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Unprecedented Civil Disobedience For Hemp Legalization

By Phillip S. Smith, Drug War Chronicle. Posted October 16, 2009.


Hoping to focus the attention of the Obama administration on the DEA's bad policies, leading activists were willing to get arrested to make their point.
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Fresh from the Hemp Industries Association (HIA) annual convention last weekend in Washington, DC, a pair of real life farmers who want to be hemp farmers joined with hemp industry figures and spokesmen to travel across the Potomac River to DEA headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, where, in an act of civil disobedience, they took shovels to the lawn and planted hemp seeds. Within a few minutes, they were arrested and charged with trespassing.

Hoping to focus the attention of the Obama administration on halting DEA interference, North Dakota farmer Wayne Hauge, Vermont farmer Will Allen, HIA President Steve Levine, hemp-based soap producer and Vote Hemp director David Bronner, Vote Hemp communications director Adam Eidinger, and hemp clothing company owner Isaac Nichelson were arrested in the action as another dozen or so supporters and puzzled DEA employees looked on.

"Who has a permit?" demanded a DEA security official. "A permit -- that's what we want from the DEA," Bronner responded.


After being held a few hours, the Hemp Six were released late Tuesday afternoon. On Wednesday, two pleaded guilty to trespassing and were fined $240. The others are expecting to face similar treatment.

Although products made with hemp -- everything from foods to fabrics to paper to auto body panels -- are legal in the US, under the DEA's strained interpretation of the Controlled Substances Act, hemp is considered indistinguishable from marijuana and cannot be planted in the US. According to the hemp industry, it is currently importing about $360 million worth of hemp products each year from countries where hemp production is legal, including Canada, China, and several European nations.

The DEA refused to comment on the action or the issue, referring queries instead to the Department of Justice, which also refused to comment beside pointing reporters to its filings in the ongoing hemp lawsuit.

Currently, eight states -- Hawaii, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Montana, North Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia -- have programs allowing for industrial hemp research or production, but their implementation has been blocked by DEA bureaucratic intransigence. This spring, however, President Obama instructed federal agencies to respect state laws in a presidential directive on federal preemption:

"Executive departments and agencies should be mindful that in our federal system, the citizens of the several States have distinctive circumstances and values, and that in many instances it is appropriate for them to apply to themselves rules and principles that reflect these circumstances and values," said Obama. "As Justice Brandeis explained more than 70 years ago, 'it is one of the happy incidents of the federal system that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.'"

 

http://stopthedrugwar.org/files/hempatdea.jpg
police move in (courtesy votehemp.com)

The hemp industry and hemp supporters see several paths forward. Farmer Hauge is a plaintiff in a lawsuit challengingly the DEA's interpretation of the Controlled Substances Act. That case is now before the 8th US Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis. US Reps. Ron Paul (R-TX) and Barney Frank (D-MA) are sponsoring a bill that would allow farmers to plant hemp in states where it is permitted, and the industry is urging President Obama and the Justice Department to follow their own example on medical marijuana and leave hemp farmers alone as long as they are legal under state law.

But despite all their efforts, nothing is happening. Tuesday's civil disobedience was designed to begin breaking up the logjam.

"We're getting frustrated," said Bronner, president of Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps, which has been used hemp oil in its soaps since 1999. "This is supposed to be change with Obama, and things aren't changing. We just had the DEA and local DA go nuts on the dispensaries in San Diego where I live. We spent money on a lobbying firm to get a statement from the Justice Department along the lines of Holder's statement on medical marijuana, but nothing is happening. This would be easy to do, but it's not happening. We understand that Obama has a lot going on, but we're getting increasingly disappointed and frustrated. We hope this will help catalyze something in this administration."


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See more stories tagged with: hemp, dea, will allen, wayne hauge, steve levine, david bronner, adam eidinger, isaac nichelson

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The Evilness of Hemp Prohibition
Posted by: victoriahokulani on Oct 17, 2009 1:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the 18th century Virginia farmers were penalized for NOT growing hemp since it was such a useful plant for so many applications. I wonder how history will view the latter 20th century through early 21st when it is noted that Hemp/Cannabis was illegal to possess and cultivate in the most powerful empire of that time? What evil idiocy has gripped this shitforbrainz of a government for the last 80 years, that continues to outlaw a plant that the Chinese once called tai ma or just "ma"?
What does Tai ma mean? It means "Great Mother".
Lets yank the "Cheech and Chong" vernacular out of Cannabis/hemp and begin a deep soul searching into why mankind has not risen up en masse to demand we get our sacred plant back growing in our collective gardens This is a crime against all of humanity, the Great Mother Earth, and the Creator, that this all purpose plant has been demonized and villified. WE THE PEOPLE need this plant more than ever, it is truly our salvation and can lead us towards the road to a true planetary healing and economic recovery.

