Pro Hemp Group
Wants Companies to Use Cannabis to Power Vehicle
Printed Sept 23, 1999 in Florida Today....
Article by Aaron Davis
In a twist of logic, pro-hemp protesters picketed a Melbourne gas station during
the evening rush hour Wednesday. Their message: "Don't use gas, use cannabis."
About a dozen hard-core hemp promoters from around the state descended on the
Shell Gas station at the corner of Harbor City Boulevard and St. Clair Street.
For hours they chanted, screamed, and hoisted signs toward honking motorists.
"We are asking people to not buy gas at all", said 36-year old Kevin Aplin who's
been promoting the medical and industrial uses of the cannabis plant full time
for ten years. "We're looking for companies to start using hemp instead of oil."
They argue that hemp could be used to manufacture a fuel that would power automobiles.
The protest was the first ever at the station and baffled its owners. "If they
have a problem with Shell they should go to the company, not to the poor people
who work 16 hours a day to live", said Rahman Kahn, who has owned the station
for six years. "They are hurting my business." Protesters say they want all oil
companies to start experimenting with hemp fibers as fuel, but they targeted the
shell station because of the companiy's pro-apartheid stance in South Africa during
the 1980's. "I've heard of any number of strange ones over the years, but this
may be the most off the wall ever.", shell spokeswoman Kitty Borah said from the
company's headquaters in Houston. Borah said the protesters' gripes should not
be directed toward Shell or any of its franchises because only the company's parent
operation, Royal Dutch/Shell, operated in South Africa. Either way,"there will
be more protests in the coming weeks", said Jodi James, who brought her 1-year-old
son Justus to the protest. Organizers hope the rallies spark intrest in the 6th
Annual Hemp Freedom Fest they expect will attract 5,000 people to Wickham Park
this November. Scott Bledsoe 27, was on hand at Wednesday's protest as a delegate
from Cannabis Action Network. According to Bledsoe, the network already has gotten
50,000 signatures on a petition to hold a referendum on legalizing the medical
use of marijuana in Florida. A handful of passers-by added to that list Wednesday.
The movement needs 435,000 signatures by next June to get the referendum on the
November 2000 ballot. James said the next local protest may target a drug-testing
center. "We believe drug testing discriminates against marijuana users", Aplin
said. "Cocaine only remains in your system for a couple of days, Marijuana may
be linger for 30 to 60 days............We believe that people like airline pilots
should be tested. But you should not have to be tested for every job"