-Caveat Lector-

Ditchweed Update:  DEA Numbers
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/195.html#ditchweednumbers

Last week, DRCNet reported on the Drug Enforcement Administration
(DEA) Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/194.html#ditchweed), which appears
primarily devoted to wiping out feral cannabis, or "ditchweed,"
descended from the "Hemp for Victory" program of World War II.
Because the DEA was slow to respond to DRCNet requests for
current information, we were unable to provide accurate recent
figures.

The DEA has now responded.  DEA figures confirm that the vast
majority of cannabis plants destroyed by the eradication campaign
are ditchweed, feral cannabis plants that do not contain enough
THC to provide any psychoactive effects other than a headache.

According to the DEA, the eradication program destroyed 252,
717,000 cannabis plants in 2000.  Of those, 250 million were
ditchweed, 2.5 million were cultivated outdoor plants, and
717,000 were indoor cultivated plants.  In other words, DEA's own
data show that 98.92% of all cannabis plants destroyed under the
program were harmless weeds whose destruction has absolutely no
impact on drug use in the United States.

This year's program is funded at $13.2 million dollars, the DEA
told DRCNet, with grants to state and local agencies ranging from
$5,000 to over one million dollars per agency.  The grants go to
some 106 law enforcement agencies in all 50 states.

Surprisingly, the DEA also claimed to "have evidence that sample
"ditchweed" plants submitted from each state contain THC in
excess of the levels accepted for "getting high."

That was news to cannabis expert Chris Conrad
(http://www.chrisconrad.com).  "I don't know what their 'levels
accepted for getting high' are," Conrad told DRCNet, "but I would
place it at something above 2% THC concentration.  Mexican brick
weed averages about 3%, and according to the study done by the
American Midland Naturalists in the mid-1970s, ditchweed averaged
around 0.5%."

Readers should not be surprised, however, that the DEA claims
that ditchweed can get you high.  This is, after all, the same
agency that has expressed serious concerns about people getting
THC in their bodies from hemp-based lip balms and other body care
products.

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