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» "It's the tobackgo, stupid" Posted by: kauaiq
All in favor, say Aye.
Posted by: PJAW on Oct 17, 2009 2:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any opposed? Anybody?

I would expect that just about everyone who reads AlterNet knows and understands the absolute stupidity of the ban on Hemp and the long list of benefits that its growth and utilization would provide.

It's an easy issue for legislators to avoid because "there's so much going on" and because of the severe paranoia surrounding any position that might be interpreted as "pro-drug" even though Cannabis and Hemp are different plants and neither of them is a "drug".

Praise to this group of citizens for taking action.

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Just one question:
Posted by: ADNK on Oct 17, 2009 3:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Did the DEA dig up the seeds?

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» RE: Just one question: Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN
hemp
Posted by: vasumurti on Oct 17, 2009 6:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Under our drug laws, even the growing of cannabis hemp -- the nonspyschoactive variety of the plant--is outlawed in order to enforce the marijuana laws.

Hemp has many economic uses. It contains the longest fiber in the plant kingdom and is one of the strongest and most durable. It can be used for commercial and industrial applications, including insulation, textiles, clothing, and rope. The fiber and pulp can be used to manufacture nondeteriorating paper using a relatively pollution-free process. The plant can also be used for biomass applications. Its seeds yield oil similar to linseed, which can be used in many commercial and industrial applications. In Eastern Europe and Central Asia, the seeds have been used for human consumption.

"Hemp. It's marijuana's nonspyschoactive sister," writes Ed Rosenthal. "You couldn't get a buzz if you smoked a bale of hemp, but it's still illegal to grow it in the United States." Industrial hemp is legally grown in over thirty countries. For thousands of years, people grew hemp and prospered. It flourishes without pesticides. Thomas Jefferson considered hemp so vital to America that he risked his life to smuggle hemp seeds out of France. George Washington grew hemp and instructed his caretaker at Mount Vernon: "Make the most of the hemp seed. Sow it everywhere."

Industrial hemp was first grown in Kentucky 250 years ago. It is currently grown in other countries across the globe, including France, England, Canada, Australia, China, Hungary and the Ukraine. Industrial hemp has virtually no THC, the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. It cannot be used as a drug. None of the countries that allow industrial hemp production have experienced any drug problems relating to the crop. Using modern processing techniques, hemp can be used in place of petrochemicals. Instead of synthetic plastics made from oil, we can use natural fiber and processed bioplastic derivatives. Plastics and polyester rely on foreign oil, while cotton consumes enormous amounts of water, fertilizer, herbicides, and pesticides.

Industrial hemp is very clean, easy to grow and is one of the most environmentally sound sources of industrial fiber in the world. Environmentally friendly detergents, plastics, paints, varnishes, cosmetics, and textiles are already being made from it in Europe. Industrial hemp can meet our fiber needs while also revitalizing our struggling rural economies.

Hemp is already being used in place of trees for pressboard, particleboard, and core concrete construction molds. Paper made from hemp is acid-free, stronger and lasts far longer than paper made from trees. Hemp fabrics are far stronger and more resistant to mold than any other natural fiber. Builders in France and Germany use hemp for construction material, replacing drywall and plywood. Hemp can be used to manufacture plastic plumbing pipe, replacing such toxic materials as polyvinyl chloride (PVC). Hemp fiber is already being used in place of glass fiber in surfboards and snowboards. Hemp could also provide the resin itself.

For ideological reasons, the federal government refuses to allow farmers to grow hemp despite the fact that industrial hemp is currently grown legally worldwide. The George W. Bush administration took anti-hemp policy to a new extreme, attempting unsuccessfully to ban the import of hemp foods and cosmetics. Erwin "Bud" Sholts, director of the Wisconsin Agriculture Department's marketing division, said hemp "is the most value-added, prolific fiber crop man can grow." Sholts acknowledged that hemp is an emotional issue, but points out that "other nations with drug laws as tough or tougher than ours have overcome this hurdle." The U.S. is the only major industrialized nation that prohibits the growing of industrial hemp; anti-drug hysteria should not blind the public to the commercial and industrial applications of hemp.

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» RE: hemp Posted by: rockie57
» RE: hemp Posted by: robbrian
» RE: hemp Posted by: perrylove
Fighting For OUR OWN FREEDOM...Meanwhile in China...
Posted by: picket on Oct 17, 2009 6:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our elected USA Leaders are mute and they do not hear or see OR CARE about their own citizens' ability to make a living.

