Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Contact: Sat, 23 Jan 1999 Page: B3 Section: Letters of the Week Author: Kane Slater, Toronto HEMP CROP WAS MEANT FOR OIL PRODUCTION Canadian entrepreneur Paul Wylie rots in a Nicaraguan prison -- presumed guilty -- because the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency continues to prop up the ridiculous and evil prohibition of cannabis hemp. Marijuana is the flower of certain strains of hemp that have been specially bred for high levels of THC (6 to 22 per cent). According to information given by Nicaraguan authorities at Wylie's preliminary hearing, his crop tested at 1.6 per cent THC; that is industrial hemp, not marijuana. All you have to do is look at the plant to tell the difference: If there are no buds, it's not marijuana. Wylie is charged with growing 400 million pounds of marijuana. That is beyond absurd. That's four pounds of marijuana for each of the estimated 100 million users worldwide. Four pounds is enough pot for five joints per day -- enough to stay high every waking moment, every day for five years and four months. Obviously Wylie was not growing 57 hectares of marijuana; he was growing hemp for the nutritious seed oil. Does anyone really believe these charges? How long must this farce go on? Did Foreign Affairs Minister Lloyd Axworthy do something about this when he went to Nicaragua? Marijuana was made illegal to make hemp illegal. Hemp is the most useful and versatile plant on Earth. The industrialization of hemp will eventually eliminate any need for petroleum, cotton, wood pulp and at least a quarter of all pharmaceuticals. The corporations that control U.S. and Canadian policy do not want this to happen and that's why Wylie rots in jail. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck