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Therapeutics & Pharmacology

Medical Cannabis: Rational Guidelines for Dosing
IDrugs


Pharmacology of Marijuana
Massachusetts Cannabis Reform Coalition, Inc.


Marijuana: Its Role in the Medical Arena
Creighton School of Medicine


Pharmacology of Marijuana
Pharmacodynamics


Pharmacology and effects of cannabis: A brief review
British Journal of Psychiatry


Pharmacology of some Marijuana Constituents and Two Heterocyclic Analogues
Nature Publishing


The Endocannabinoid System as an Emerging Target of Pharmacotherapy
Pharmacol Rev


Ganja in Jamaica - Marijuana and Medicine
Interactive Science Group


Cannabis / Marijuana (Tetrahydrocannabinol, THC)
Drugs and Human Performance


Parkinsons' Helped By Marijuana-Lke Chemicals In Brain
Medical News Today


"Natural marijuana" may treat brain disorders
BBC News


Marijuana Use Affects Blood Flow In Brain Even After Abstinence
Science Daily


Medical Marijuana (A-01) Full Text
AMA


Marijuana as medicine: Consider the pros and cons
Mayo Clinic


Marijuana As Medicine
Fact Sheets


PN Study Supports Medical Marijuana
Cannabis in painful HIV-associated sensory neuropathy


Medical Marijuana Might Reduce Nerve Pain Among People Living With HIV/AIDS, Study Says
Medical News Today


Marijuana in Pregnancy
Ann Acad Med Singapore


Workshop on the Medical Utility of Marijuana
Ad Hoc Group of Experts


Cannabis Compound Abuse
Lina Cassandra Vawter, MD


The Brain's Own Marijuana
Roger A. Nicoll and Bradley N. Alger


MARIJUANA: From evil weed to wonder drugs?
Modern Drug Discovery






The Campaign for the Restoration and Regulation of Hemp (CRRH) goal is to educate people about the medicinal and industrial uses for cannabis in our global society in order to restore hemp cultivation and end unjust adult cannabis prohibition.

Why should farmers grow hemp?
Because hemp is the ultimate cash crop, producing more fiber, food and oil than any other plant on the planet.

According to the Notre Dame University publication, The Midlands Naturalist, from a 1975 article called, "Feral Hemp in Southern Illinois," about the wild hemp fields that annual efforts from law enforcement eradication teams cannot wipe out, an acre of hemp produces:

1. 8,000 pounds of hemp seed per acre.
  • When cold-pressed, the 8,000 pounds of hemp seed yield over 300 gallons of hemp seed oil and a byproduct of
  • 6,000 of high protein hemp flour.

These seed oils are both a food and a biodiesel fuel. Currently, the most productive seed oil crops are soybeans, sunflower seeds and rape seed or canola. Each of these three seed oil crops produce between 100 to 120 gallons of oil per acre. Hemp seed produces three times more oil per acre than the next most productive seed oil crops, or over 300 gallons per acre, with a byproduct of 3 tons of food per acre. Hemp seed oil is also far more nutritious and beneficial for our health than any other seed oil crop.

In addition to the food and oil produced, there are several other byproducts and benefits to the cultivation of hemp.

2. Six to ten tons per acre of hemp bast fiber. Bast fiber makes canvas, rope, lace, linen, and ultra-thin specialty papers like cigarette and bible papers.

3. Twenty-five tons of hemp hurd fiber. Hemp hurd fiber makes all grades of paper, composite building materials, animal bedding and a material for the absorption of liquids and oils.

4. The deep tap root draws up sub-soil nutrients and then, when the leaves fall from the plant to the ground, they return these nutrients to the top soil for the next crop rotation.

5. The residual flowers, after the seeds are extracted, produce valuable medicines.

Our farmers need this valuable crop to be returned as an option for commercial agriculture.

While marijuana is prohibited, industrial hemp will be economically prohibitive due to the artificial regulatory burdens imposed by the prohibition of marijuana. When marijuana and cannabis are legally regulated, industrial hemp will return to its rightful place in our agricultural economy.

Hemp may be the plant that started humans down the road toward civilization with the invention of agriculture itself. All archaeologists agree that cannabis was among the first crops purposely cultivated by human beings at least over 6,000 years ago, and perhaps more than 12,000 years ago.

Restoring industrial hemp to its rightful place in agriculture today will return much control to our farmers, and away from the multinational corporations that dominate our political process and destroy our environment. These capital-intensive, non-sustainable, and environmentally destructive industries have usurped our economic resources and clear-cut huge tracts of the world's forests, given us massive oil spills, wars, toxic waste, massive worldwide pollution, global warming and the destruction of entire ecosystems.

Prohibiting the cultivation of this ancient plant, the most productive source of fiber, oil and protein on our planet, is evil. In its place we have industries that give us processes and products that have led to unprecedented ecological crisis and worldwide destruction of the biological heritage that we should bequeath to our children, grandchildren and future generations.
Hemp TV is one of the largest archives of hemp-related videos on the Web. Please make a donation to help this resource and to help change cannabis laws in the United States, and the world.

Gov. Mitt Romney meets a medical marijuana patient

The Hemp Movement and Dash Hemp

Hemp prohibition is the result of propaganda by the petrochemical, cotton, and wood-based paper industries, who foresaw competition from hemp. Virtually anything that can be made from petroleum can be made from hempseed and other vegetable oils at a much lesser cost, and hemp fiber is many times more durable and resourceful than cotton or wood-based paper. The Root$ of Prohibition

US Marijuana Arrests 1965-2006

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Please visit our our 501(c)(3) non-profit medical marijuana clinics at:
The Hemp & Cannabis Foundation





Let's restore our right to grow this resourceful crop!



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All material included herein is provided free of charge for political and educational purposes under the US federal "Fair Use Doctrine." This material may only be used for political and educational purposes without written consent.


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