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Farmers Try to Plant Hemp at DEA Office, Arrested
BISMARCK, N.D. — A 51-year-old grandfather who grows garbanzo beans and other crops in northwestern North Dakota was among the protesters arrested for planting hemp seeds on the lawn of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration offices.
Hemp fiber. "We still have folks in high places that seem to think hemp and marijuana are the same thing — they aren't," said Roger Johnson, of the National Farmers Union. "We need to get past that."(Image: Compostablegoods.com) Wayne Hauge and five other
people were arrested Tuesday for trespassing and part of a group of
about 20 protesting the ban on growing hemp, said authorities in
Arlington, Va. Hemp, which is used to make paper, lotion and other
products, is related to the illegal drug marijuana.
Proponents argue it contains too little of the mind-altering chemical THC to make people high.
Hauge and David Monson, a Republican state legislator and farmer from Osnabrock, received the North Dakota's first state licenses to grow industrial hemp in 2007, but they've never received approval from the DEA, which considers hemp a drug. They've sued the DEA, and their case has been before the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for about a year after a federal judge in Bismarck dismissed it and told the farmers to take their case to Congress.
"You might say this is outside of my normal character, and I don't intend to make it a practice," Hauge said in a telephone interview, after spending about five hours in jail. "My interest here was to show that hemp is just a crop. Hemp is not a drug."
The Hemp Industries Association, which has been lobbying lawmakers on Capitol Hill to allow the growing of hemp for industrial uses, said it's the first time the protesters engaged in civil disobedience.
DEA officials did not return telephone calls for comment Tuesday.
David Bronner, president of Escondido, Calif.-based Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps, said his company has used hemp for a decade in its products. The company imports hemp from Europe and Canada, but Bronner said he would like to buy it from U.S. farmers.
"With the weak dollar and the high cost of freight, it's something we should be able to source in the U.S.," said Bronner, who invited Hauge to Tuesday's demonstration.
Bronner said he, Hauge and four others dug several holes on the lawn of the DEA headquarters and planted about 1,000 hemp seeds. Hauge was one of two farmers arrested. The other was Will Allen of East Thetford, Vt.
"He dug a better hole than anyone," Bronner said of Hauge.
Hauge and Allen's trip was paid for by Vote Hemp, the lobbying arm of the hemp industry.
Hauge, who lives in Ray, a town of about 500 people, still has 400 acres of beans to harvest at home. He would like to add hemp to his other crops, which include lentils, barley and durum, and said he and other hemp proponents are frustrated by the lack of progress in legalization.
"My interest has been and will always be raising it for a crop, as part of my rotation," said Hauge, who also is an accountant.
National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson, who pushed for legalizing the growing of industrial hemp in the U.S. while serving as North Dakota's agriculture commissioner, said he was surprised by Hauge's arrest.
"Wow, he didn't strike me as the kind of guy who'd wind up in jail," Johnson said. "He's a rational kind of guy. He's an accountant, for crying out loud, and a farmer."
The National Farmers Union has not taken a position on hemp. But Johnson said he still believes U.S. farmers should be allowed to plant it.
"We still have folks in high places that seem to think hemp and marijuana are the same thing — they aren't," Johnson said. "We need to get past that."



21 Comments so far
Show AllCould we make rolling papers from hemp? At 2 bucks a pack for zig-zags, 32 papiers, it would turn the economy around. The system just fears paper-words, ideas; was it the bill of rights, communist manifesto, or US constitution writ on hemp?
northern california
It should not matter that "hemp and marijuana are not the same thing". They should BOTH be decriminalized. Period.
Thankyou Mr Hauge and Mr. Allen,and to Vote Hemp.We appreciate you consciousness raising protest.The D.E.A. knows the truth,they have an interest in preserving the status quot.Keep up the good fight,Mr Hauge I hope you can use your licence soon.Does anyone know the status of Ron Pauls' Industrial Hemp Bill? Cannabis for peace,Free Marc Emory "overgrow the government"
A rationale the DEA uses against hemp fields is that marijuana growers would hide their crops in said fields. Unclear on the concept.
Since sinsemilla means "without seeds", it seems the morons at DEA haven't thought this one through very well. What pot grower in their right mind would hide their valuable female plants in the midst of mixed sex hemp plants? The pollen would ruin the potency and turn half the bud yield into seeds. Sheesh!
In fact, growers would want to plant their females as far away as possible from hemp fields to eliminate the chances of stray hemp pollen floating by. Hey, maybe we could sell the DEA on hemp as a means to discourage pot growers. Enough hemp fields in any one area would make them move elsewhere!!
Enough hemp fields across the USA would make all pot growers go underground. Oh, they already are...
And in addition to the mentioned products, paper and oils, hemp can be used to make plastics, both bio-degradable and non-degradable, and provides much more bio-mass for ethanol than corn. And it grows where food cannot, so its use for fuel won't take farm land out of production. So, we've got the petroleum lobbies (close to half the oil we import goes to making plastics...) and corn lobbies against hemp. Small wonder the DEA won't approve it, no? And, it grows without the use of pesticides or herbacides, so we've got Monsanto against it, too! And of course, Big M uses oil to make its products.