China Looks to Hemp for Poverty Alleviation, 4/14/09 http://gokunming.com/en/

Farmers are provided with free hemp seeds plus technical training. There are 10,000 farmers in this particular Chinese province and the farmers stand to double their annual income through hemp cultivation.

Also isn't China is the leading exporter of Hemp materials??

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UNPRECEDENTED CASH GRAB TO THE END
Posted by: stellabloo on Oct 17, 2009 8:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to this video Hemp for Ethanol we could be making hemp ethanol for about $1.40 per gallon.

This very straight museum curator and descendant of Kentucky hemp farmers also explains that hemp is seeded continuously like grass, not grown in rows like corn, doubling the yield per acre.

Hemp ethanol was used to run the original Model T's. This put it into direct conflict with the corporate interests of Standard Oil (originally established in 1870, it made John D Rockefeller the richest man on the planet and ultimately spawned Exxon-Mobil, the richest corporation on the planet). Rockefeller became a billionaire by using gasoline in his vehicles - previously a waste product of the oil refining process.

In 1916 the US administration hired a committee, headed by Freud's nephew Dr. Edward Bernays, to swing public opinion - in spite of America's policy of strict neutrality - in favor of entering WWI. The first deliberate PR campaign, really an experiment in mass mind control (read up on Bernay's other "accomplishments") was so successful that in 6 months the US entered what was previously an unpopular war. At the same time, planes and tanks (which ran on gasoline) made their large-scale debut in modern warfare.

Immediately following what was doubtless a lucrative period for Rockefeller, Ethanol Prohibition was introduced. Suddenly the farmers were no longer allowed to brew their own tractor fuel (or a few bottles of special reserve). Prohibition was impractical, as history shows us, so was immediately followed by Hemp Prohibition. All it took was a series of newspaper articles highlighting crimes committed by blacks and hispanics under the influence of "marihuana reefer" (the origin of the term "yellow journalism"). Anslinger quotes are rife with the basest sort of racism.

This is the historical background for today's hemp prohibition. It is not a proud history.

Unbelievable that we are using corn, which uses petroleum-based fertilizers and pesticides, for ethanol - when there is an alternative. Unbelievable that millions starve every year and cod livers are in short supply, but a valuable and hardy (hence the term "weed") food plant is still ILLEGAL because it LOOKS like another plant - that is basically harmless. Unbelievable that a commonplace expression like "hemp ethanol" has virtually disappeared from the public lexicon. Unbelievable COINCIDENCE, yes.

But once you realize that the Federal Prison Industry now produces 100% of all military helmets, ammunition belts, bullet-proof vests, ID tags, shirts, pants, tents, bags, and canteens (using non-violent inmates, most of whom are in prison on minor drug charges), Hemp Prohibition becomes just another entirely believable Corporate SCAM :.?

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Keep China Working
Posted by: JFlagg on Oct 17, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If the DEA allows US farmers to grow hemp think of all the Chinese farmers who will loose market share.

The DEA is protecting jobs around the world, the US is a service and Tech provider to the world Market. If we start improving conditions for the American business man he will have an unfair advantage and countries might try and place Tariffs on our exports, then we would have to retaliate and place Tariffs on some imports.

THEN, what might happen is that the US workers would have to go back to work and manufacture stuff, or start growing stuff and then the whole balance would be thrown off and what are all the American businesses with off-shore manufacturing facilities going to do?

Protect us DEA, from this ugly downward spiral into American people working.

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» RE: Keep China Working Posted by: Birdland
» How about America Working? Posted by: Cooltruth
not a mainstream subject..
Posted by: jonestown kool-aid on Oct 17, 2009 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
while I enjoyed reading the posts on this article, it's a shame that there's only 11 comments-and this is alternet! I can only imagine how these guys were portrayed on the evening news...

People who are aware of the facts about hemp understand it's importance on many levels, the rest of the herd seems indifferent or puzzled by the concept. In reality there is a HUGE market that currently can't reach it's potential due to misguided and archane laws.

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Johnny Appleseed?...
Posted by: Bearzerker on Oct 17, 2009 11:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...we need Johnny Hempseed out in force throwing hemp seed enmass around all federal buildings ...everywhere...

Marc Emerey says it best...
overgrow the government!

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» RE: ...everywhere... Posted by: Sister_Lauren
Mute Voices.
Posted by: melpol on Oct 17, 2009 11:42 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The voices of the people is of little concern. Only the voices of profiteers is heard. Unless Hemp growers can buy lobbyists their voices will be mute.

