Cannabis: the healing of the nation
Cannabis: the healing of the nation
In Hokkaido and northern Honshu, squads of police and public helpers clean the rural area for cannabis every summer.
In a country where illegal drugs laws are very strict, the plants are strikingly not hard to find. In a standard year, group of people sent to keep watch over an area find between one million and two million, some planted by illegal smokers but most of them are the wild descendant of cannabis before its injunction under the Cannabis Control Act of 1948.
For many years, some people were in doubt about the complete destruction of campaigns every year. But today, a human voice minority is demanding their ability to produce a desired result and the general approach of Japan in cannabis.
But the formal discussion on the standard procedures in cannabis that has been raging foreign countries since the 1960s has yet to outstretch the coast of Japan. Before such debate takes place, the significant contributions of cannabis to the local economy are generally unrevealed.
If it is use thoroughly and correctly, cannabis could be an effectively resolve the problems that the country is encountering today, including the issues illegal logging and deforestation that benefit the paper companies, the protection of many cancer patients and the shrink of agriculture.
J. Mitchell