Pubdate: Wed, 03 Feb 2010 Source: Hendricks County Flyer (IN) Copyright: 2010 Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5125 Website: http://www.flyergroup.com/ Author: Elliott Duquette LEGALIZE IT To the Editor: Nobody in the history of the world has overdosed from marijuana. Many people in America depend on medical marijuana for their medical conditions and symptoms such as glaucoma, cancer, multiple sclerosis, nausea, epilepsy, etc. It's sad how people with chronic pain and deathly illness are deprived of the only medicine that will work for them. Prescription medication can become very addicting, and cause death from building up a tolerance, requiring the patient to use more than prescribed. The U.S. government has marijuana classified as a schedule I drug, which means it has a high rate for abuse and no accepted medical value. After 16 years of court battles, the DEA's chief administrative law judge, Francis L. Young, ruled: "Marijuana, in its natural form, is one of the safest therapeutically active substances known." The United States is the only industrialized country not growing industrial hemp. Farmers could grow hemp to feed all of the new ethanol production plants built in Indiana who cannot get enough corn from our farmers, which is raising the price of everything since corn byproducts like corn syrup is used in most of our foods, thereby raising food prices overall. Paper could be made from hemp, solving our deforestation problem. Hemp can yield three to eight dry tons of fiber per acre. This is four times what the average forest can yield. In the first year of legalization 18,000 new jobs could be brought to Indiana, from hemp paper mills to bio fuel plants. In 2007 the United States imported about 500 tons of hemp from Canada. Manufacturing companies could save money from buying hemp grown in the United States, lowering overall costs of production. Elliott Duquette Avon - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D