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» RE: Mute Voices. Posted by: aussidawg
1. PR; 2. Brownspliff; 3. NH
Posted by: tokerdesigner on Oct 17, 2009 11:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
1. I think these well-meaning guys blundered into some bad PR, in the sense that they were seen attacking innocent grass, messing up the people's lawn, etc.

2. Anyone who wants to get industrial hemp legalized reasonably quickly could try the "Brownspliff" program (find "UK Sea of Green" on the UKCIA website-- stands for Cannabis Internet Activists). Roll up pot(ting) soil in a big sycamore leaf with one potseed inside (or two if you have lots of seeds). Load up hundreds of these in a big ruecksack and ride your bike at night; use a dibblestick to make 3"-deep holes under frowsy untended shrubs or hedges and stand each spliff invisibly inside, where the shade-tolerant seedlings will get moderate waterdrippage and grow to seed before anyone notices them. Then ride 100 yards and do the next one, etc. In summer 2011 the region will be so flooded with industrial(?) hemp plants, the bureaucrats will be overwhelmed and just give up.

3. Good starting place for plantpilgrims to flock to might be New Hampshire-- it has the right name, and the inhabitants are said to be feisty and resistant to federal domineering.

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What's needed is a count of supporters, other than ballot box.
Posted by: hardwroc on Oct 17, 2009 12:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The ballot box is blocked by the hoops and jumps required to get on the ballot, plus the way it would be worded, plus the massive expenditures required and amassed by the opposition.
What is needed to be done is a non binding show of support without the crap campaign. A website that only allows one vote per address and made nationally known for a short time to just get an approximate number of pro votes.

These could be waved like a flag at those that think jailing half a million Americans each and every year is a GOOD idea. And that is regarding the ACTIVE version of Cannabis. It could be done seperately regarding HEMP as well. This would show the support for the industrial uses, and the personal uses.

Hey, NORML ? Anything ? DNC ? FAUX Newz ?
2o/2o ? Somebody curious?

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» RE: The President's own site Posted by: Sister_Lauren
This is
Posted by: linecrosser on Oct 17, 2009 12:20 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
the clearest example of how the Corporate State and not WE THE PEOPLE actually run this country. Will the revolution be peaceful? I doubt it, just looking at the country's foreign policy and the way it deals with any country that doesn't do things the way Amerika thinks it should be, we start wars. The "war on drugs" is so perverse that in includes hemp. The war on drugs is just a cover for militarizing the police, so the "powers that be" HAVE A STANDING ARMY in OUR streets. Glad I bought all my ammo before the shortage began. I'm willing to die so my children won't have to grow up in this hidden slave state, that is so blatantly hypocritical . We preach tolerance and acceptance, but only if you become a consumer of and slave to the Corporate State. I'm not advocating violence, I'm expecting it. History will repeat itself. It always has. Why don't I do something myself? basically, I respect life, everyones. Unlike those who have taken over and run this country now. I will continue to do it the peaceful way, writing congress members. It's so easy to imagine a time when there is no FEDERAL RESERVE, Medical Insurance Industry, and a sincere effort to save the planet, from the idiots in control who threaten violence with a badge and gun. Remember any violent effort, will harm any efforts made to date, and must be avoided, those in control now will use it to take away what remaining rights we struggle to keep. Peace out.

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This is great, however,
Posted by: soulrebeljc on Oct 17, 2009 12:25 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's not also lose sight of the fact that people want to get high also. I want to get high. I want to come home from a long day a productive and societally beneficial work as a public school teacher, and I want to fire up a joint. The government simply has no right telling me I can't do that, constitutionally.

So absolutely our economy and the environment would benefit immeasureably from the industrial use of hemp. That's not even an assailable argument anymore. It's the prohibition mentality of the so-called do-gooders who want to sniff everyone's butt for the devil's business that have our government in a tailspin. Fuck those people. Seriously. Take the argument where it needs to go - enough of the hypocrisy - legalize pot or ban alcohol and tobacco also.

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» RE: This is great, however, Posted by: joebanana
» RE: I want to get high. Posted by: stellabloo
» RE: Teaching testimonials Posted by: Sister_Lauren
it won't spring MARC EMERY from a US human-rights violating PRISON
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Oct 17, 2009 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
now will it?

nope...

the furriner will continue to suffer for US policies

all for filling American citizenry's orders ... while the Americans get no time AT ALL for initiating the transactions

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Who the hell gave them the power to outlaw a plant anyway
Posted by: joebanana on Oct 17, 2009 12:45 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Laws based on lies, misinformation, propaganda, and,opinion, and most of all stupidity, aren't "laws" at all, their crimes committed by a few against the majority. Who do these assholes think they are? Protectors of society? I don't think so. A government that arrests people that don't agree with it's way of thinking, isn't a democratic government. America is not democratic. America has been infiltrated by a sick "good ol' boy's club". Our government is not a government "of the people", it's group of elite, with personal agenda's, who couldn't care less about Americans. Our government is the most harmful, dangerous, deadly, entity, that ever existed. And it keeps getting worse. If, terrorism is rated in needless, politically driven, death, and destruction, the US beats the pants off of al-Quada. If the taliban launched a hundred attacks, that killed a hundred innocent people, it would be nothing near the death toll, the US has inflicted on other countries. What's the difference between the "war on terror", and terror?

