Rand Paul / Mitch McConnell - Industrial Hemp Bill

Discussion in 'Marijuana Legalization' started by Twistedd, Mar 7, 2013.

  1. Supporters of industrial hemp gained a powerful ally in Washington several weeks ago when Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) joined fellow Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul and Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) as a co-sponsor of S.359, the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2013. The House companion, sponsored by Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), has 28 co-sponsors. The bills would amend the Controlled Substances Act to exclude industrial hemp, the domestic production of which has been illegal since 1970.

    Though manufacturing hemp is currently just as illegal as growing smokable pot, 10 states already have frameworks in place for industrial hemp production. The problem is that the Drug Enforcement Administration classifies all forms of hemp as a controlled substance, despite the fact that industrial hemp generally contains less than 0.3 percent THC, or anywhere between 1/6 to 1/66 the amount you'll find in marijuana. If you tried smoking hemp, you'd exhaust yourself before you got high.

    Federal regulations do not differentiate between marijuana and its non-psychoactive cousin, which is used in the production of many useful items, including clothing, rope, biofuel, construction materials, and pulp for paper products. According to David West of the North American Industrial Hemp Council, more hemp products are exported to the United States from places like China and Canada than any other nation on earth.

    The most recent victory for industrial hemp at the state level came when SB50, a bill to create a framework for licensure in Kentucky, passed unanimously out of the Senate Agriculture Committee and by 31-6 on the Senate Floor. Sen. Paul (who donned a shirt made of hemp during his testimony), Rep. Massie, Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner James Comer, and former CIA Director R. James Woolsey all testified in favor of the bill in committee.

    "The specter of people getting high on industrial hemp is pretty much exactly like saying you can get drunk on O'Doul's," Woolsey testified. But there's another angle to the anti-hemp argument. Law enforcement groups claim hemp farmers could cultivate marijuana with substantial amounts of THC among an industrial hemp crop. Woolsey debunked this notion, saying marijuana growers would “hate the idea of having industrial hemp anywhere near” their crops because cross-pollination leads to less THC in marijuana, rather than more THC in hemp. As Reason's Jacob Sullum has noted, “In Colorado… the managers of indoor marijuana grows (currently serving the medical market) are worried about drifting pollen from hemp farms, which could make their plants go to seed instead of producing lots of lovely buds and resin.”

    American policymakers have had a love-hate relationship with hemp. Despite being widely produced in colonial America and grown by some of the Founding Fathers, the U.S. government can't seem to make up its mind about the plant. The U.S. allowed domestic hemp for nearly two centuries before passing the Marihuana Tax Act of 1937, which imposed onerous licensing requirements and taxes on hemp producers. When Japan invaded the Philippines in 1941, thereby cutting off the U.S. Navy from its sole provider for rope fiber, the U.S. launched the "Hemp for Victory" campaign, which sparked Kentucky's hemp farming revival. The Feds reversed their stance yet again with the passage of the Controlled Substances Act in 1970.

    Hemp is also a historically popular crop in Kentucky. In 2002, Purdue University released a study claiming that “[f]rom the end of the Civil War until 1912, virtually all hemp in the U.S. was produced in Kentucky.” Even today, industrial hemp farming would have tangible benefits for Kentucky, where tobacco has waned in recent years. Congressman Massie, who operates a family farm in Garrison, Kentucky, has taken the lead on legalizing industrial hemp in the House. In a recent press release, he said,

    Industrial hemp is a sustainable crop and could be a great economic opportunity for Kentucky farmers. My wife and I are raising our children on the tobacco and cattle farm where my wife grew up. Tobacco is no longer a viable crop for many of us in Kentucky and we understand how hard it is for a family farm to turn a profit. Industrial hemp will give small farmers another opportunity to succeed.

    Despite testimony from an all-star lineup in the Kentucky Senate Agriculture Committee, the measure faces a “tougher time” passing the House, according to Speaker Greg Stumbo; and it will face an even greater challenge making it past Governor Steve Beshear, who sympathizes with Kentucky's anti-hemp law enforcement community.

    Nevertheless, half of Kentucky's congressional delegation supports the Industrial Hemp Farming Act of 2013 and state Agriculture Commissioner Jim Comer said it was a “top priority” for Kentucky's agriculture lobby. McConnell, whose increasingly amiable relationship with Rand Paul seems to be making him lean in a slightly more libertarian direction, explained in a joint statement with the junior senator from Kentucky:

    I am proud to introduce legislation with my friend Rand Paul that will allow Kentucky farmers to harness the economic potential that industrial hemp can provide. During these tough economic times, this legislation has the potential to create jobs and provide a boost to Kentucky's economy and to our farmers and their families.

