Thursday, May 2, 2013

Position Arguement


Mitch Poen
Ashley Argyle
English 2010
7 April, 2013
Position Discussing the Benefits Hemp and Marijuana
            There is perhaps no other family of plants that is more misunderstood than the family of Cannabaceae, the hemp family. Both marijuana and industrial hemp are two crops that, contrary to popular belief, harness quite a lot of progressive power in the worlds of medicine and industry. The United States, despite all of its strength, would benefit immensely from finally making the decision to recognize cannabis plants (once again) as some of the greatest, most versatile, and useful resources on planet earth.  As an evolving and progressive people, it is more than necessary to reevaluate the laws that prohibit the cultivation and use of cannabis. Industrial hemp is a crop that can drastically improve our ecosystem, help eliminate a great share of deforestation and provide a solution to soil depletion. Hemp can be used for a wide variety of purposes including the manufacturing of textiles, hundreds of food and nutritional products, paper, plastic composite materials, construction materials, bio fuels and more. The psychoactive properties of THC-concentrated marijuana hold an unimaginable amount of potential for pharmaceutical researchers. As soon as marijuana is legalized and regulated, fantastic medicines that scientists haven’t yet been allowed to create will be introduced and the medical industry will rejoice. An unfortunate history of harsh assumption and a lack of critical thinking has led to a situation in which the government is shooting itself in the foot, so to speak, by both eliminating a huge potential market for itself and by spending billions of tax dollars annually in enforcing and prosecuting marijuana offenders (Small and Marcus).
            Hemp is a sister plant to marijuana and has extremely low doses of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the chief psychoactive chemical in cannabis. If one were to try smoking hemp to get high, he or she would be sorely disappointed, as it holds non-threshold doses of THC. The two plants can cross pollinate, but plants grown primarily for their intoxicating resins are potent because they have been selectively bred to produce those attributes. If a marijuana farmer tried to put high-THC marijuana plants among a field of hemp to effectively hide them, the marijuana plants and the hemp plants would cross-pollinate, resulting in a much less THC-concentrated bud, something that any pot farmer would never want. Hemp may look a lot like marijuana, which is one reason why people are so quick to feel uneasy about it, but it is truly one of the most fibrous plants on Earth, and to say that it deserves respect would be an understatement (Small and Marcus).
             Nowadays, wood pulp accounts for the great share of industrial fiber in the world, and is of course, very useful. The problem is that world population and industrialization is moving at a rate that greatly exceeds the capacity of what our forests can churn out. While a tree might take a hundred to several hundred years to fully mature, a field of hemp can fully mature in about a year’s time, all the while nurturing the soil it grows in rather than bleaching it of nutrients. Many say that it would never be worth the time and money to process hemp fiber at a large capacity, that it could never be as cost effective as lumber and cotton. Since our economy is so accustomed to the markets of lumber and cotton, it is argued that it would be too costly to switch over to hemp cultivation. What if we chose to adapt? In a time of global climate change, where deforestation is harming the planet’s ability to clean out greenhouse gases, the forests of the world are needed more than ever. Hemp provides another source of fiber and a new market for Americans to develop and grow on all the while being an ecological savior. The vast amount of products that hemp can produce is far more than what meets the eye. We have ways of creating biodegradable plastics out of hemp, construction materials like fiber boards, plastic composite materials for automobiles, insulation, stronger concrete, more durable clothing than cotton, more durable paper than wood, not to mention the hundreds and hundreds of food and nutritional applications of the hemp seed. Hemp seeds are around forty-five percent edible fats, and are nearly a complete protein. They contain all 29 amino acids including all 9 that the human body must eat to survive. In addition to being a very nutritional food source and an industrial fiber, cannabis plants that are high in psychoactive cannabinoids have a seemingly endless amount of medicinal applications (Small and Marcus).
            Marijuana’s place in the world of medicine is astounding. There are no reported deaths to this day that attribute marijuana as the soul culprit. That is not to say marijuana is harmless to everyone, but that’s the way most drugs work anyway. For the most part, marijuana products are very low risk and are used to treat many ailments. Marijuana has been shown to be an effective treatment for chronic pain patients, has been shown to effectively reduce intra-ocular pressure in those suffering from glaucoma, and also reduces muscle spasticity in multiple sclerosis patients. Marijuana is celebrated among cancer patients (myself included) as a far superior drug to help patients deal with the side affects of chemotherapy and radiation by allowing patients to be relieved of the endless nausea. Not only does marijuana do all of this and more, THC has been proven in brain cancer patients to slow the growth of and even kill cancer cells. Nevertheless, marijuana is federally a Schedule I substance, meaning that it is considered by the law to have no medical use whatsoever (“Cannabis and Cannabinoids”).
            It is important to know that plants in the cannabis family have always been a key player in the industrialization of our world. Archeologists have found hemp as a binder in pottery as old as ten-thousand years.  Hemp was even internationally accepted as the world’s leading industrial fiber around the mid 19th Century. It should be a commonly known fact that even the Declaration of Independence, the document that founded our country, was drafted on hemp paper. Let’s not forget also, that founding fathers George Washington and Thomas Jefferson were hemp farmers themselves.  A historian may find it surprising that cannabis isn’t commonly celebrated as a key component in the great success of our nation (“Hemp History Timeline”).
