1. Marijuana is NOT Hemp!

Although both marijuana and hemp are weeds, have a similar leaf
shape, and are subspecies of the Cannabis sativa plant, they are in fact
very different. Marijuana has flowering buds with a high content of THC
(delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol) the stuff that makes you feel “high”.
Hemp, on the other hand, has a very low THC content, can be grown
closely together, and it can be used to make a variety of useful
products. (You cannot get high from smoking hemp.) Hemp and marijuana
were once considered separate entities. The 1937 Marihuana Tax act was
focused on the THC-producing variety. It wasn’t until 1970, when the
Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act took over lumping
hemp and marijuana in the same category, making both illegal, and
creating confusion in people’s minds to this day.
2. It Used To Be Patriotic To Grow Hemp

While America was still just 13 colonies, a 1619 law REQUIRED farmers
to grow it. Hemp was used to make rope, clothing, and sails. Both
George Washington and Thomas Jefferson owned hemp farms, and Jefferson
wrote a draft of the Declaration of Independence on hemp paper. Also,
what about the flag Betsy Ross sewed? You guessed it: made of hemp.
3. The US Government Used It To Fight The Nazis

During
the height of World War II, the US produced a film entitled “Hemp for
Victory” praising the many uses of hemp, and encouraging farmers to grow
it to help with the war effort. The existence of the film was denied by
the Government for many years until 1989, when marijuana advocate Jack
Herrer donated a VHS copy to the Library of Congress. It is now in the
Public Domain, and can be seen on YouTube – watch below!
4. Medical Marijuana Has Been Around For Thousands of Years

Chinese Symbol for Marijuana (Ma)
In Ancient China, the plant, known as Ma, was used for food, fuel,
clothing, and medicine going back to 6,000 B.C. But the oldest existing
reference to medical marijuana dates to 2737 B.C. when the Red Emperor
Shen Nung is credited with writing The Herbal, a listing of medicinal
properties of various herbs, including Ma, to alleviate rheumatism and
gout pain. In 2 A.D. Hua T’o is recorded as having used Ma-yo (the
female plant) and red wine as an anesthesia while he performed painful
surgeries including organ grafts and loin incisions. Yeah, you’d
probably want to be high for that.
5. Marijuana is actually GOOD for your lungs!

Brazilian artist Fernando de la Rocque uses pot smoke to make art.
That’s right, a recent study of 5,000 pot smokers by UCSF and
University of Alabama showed that those who only smoke a few joints a
week actually had stronger lung capacity and external blowing force than
non-users. A 2005 UCLA paper also shows that marijuana smoke might
actually help to PREVENT lung cancer. Unlike tobacco, which contains
nicotine and is a known carcinogen, marijuana contains cannabinoids and
THC, which seem to discourage cancer. It is also impossible to die of an
overdose. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.
6. The Indian Government Declared Marijuana Harmless in 1894

Report of the Indian Hemp Drugs Commission
While use of cannabis was primarily medicinal in Ancient China, over
in India they liked to party with it. It was a common substance, used in
religious ceremonies and to help people chill out. It was often
ingested as a drink, boiled with nuts and milk called Bhang. It made
people happy, so much so that the British Colonial Government was
concerned it might be driving the population insane. They commissioned a
study and issued a report entitled The Indian Hemp Drugs Commission
Report of 1894. It not only concluded that mainstream usage was
harmless, but also that a ban on it might actually prove more
detrimental.
7. Why Do They Call It Dope? 14.4 Million Americans Smoke

Grandma Stoner Smokes a Blunt
A 2007 Government report estimated that 14.4 million Americans smoked
pot during a one month testing period. One study in 2006 suggested that
marijuana is the largest cash crop in the US at $35.8 Billion, but that
number has recently been disputed, with a contrasting report putting it
as low as $2.1 Billion. (Either way, it’s still a large, essentially
unknowable number.) The largest producer of marijuana in the world is
Mexico, followed by Paraguay. But who are the biggest users of the drug?
The Good ol’ USA. According to a study in Time, 42% of Americans have
tried it. Even President Obama has smoked it.
8. Where Did The Name Marijuana Come From? No One Knows

There
is a lot of speculation when it comes to the origin of the name
marijuana. Folklore has it that it is a hybrid of the names Maria and
Juana, slang terms for a prostitute. Another theory is that it is
derived from the word maraguanquo, which means “intoxicating plant.”
While a variant of the word appeared as early as 1873, the plant was
known mostly as cannabis. It wasn’t until the demonization of the drug
in the 1930′s and 40′s (used to suppress minorities) that the word
Marihuana was associated with “Reefer Madness.” Over the years, hundreds
of nicknames have been coined, including grass, weed, dope, pot, and
kush. What’s your favorite?
9. The Use of Hemp Could Save Our Planet

Uses
of the hemp plant fiber itself are numerous. It can be made into rope,
paper, clothing, canvas, eaten as a food, and its seeds can be used for
fuel. It’s also good for the planet. A study by McGill University in
Canada estimated that 1 1/2 to 3 1/2 million acres of industrial hemp
would take care of all of our oil needs. In addition, unlike tobacco,
which destroys the soil after every crop, planting cannabis actually
improves it. It is legal in Uruguay, Peru, India, and even in Iran for
it to be grown for food/fuel. Legalization of both hemp and marijuana
would produce thousands of jobs, take care of world hunger, cut back on
greenhouse gases, and help people cope with the pain of AIDs, glaucoma,
and cancer. It turns out that getting “high” from it is just an added
bonus.
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