    Relaxing restrictions on industrial hemp production would allow American farmers to successfully compete. Under the current restrictions, American consumers are sending hundreds of thousands of dollars abroad annually and creating jobs in China, Canada, and elsewhere rather than buying products made from hemp that has been grown in the U.S.A.

    Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul Join Forces to Legalize Hemp - Reason.com
     
  2. wow, i agree with a republican... and an extremist one too...
    but seriously bill maher has called this, republicans are going to start supporting weed and take this issue from the democrats and turn things upside down
     
  3. weed and industrial hemp are two very different things..
     
  4. I emailed both of my senators to support this bill...

    The Democrat
    replied with a list of pro's & cons ...the cons were that the law enforcement couldn't tell the difference between a legal hemp grow and an illegal marijuana grow and therefore couldn't "effectively monitor" the situation ....I replied to that with several points about the differences in the growing styles

    The Republican
    Has ignored my email
     
  5. My state is a heavily influenced agriculture state and they are still not having the Hemp thing. I'll email my people sometime tomorrow about this bill, and tell them how much they should support it for reasons of jobs and industry. Georgia is a fucking backwards state though, so I don't see much of a chance, but I'm willing to fight, even if it's for hemp.
     

  6. Lol obama is a democrat, and he is soooo pro-marijuana. You have to look over "party" lines, can't just think someones an idiot because of political affiliation. Look at words, and more importantly look at actions. Obama lied about stance on medical marijuana, among 100x things, but after that, how can you still think its a dem v. republican thing?
     

  7. Before he was elected, he claimed we need to rethink the marijuana situation as well as the war on drugs. Once he was elected, he admits the war on drugs is a failure, but believe we shouldn't legalize marijuana. When he leaves office, I can guarantee he'll say we should just legalize it. It's similar to what Clinton is doing right now with DOMA.

    The problem with politics is; it's always a party thing, there is no individual thought put into it. The men aren't stupid, they are just making stupid decisions. Obama is a smart man. From what I understand he did pretty well in college and teaching. The argument of "He's the first black president, he can't legalize it" is invalid to me. It's the stupidest reason for it, and it's often used to defend him on the matter. He has the power in speech to tell the states that they have the right and that federal government can't prohibit something of that nature legally, only pseudo-legally. But he doesn't.
     

  8. Exactly my point. He said he was pro-cannabis when campaigning, yet every action ex post-facto has pointed to the opposite, and what can we do about it? nothing. I really feel like rand paul wants to get industrial hemp passed, like he actually cares and believes in it, and it's surprising to me that bigfoot14 is so surprised he is a republican.
     
  9. Mitch McConnell: Campaign Finance/Money - Top Donors - Senator 2012 | OpenSecrets

    McConell's Political Allies:

    1\tKindred Healthcare (CBD Therapy)\t\t\t\t
    2\tHumana Inc\t (CBD, Clintons on the board)\t\t\t
    3\tUBS AG (Too big to fail)\t\t\t\t
    4\tJPMorgan Chase & Co (Too big to fail)\t\t\t\t
    5\tCitigroup Inc (Too big to fail) \t\t\t\t
    6\tFMR Corp\t\t\t\t
    6\tPeabody Energy\t(Hemp)\t\t\t
    8\tGeneral Electric\t(Hemp)\t\t\t
    9\tElliott Management\t\t\t\t
    10\tWelsh, Carson et al\t\t\t\t
    11\tExxon Mobil\t(Hemp)\t\t\t
    12\tWPP Group\t\t\t\t
    13\tBlackstone Group\t\t\t\t
    14\tKoch Industries\t(Hemp)\t\t\t
    15\tUST Inc\t\t\t\t
    16\tBlue Cross/Blue Shield\t(Medical)\t\t\t
    17\tCapital One Financial\t\t\t\t
    18\tFedEx Corp\t\t\t\t
    19\tAltria Group\t\t\t\t
    20\tBank of New York Mellon\t

    EPA Rejects Requests to Ease US Corn-based Ethanol Mandate | Renewable Energy News Article


    Don't you love our government and their math skills? The corn crop is ridiculously small, 42% of it will be used to make GASOLINE, and they claim this will only net a 1% increase in food prices?! :rolleyes:

    As I have read it, the oil producers have needed to foot the bill to make up the difference for a LACK of corn and other biofuel supplies. So that is money out of their pockets, and there is a tax incentive, I understand, for meeting these EPA mandates.
     
  10. Mitch McConnell the turtle co-sponsored this bill? I am flabbergasted.
     

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