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Tuesday, 3 April 2012

A Critique on Jack Herer's Good Book: The Emperor Wears No Clothes

By Reuben M. Knox


If and when you genuinely want to get serious about disentangling all the information, and misinformation, about the hemp plant, its real risks and valuable uses, and much of the conspiracy to demonize cannabis in the United States and elsewhere, then there is undoubtedly one book that downright must be on your personal list of reference books; Jack Herer's excellent and greatly reputable tome "The Emperor Wears no Clothes".

In this work, now running into its 12th edition printing, Jack Herer, largely known as the "Emperor of Hemp", makes a very clear case for why the hemp plant should be reexamined as an efficiently sustainable resource for nourishment, vitality, cloth, and remedies. Across its sixteen chapters, Herer points to not only myriad reasons why this plant should be rapidly legalized, but also outlines the history of how a calculated government propaganda offensive had forcefully driven the courts to outlaw it in the first place.

Herer, born in New York City, and originally a Goldwater republican, in fact started out as a devoted prohibitionist, and supposedly even threatened to leave his first wife after discovering that she had smoked cannabis. Herer was a military policeman in the Korean War. Not exactly the stereotype of what one would anticipate for someone that wound up with such an insatiable enthusiasm for cannabis legalization.

But that was fated to take a quantum leap. In 1967, Jack met a lovely lady he fancied that talked him into trying out cannabis, and that was the start of his full reinvention of himself, and his views about marijuana, and the willingness for the U.S. government to liberally and deliberately disinform its own population.

This book, since its 1985 debut, has been updated to the eleventh edition, with the twelfth edition already in the works to feature the latest updates. Updates to recent laws, incidentally, that can at least in some noteworthy part be accredited to the energy and efforts of Mr. Herer in writing this useful and educational book. That's also likely a big part of why this book has already sold over 700,000 copies. So if you genuinely want the honest scoop on the history of cannabis in this nation, teeming with source citations throughout, this one is absolutely a must have informational resource for you.




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