George
Washington’s 282nd birthday and hemp’s colonial and current popularity
are the focus of a new posting on the Bryan William Brickner blog by Stephen
Young.
Young
produced the 2009 hemp documentary, Government Grown: How Polo Illinois Helped Win the War, and authored Maximizing Harm: Losers and Winners in the
Drug War (2000). The
documentary film tells the story of how the US government needed hemp during WW
II and built a hemp industry, part of which is still standing in Polo,
Illinois. Young’s book noted that policies supporting the prohibition of drugs,
and thereby a hemp economy, often made matters worse and not better.
In “Birthday
Present for George Washington: Bring Hemp Back to Mt. Vernon,” Young connects
Washington’s farming to his fondness for hemp and whiskey: “As initially
reported by Reason a couple years ago, a group is using Washington’s historical
recipes and methods in an effort to accurately recreate his whiskey. But I
propose a more family-oriented way to relive the past that gives a different
sense of Washington’s entrepreneurial spirit: bring back hemp to Mt. Vernon.”
Young
continued: “As noted in The Cannabis Papers, Washington succeeded at his hemp
business, and he expressed interest in it that seemed to go beyond mere profit.
Washington described visiting the hemp plots regularly and seemed disappointed
when he missed parts of the growing cycle.”
“That
interest is easy to understand today,” Young added: “Hemp was crucial to the
colonies and the new states; hemp could be crucial now to our economy, if only
it were allowed to be grown by American farmers. There’s no better place to
start a new – hemp – tradition than at Mt. Vernon.”
Young’s article appears on the Bryan William Brickner
blog, an ongoing resource for the political science of constitutions and the
biological science of cannabinoids.
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