-Caveat Lector-

Annual Ditchweed Eradication Boondoggle Underway Again -- Feds
Spend $13 Million on Summer Jobs Program for Midwest Students,
Bored Cops
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/194.html#ditchweed

"Feral cannabis," more commonly known as ditchweed, has been a
part of the rural landscape from Indiana to the Dakotas and down
as far as Texas for the last half-century.  The hardy,
opportunistic weed, descendant of the legally grown hemp of the
World War II era, lines roadside ditches, the edges of farm
fields and creek beds, and is an innocuous and generally
unremarked upon part of Midwest country life.

As countless Midwestern youths have discovered, the wild cannabis
lacks sufficient THC content to have any psychoactive effects.
"You'd have to smoke a joint the size of a telephone pole to get
high off that stuff," is a common refrain among those who have
tried it.  "You can get a sore throat and a headache, but you
can't get high."

The folk wisdom on ditchweed is right, said internationally
recognized cannabis expert Chris Conrad.  "This stuff is feral
cannabis left over from World War II when the US government
subsidized hemp farming to help the war effort," Conrad told
DRCNet.  "It doesn't have any psychoactive effects," he added,
"and that's been known since at least the 1970s."

But that has not stopped the Drug Enforcement Administration from
waging war on the harmless (and high-less) weed.  Since its
inception in 1979, the DEA's Domestic Cannabis Eradication/
Suppression Program has expanded rapidly from initial efforts in
California and Hawaii to now operate in all 50 states.  This
year's budget is $13 million.  While the DEA publicly touts the
number of cultivated plants it destroys -- it claimed to have
destroyed 3.5 million cultivated plants in 1999 -- the vast
majority of plants spotted and sprayed in the campaign are
ditchweed.

The DEA no longer releases figures for ditchweed seizures, but in
his book, "Marijuana in the Third World: Appalachia, USA,"
University of Kentucky sociologist Richard Clayton crunched
official numbers from the late 1980s and early 1990s.  "It is
important to examine carefully how much of the marijuana
eradicated in the US is essentially worthless ditchweed," wrote
Clayton.  "The answer is 95%."

Clayton's research is not the only to pan the DEA's eradication
efforts, nor the most damning.  A 1998 report by the Vermont
State Auditor placed the proportion of ditchweed in DEA's
marijuana eradication program even higher, at 99.28%
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/041.html#ditchweed).

When asked by DRCNet this week about current ditchweed to
cultivated marijuana ratios, Clayton said, "Nobody knows for sure
now because there is no independent audit.  My guess is that
roughly the same proportion is ditchweed, which is useless from a
drug consumption point of view."

And if this year's campaign is any indication, a figure of that
order still stands.  According to reports in the Munster
(Indiana) Times: "It's marijuana season again, and that means law
enforcement officials have begun searching trenches, roadways and
farm fields in Northwest Indiana for the ditch weed."

Indiana's share of the DEA's $13 million comes to $330,000, which
it is using to employ a state trooper, a local farmer, and a crew
of college students to patrol the fields of Nothwest Indiana.
When the evil weed is spotted, the crew springs into action,
spraying the plants with herbicide, then watching them wilt.

"It's very difficult to kill," trooper Don Hartman told the local
paper.  "Once it goes to seed, it's spread by animals, birds or
the wind.  You have to actually destroy the seed and sterilize
it, but it's not possible.  We spray the plant but we have to
keep checking the same area to see if it's really gone."

While police are vigilant for ditchweed aficionados and warn area
farmers to be on the lookout, they don't seem to find many.  "A
few years ago, the jails were packed with people who came to pick
ditchweed," Hartman said.  "We'd get phone calls about strange
cars in the area or a hotel manager would call and say that
someone from a different state was there, and we'd do a
surveillance the next day.  That's not true anymore.  You don't
see people coming from all over the country.  We believe we've
had some success."

Or perhaps those unfortunate suburban Chicago kids finally got
the word about ditchweed.

The enthusiastic Hartman told the paper that in one year a decade
ago, police destroyed 23 million ditchweed plants in the state
with a value of $10 billion.  Sounds impressive, until one
considers that ditchweed has no value in the drug market.  This
would suggest a more modest value for the eradicated plants:
zero.  (Twenty-three million times zero still equals zero.)

Hartman added that the herbicide spray doesn't kill the plants
immediately.  If you smoke it after it has been sprayed, it won't
kill you, he told the Times, "but you won't get the same high."
The Times reported that Hartman "chuckled" at his own witty
remark.

At least the program provides summer work for a crew of college
students like Dawn Patrick, 20, of Wheatfield, a junior at
Southern Indiana University.  Part of a two-person crew -- one
drives, one sprays -- Patrick is in her second year on the
ditchweed death patrol.  "I don't know anyone who has come to
pick it, but we had heard that people would come look for it,"
she told the Times.

The Munster Times reporter did not question either about the
futility or utility of their work.  But when DRCNet asked the
University of Kentucky's Clayton about the wisdom of devoting
resources to eradicating ditchweed, he asked in return: "How do
you transcribe the sound of laughter?"  Regaining his composure,
Clayton said: "In the larger scheme of things, this is a
relatively small amount of money.  The program's principal
purpose may be as much symbolic as real, which is consistent with
the principal approach of the domestic drug war."

It may only be $13 million this year, said Chris Conrad, "but's
that's money that could be hungry kids, for education, or any
number of other things.  At least it's not $13 million being
spent to put people in prison."

But for Conrad, who frequently testifies as a court-qualified
expert witness in California marijuana cases, the war on
ditchweed is worse than merely stupid.  "This is more than a
waste of money," Conrad told DRCNet.  "This is akin to species-
cide.  The taxpayers' money is going to destroy hemp that was
developed at taxpayer expense by the US government to produce the
most productive hemp in the world for American fighting men.
This feral cannabis is highly superior to what is being used in
Europe and Canada now.  What we have here is one of the last
stands of superior hemp for high quality industrial products,"
said Conrad.  "If I were growing hemp, my preferred source of
seeds would be those plants being destroyed by the DEA.  They're
the best possible hemp seeds: low THC, high fiber and oil
production, low fertilizer requirements, high yield."

As for the DEA, said Conrad, they are engaging in what is
"basically an arbitrary abuse of power.  They have discretion to
deal with this, and their discretion is to be arbitrary, cruel
and capricious."

("Arbitrary and capricious" is legal language that was used by
DEA Administrative Law Judge Francis Young in 1988 to conclude
that DEA was obligated under the Controlled Substances Act to
reschedule marijuana as a prescription medicine.  DEA Chief
Administrator Robert Bonner proceeded to arbitrarily and
capriciously disregard Judge Young's well researched and reasoned
decision, which the Act allowed him to do.)

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to