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Lets not forget
Posted by: kauaiq on Oct 17, 2009 2:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lets not forget that the real reason for illigalization of MJ was to repress industrial hemp. I think as long as MJ is illegal the DEA will continue to hide behind their reasoning of not being able to discern between the two. It's the same ruse they used with reefer madness in order to weed out comp for big oil.
people want to get high and if they don't have access to safe forms they will seek out other forms of drugs to do so. It's time the people said whats wrong with being mellow. Untill MJ is legalized industrial hemp, the biggest benefator of the planet will continue to be repressed by big business

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Time to get to work on getting HR 1866 on the table. March forward soldiers !
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 17, 2009 2:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ron Paul has been trying repeatedly to legalize hemp and HR 1866 is the ticket. I'm back to asking Congressman Glenn Nye to support Ron Paul's HR 1866. There are Republicans who support legalizing hemp and don't trust the DEA either which may sound odd to some. Don't hesitate to confront your Congress critter on this. March forward soldiers !

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Hemp wasn't banned because of pot
Posted by: angelmom1 on Oct 18, 2009 11:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hemp was banned because cotton farmers feared hemp would replace cotton and they would be out of business. Southern cotton plantations owners were feeling the pinch with the abolition of slavery, then came the problem with hemp. Hemp was easier and cheaper to grow and the blacks could grow enough on their small plots of land, to feed their families plus a little extra for bettering their situations. The cotton farmers weren't going to let this happen, so the rumors spread about the hemp being used by blacks to get high and then the young black men got the wrong ideas about white women. With this "dangerous" weed around, no southern white woman was safe. Banning it along with marijuana would keep 'King Cotton' king and southern whites in power. The cotton industry had the money to get the ears of congress and the small farmers didn't. Then, as now, the ones with the money got what they wanted and hemp went to the wayside and marijuana underground. So, it all goes back to civil rights in more ways than one. If we want hemp for it's many wonderful uses, we need to dispel the myths that got it banned to begin with. It is not marijuana, it is a growth product for industry and it is an earth friendly product. Sometimes we need to to dig back into history's under belly and find the myths that brought about the laws of today, in order to free the minds of those in power. Just seeing the 'why' for the original laws can sometimes bring about a fervor for change. The laws were originally passed for the wealthy to stay wealthy and in power and to keep the blacks and other poor farmers from thinking they could ever have any power.

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» Digg a little more Posted by: kauaiq
Hemp Laws Will Not Change
Posted by: melpol on Oct 18, 2009 12:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Change or reform will not come through marches or protests. It can happen only by buying support from congressmen through their lobbyists. The public has the power of the ballot box. But unfortunately their choices will only follow the bucks of lobbyists. It is a no win game. The laws against hemp will not be altered.

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Hey, don't leave Oregon out.
Posted by: pawprints on Oct 20, 2009 12:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oregon's state legislature passed a bill to start licensing for industrial hemp farming in Oregon this summer, in a surprise move that has stimulated a lot of people to think about large scale hemp farming. The lawn- grass seed industry is petering out, vegetables are not grown as much as they used to be, and a possible switch to profitable industrial hemp was welcomed by our farmers. The bill was passed and the caveats began to accumulate, warning that the DEA would not regard hemp as a legal product, and would likely obstruct farmers. I hope this move by Obama's administration will encourage farmers to grow this ancient, useful fiber and seed for domestic and export uses.

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.
Posted by: stacyhinjosa on Nov 11, 2009 11:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please excuse my English. I have no idea why marijuana is still prohibited. Now is the time for legal weed. Nowadays, by using a vaporizer, smoking weed is almost perfectly healthy. Vaporizers take away all the negative effects of marijuana. The best herbal vaporizers are now even cheap to buy and great to use. The Obama administration claims to want change yet is not doing anything to reap from the tax potential of legal weed. I think legal weed is inevitable and necessary. The government can't continue trying to police something it can't control. Think about how safer our streets would be near South Texas and California where drug trafficing is common place.

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