BTW, azjoe, you really need to stop using ZigZags. They are harsh on your throat and the glue isn't the kind that gets you high. Try Club, by S.D. Modiano, the ones made of rice paper in Italy in the little square package of 50. They are ungummed, and require a new technique. Hold one paper at the narrow end and tear about an eighth inch strip down the long side. That creates a fuzzy edge with many fibers that help it stick, along with a bit of saliva. Keep the beveled side of the tear toward the inside of the joint. You will notice the difference immediately over Z's. Your respiratory system will thank you.
thanks gilamon, i'm smoking a joint right now and feel the wisdom of your advice. i knew it once and need to remember it!
From the article:
"Proponents argue it (hemp) contains too little of the mind-altering chemical THC to make people high."
Agreed with Seventhson. If I want to get high OR drive a diesel-electric hybrid running on hemp oil, it's nobody's dirty business if I do.
Also, nice post by gilamon. Agreed on Club papers; Mrs. T and I have used them exclusively for many years whenever it was inconvenient to use our little glass water pipe.
I can see no rational reason for the banning of Hemp inside the USA other then a perceived need to protect certain industries.
The Constitution was written on paper made from hemp.
.
better ban the constitution then.
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
or smoke it.
...and wasn't George Washington a 'hemp farmer'...or at least owned the plantations.
"I am not a Politician...I only suffer the consequences."
Peter Tosh.
It is a clarion call for ending foreign domination!
Smoke American!
Turn the economy around, bet people back into nature, growing for their own needs.
If it was good enough for George Washington, it is good enough for everybody.
I've never understood why people are worried about a product that mellows most people.
Even if it makes people loose some of their IQ, you would think that the smart elites would like that because it makes it easier for them to be elites.
So the Constitution was done on Hemp, now I see why Bush and Co. burned it!
Try a dugout - never need papers.
What would we do without the DEA?
The problem with hemp is that it has no marijuana.
If it weren't for the DEA, Big Oil would be getting its but whipped by Hemp for fuel.
By the way, if you all don't mind, I recommend getting out there and calling your Congress folks and telling them to support Ron Paul's HR 1866 so that we can end these kinds of anti-cannabis injustices.
I find it very interesting that hemp was outlawed just about the time that Dupont patented nylon!
I guess the corporations have always ruled this country. Elections are held every 4 years just to give us something to do.
Very well put. Sometimes, I feel guilty of wearing clothing made of nylon despite its smooth texture. Yes, capitalism in its disaster form always looms ready to strike. Don't forget the midterm and local/state elections. I heard that Oregon was close to breaking the ban on cannabis. I can't imagine getting anything close out here in Misery(MO).
While it's true that Hemp doesn't contain enough THC to make you get "high", another issue here is the fact that marijuana is still federally illegal despite widespread use by everyone and their dog in all 50 states and around the world.
Here in California, we have hypocritical county and state officials barging into medicinal cannabis dispensaries and indiscriminately arresting the proprietors, stealing the wares, and shutting the businesses down. Of course, medical marijuana has been legal in California since 1996, but our idiot “war on drugs” (Chomsky calls it the “war on ‘certain’ drugs”) DA Bonnie Dumanis has a personal agenda to route out the dispensaries. Dumanis is doing this despite the fact that Obomba had vowed earlier this year NOT to use federal agents to interfere in medical cannabis operations taking place in states that had ratified legality at the state level.
That King Solomon’s Weed of Wisdom is still illegal is a crock and is hypocritical as hell. I am certain that cops, judges, attorneys, etc. smoke the weed of wisdom just as the rest of us do.
IN FACT, I worked for a VERY experience attorney (33+ years) who frequently had other top-dog attorneys and judges over to her house for “bridge games” during which they would light up a spliff and pass it around. I also know that this experienced attorney used her former paralegal to source her ganja for her.
It's absurd that alcohol, tobacco, and caffeine are legal while marijuana is not. Marijuana is, in fact, NOT harmful to the body, while these other stimulants are and very much so.
Additionally, marijuana is actually helpful to the body, as studies have shown that the state of being “high” actually induces a state of deep respiration, which aides in detoxifying the body.
But apart from the argument for legalizing chiba, I sympathize with the plight of these farmers. As other posters have pointed out, this is a money issue more than anything. Nylon, big oil, and others fear the proliferation of this wonderful and dynamic plant. Apart from thousands of industrial applications of the hemp plant, Hemp seed oil is actually an extraordinarily beneficial nutritional supplement for our bodies. Hemp is a wonderful plant with a myriad of helpful and thrifty uses and it absolutely should be legalized immediately.
Skavolutionary78
Citizens charged with trespassing for going onto publicly-owned property?
That should tell us something important.
Heh, look, join in wars of aggression, massacring millions of innocent people, poisoning their countries (and yourselves) with all of the DU dust and toxic chemicals from warfare, destroy their countries, while helping to destroy your own; but don't go planting no hemp on any DEA lawns, for that's impermissible. It's Satan's rule.
Otoh, maybe they'd accept the act if the farmers were planting poppy flower seeds. After all, the U.S. government really gets a kick out of trafficking the "heavy" drugs, the most addictive and profitable ones. All you can make from hemp is seed oil, rope fiber, ... all of which is much less profitable when you consider profit per volume or weight ratios; ya know.