agriculture policy should be more receptive to learning more about the crop, as an alternative to tobacco.  
Kentucky farmers could produce hemp better than any other farmers in the Western hemisphere.  An expanded tax base from 
the hemp industry could provide for better education for Kentucky citizens and could also further develop the people in 
Kentucky as well.  In order for Kentucky to become a more industrialized and self-sufficient state and for this country 
to do the same, then we must first look at industrial hemp more seriously and its potential to bring us forward into the 
Twenty-first Century as a leading producer, and not a principal importer.

                      
	



Third Place Essay in the 1st Annual Kentucky Industrial Hemp Essay Contest in the Senior High Division 
Sponsored by Woody Harrelson
September/October 1996







		

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