Thursday, January 23, 2020
Hemp: The Earths Greatest Plant :: essays research papers
 Hemp: The Truth About the Earth's Greatest Plant      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In a perfect world there would be a product that could serve as a fuel  source, a food source, a paper source, a textile source, and this product would  be easy to produce in any of its forms. Believe it or not such a product does  exist; it is the plant known as hemp. No tree or plant species on earth has the  commercial, economic, and environmental potential of hemp. Over 30,000 known  products can be manufactured from hemp.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Hemp was a common crop grown in the U.S. until 1937 when it was unjustly  banned. A common misconception about hemp is that it was banned because it was a  widely abused, harmful drug. Hemp was banned because it was a competitive threat  to the wood industry. Corporations that profited from the demise of hemp spread  rumors that marijuana was a major drug problem, which it was not at the time.  They also propagated a campaign that it was a drug that induced uncontrollable  violence, another complete falsehood.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Hemp is the plant scientifically known as cannabis sativa. It is  referred to as hemp when it is grown for its fibers, stem, and seeds. Its leaves  and flowers produce the drugs marijuana and hashish. However, sterile breeds of  the plant are still illegal to grow in the U.S. Literally millions of wild hemp  plants grow throughout the entire Midwest today. Wild hemp, like hemp used for  industry purposes, is useless as an intoxicant. Yet U.S. drug law states that  one acre of this can result in the owner being sentenced to death. The death  penalty exists for growing one acre of perfectly harmless, non-intoxicating  weeds!  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Hemp can produce any product that paper can produce. The difference is  that one acre of hemp can produce four times as much paper as one acre of trees  ( a study done by the U.S. Department of Agriculture). Also, a crop of trees  takes twenty to fifty years to be ready for harvest where hemp is ready to  harvest four times as much in just a year. In addition, hemp produces twice as  much fiber per acre as cotton. Twenty five percent of all pesticides in the  world are used on cotton, averaging to four pounds of chemicals per acre of  cotton in the U.S. every year. Since hemp is a natural repellent to weeds and  insects, it needs almost no insecticides or herbicides. If it were substituted  for cotton it could greatly reduce the pesticide usage. Again, hemp can produce  anything cotton can and what's more it can produce it better.  					    
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