How is it then, that the cannabis family of plants, an amazingly versatile and long accepted resource for medicine and industry, has been banished so harshly and quickly in this country?  It turns out that many of the attitudes concerning cannabis appeal to tradition rather than facts. In the early 20th Century, it wasn’t at all uncommon to be able to purchase hashish extracts, tinctures, elixirs and tonics, all containing THC of some sorts. The average American was actually once allowed to grow and smoke marijuana as he or she pleased. During the Great Depression, however, national attitudes regarding hemp and marijuana began to change. Millions of Americans experiencing the economic hardships of the Depression ended up using Mexican immigrants as a scapegoat for their economic hardships. Mexican workers were the first to really introduce the recreational smoking of marijuana to North America, so the drug became associated with them. Prejudice and fear of the Spanish speaking immigrants led to initiatives and campaigns associating marijuana use with violence, crime, and other socially deviant behaviors, primarily committed by "racially inferior" or underclass communities. It is important to remember that negative attitudes towards cannabis started appearing during a time where racism and prejudice were at an all time high in the United States; A time where segregation was still in play and the Civil Rights Movement hadn’t even made an appearance (“Marijuana Timeline”).
            Anti-marijuana campaigns gained a lot of steam. By 1931, 29 States had already outlawed marijuana and hemp began to be farmed less and less. Politicians developed more and more zeal behind the prohibition of drugs and so the assumptions and propaganda about marijuana began to snowball. Rather than looking into a public health researcher’s perspective on the effects of marijuana, politicians became more prone to hastily wage war on something they knew very little about in order to prove their patriotism. The beginning of the marijuana misconception can be traced to the ambitious efforts the first Commissioner of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics (FBN), Harry J. Anslinger, whose agendas were easily rooted in racism and greed. Mr. Anslinger once said that, “Most marijuana smokers are Negroes, Hispanics, jazz musicians, and entertainers. Their satanic music is driven by marijuana, and marijuana smoking by white women makes them want to seek sexual relations with Negroes, entertainers, and others. It is a drug that causes insanity, criminality, and death — the most violence-causing drug in the history of mankind (Gerber 9).” A man with great power and influence on legislation, Harry J. Anslinger effectively and aggressively ran many national propaganda campaigns against the drug beginning in the 1930’s, molding the nation’s notion that smoking pot is a severe violation of the greater good, all without any scientific backing to his claims. Mr. Anslinger didn’t need credibility, because he already had the politicians to back him. Harry J. Anslinger’s outdated perspective on cannabis thrives to this day, maybe with less racism behind it, but marijuana is still demonized as an illicit drug capable of destroying lives (“Marijuana Timeline”).
            Power politics and blind ambition are responsible for a misconception that creates a situation where the very definition of freedom is altered and twisted. The question is this: Should a person be forcibly arrested and spend time in a cage for smoking marijuana? The number of incarcerated individuals in the U.S. accounts for twenty-five percent of the total number of inmates in the world, while the U.S. population accounts for about five percent of the world population. The United States of America, “the land of the free, and the home of the brave”, is the world’s leading jailer.  Over half of the inmates in U.S. prisons are serving time for non-violent offenses (“Drug War Statistics”). Legislators need to question the morality surrounding recreational marijuana use. An adult’s choice to smoke cannabis is not a malicious act. It does not demean people or put others down in any way, nor does it automatically lead to a life of deviancy. It is one’s human right to regulate one’s self as he or she pleases as far as what they wish to consume.  The government has overstepped their authority in putting legislation on personal behavior. Drinking alcohol and smoking tobacco are decisions that are left up to the consumer’s discretion. Consumers are warned day in and day out about the dangers of tobacco and alcohol. Nevertheless, people still consume alcohol and tobacco in all walks of life, because they consciously make the decision to put what they want in their bodies (Bourgois 581).
Marijuana laws reflect negligence toward what is actually causing the largest amount of grief and pain among Americans. Any true optimist with a faith in the future of humanity couldn’t imagine a future without cannabis cultivation. It is our government’s duty and obligation to create the best possible scenario for its people and to ensure that justice is truly justice. It is 2013, and now is not the time to embrace perspectives and ideals that put limitations on what this country is truly capable of.

Works Cited
Bourgois, Philippe. "The Mystery Of Marijuana: Science And The U.S. War On Drugs." Substance Use & Misuse 43.3/4 (2008): 581-583. Academic Search Premier. Web. 9 Mar. 2013.
"Cannabis and Cannabinoids." National Cancer Institute. National Institutes of Health. Web. 11 Apr 2013. <http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/cam/cannabis/healthprofessional/page5>.
"Drug War Statistics." Drug Policy Alliance. Drug Policy Alliance. Web. 11 Apr 2013. <www.drugpolicy.org/drug-war-statistics>.
Gerber, Rudolph Joseph. Legalizing Marijuana: Drug Policy Reform and Prohibition Politics. 1st ed. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2004. 9. Print.
"Hemp History Timeline." Hemp History Week. Hemp History Week. Web. 12 Apr 2013. <http://hemphistoryweek.com/timeline.php>.
"Marijuana Timeline." PBS, Frontline: Busted. Public Broadcasting Station. Web. 30 Apr 2013. <http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dope/etc/cron.html>.
Small, Ernest, and David Marcus. "Hemp: A New Crop with New Uses for North America."hort.pudue.edu. N.p., n.d. Web. 12 Apr 2013. <http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/ncnu02/v5-284.html>.


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