Congress Expected to Approve Experimental Hemp Cultivation

With the exception of Colorado, Washington, and Uruguay, cultivation of marijuana for general use is illegal pretty much everywhere on Earth. That includes Australia, Austria, Canada, Chile, China, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkey, and Ukraine. Yet all of those countries allow cultivation of industrial hemp, a nonpsychoactive version of cannabis used in textiles, cosmetics, food products, fuel, and building materials. According to the Hemp Industries Association, the United States is "the only industrialized nation in the world" that has not managed to reconcile these two policies—an impossible feat, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. It looks like the U.S. will soon lose that dubious distinction. The farm bill approved by the House yesterday included a provision allowing pilot hemp cultivation projects in 10 states.
"This is big," Vote Hemp President Eric Steenstra told the Associated Press. "We've been pushing for this a long time." The hemp provision, which allows cultivation by colleges, universities, and state agriculture departments for research purposes, was introduced in the House by Reps. Jared Polis (D-Colo.), Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), and Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.). Its main champion in the Senate, which is expected to pass the farm bill as soon as next week, was Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who took up the cause of farmers in his state who see hemp as a potentially lucrative business. "In 2011," A.P. notes, "the U.S. imported $11.5 million worth of legal hemp products, up from $1.4 million in 2000."
The 10 states that notionally allow hemp cultivation are Colorado, Washington, California, Kentucky, Maine, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Vermont, and West Virginia. With the exception of an experiment in Hawaii that was abandoned due to DEA resistance, hemp has been produced only in Colorado, where Amendment 64 legalized it along with marijuana. Although the Colorado Department of Agriculture has not gotten around to awarding hemp cultivation licenses yet, a few farmers went ahead and planted crops anyway. Last October, Baca County farmer Ryan Loflin harvested the country's first quasi-legal hemp crop since the late 1940s.
Maybe the next time a hemp flag flies over the Capitol, it will be made of fiber produced in the USA. The horror.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
RE-BAN IT.
"The farm bill approved by the House yesterday included a provision allowing pilot hemp cultivation projects in 10 states."
Does the legislation specifically limit it to ten states, or does it just happened that the number of cultivation operations to be approved has been in ten different states?
If ten states is the legal maximum, how does this not conflict with the intent of the commerce clause for all commerce to be regulated equally among the states?
Industrial hemp will make all the products made from it lethargic and unambitious. A rug made from hemp will just lay there, on the floor, doing nothing. All the stereotypes are true.
Hemp ropes are unreliable and often mate with ropes from mongrel races.
Hemp oil is the gateway to rape oil.
You mean rapeseed oil?
"You call it rape seed, we call it Canola."
Hemp ropes encourage aggressive group action and serve as a linch pin of collective violence.
Better than the state doing it. Hemp rope doesn't pretend to strangle or break the neck of anyone in my name.
Unless I chose to be part of the lynch mob collective action
Industrious hemp is an oxymoron.
NutraSweet's Realdoll is made of hemp, and she never puts out any more. He's quite bitter about it.
As for me, I prefer it when chicks just lay there. All that kissing and moaning is just a huge distraction really.
What exacty is the null hypothesis here? That if you plant hemp seeds in the righteous soil of 'Murka, they won't grow because they aren't as morallybpure as corn?
No, they're planting GMO Hemp.
Hard to say. Things having to do with the actual growing and use of hemp fiber is rather well understood, so probably something to do with the DEA freaking out and burning people's hemp fields or everyone in the country becoming a parody of a stoner or something.
This hemp will undoubtedly be trucked on government owned and maintained roads at taxpayer expense so we can't allow this industry to be legal.
Obviously this pilot will result in an appreciable uptick in heroin and meth addiction because of gateway.
Next, we'll see more Poppies in flower shops!
Poppies! Poppies!
Next, we'll see more Poppies in flower shops!
Remember when you could buy the pods off of eBay?
What a glorious time.
Hilarious alt-text, Sullum.
Sullum's alt-text is consistently the best.
Here's my farm bill:
You can grow anything you want on your land.
Are you fucking serious?
If people are allowed to grow whatever they want we'll be starved out at the mercy of China and Mexico. Sorry that facts get in the way of your extremist ideology.
Monsanto will bribe all the private farmers to grow death corn, and the cows and pigs who eat it will glow, and little boys will grow breasts. Think of the little boys.
The funniest thing about the resistance to allowing hemp to be grown is that hemp farming would only make it more difficult to grow marijuana. Any outdoor grow down wind of a male hemp plant would be ruined by being pollinated. It's about as smart as spending millions of dollars to eradicate ditch weed.
The hemp provision, which allows cultivation by colleges, universities, and state agriculture departments for research purposes,
America's march toward a formal caste system goes unabated. God forbid the plebes grow hemp.
A gem in the manure pile that is the Farm Bill.