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View Full Version : US Senate Votes to Finally Legalize Hemp After 80 Years of Prohibition



dynamo
1st July 2018, 14:24
June 30, 2018
https://www.activistpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/legalize-hemp-840x400.jpg (https://www.activistpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/legalize-hemp-840x400.jpg)

By Carey Wedler (http://theantimedia.com/author/careyw1/)

(CW (https://steemit.com/news/@careywedler/senate-votes-to-legalize-hemp-after-80-years-of-prohibition)) — On Thursday, the U.S. Senate approved (https://www.forbes.com/sites/tomangell/2018/06/28/u-s-senate-votes-to-legalize-hemp-after-decades-long-ban-under-marijuana-prohibition/2/) a bill to legalize hemp, an industrial crop that has been banned for decades.

In April, Senators Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Rand Paul (R-KY), Ron Wyden (D-OR), and Jeff Merkley (D-OR) submitted (http://thehill.com/policy/finance/394741-senate-passes-legislation-to-legalize-hemp-as-agricultural-commodity) a separate bill to legalize hemp, and those provisions were then incorporated into the broader farm bill (https://www.agriculture.senate.gov/2018-farm-bill). The Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry approved that version before the upper house of Congress voted to approve it this week by a margin of 86-11. The bill would legalize the cultivation, processing, and sale of hemp.

“Consumers across America buy hundreds of millions in retail products every year that contain hemp,” McConnell said Thursday. “But due to outdated federal regulations that do not sufficiently distinguish this industrial crop from its illicit cousin, American farmers have been mostly unable to meet that demand themselves. It’s left consumers with little choice but to buy imported hemp products from foreign-produced hemp.”
According to Wyden:
Legalizing hemp nationwide ends decades of bad policymaking and opens up untold economic opportunity for farmers in Oregon and across the country.
Hemp is a versatile crop that can be used in everything from construction material to clothing, and it has long been a staple in the United States and around the world (http://maui.hawaii.edu/hooulu/2016/01/15/industrial-hemp-a-history-and-overview-of-the-super-crop-and-its-trillion-dollar-future/). In fact, in the 17th century, the government encouraged (https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/dope/etc/cron.html) people to grow it.

Though hemp was eventually banned amid the widespread attack on cannabis in the 1930s, ironically, it then had to be imported to sustain the war effort during World War II.

Farmers across the country have expressed relief and excitement that hemp has come this close to legalization. “It’s super big,” Dani Billings, who owns LoCo farms in Longmont Colorado, said, as reported (https://www.9news.com/article/news/local/next/hemp-farmers-in-colorado-applaud-senate-farm-bill-that-legalizes-it/73-568956645) by an NBC affiliate station in Colorado . “We have people who understand agriculture, that understand this is for farming and it’s not to get people high.”
Bruce Perlowin, CEO of NC-based Hemp Inc., which worked with veterans, said (https://globenewswire.com/news-release/2018/06/29/1531670/0/en/Hemp-Inc-Commends-U-S-Senate-for-Passing-Farm-Bill-with-Hemp-Legalization-After-Decades-of-Prohibition.html) in a press release:
With Veteran Village Kins Community B-Corporations set up in 8 states so far, the legalization of industrial hemp will now allow these future veteran villages to be built and to flourish – creating more support for our veterans than anyone can possibly imagine.
The bill still must be approved by the House, which has expressed opposition to hemp legalization, though McConnell is expected to campaign heavily in favor of the bill in the lower house of Congress. A list of concerns about the bill handed down from the White House reportedly did not include any objections to hemp legalization, meaning that if the bill makes it through the House, it’s likely President Trump will sign it into law.
Some states have passed legislation in recent years legalizing hemp, but the latest legislation would make it national policy.

Support Carey’s work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/CareyWedler)!
By Carey Wedler (https://steemit.com/@careywedler)

Dennis Leahy
1st July 2018, 16:05
What the cannabinoids harvested from high-cannabinoid cannabis plants are to the world of natural medicine, the fiber and seed oil from low-cannabinoid cannabis plants ("hemp") are to industry. Hemp has the capability of causing a new (real) 'green revolution' in industry, completely replacing wood fiber in paper production, partially or completely replacing wood fiber in some construction materials (OSB at least) and adding "hempcrete", replacing (or severely limiting) cotton in textiles, replacing the petroleum-based components of plastics, epoxies, paints, inks, lubricants, soaps, and fuels, as well as provide high-protein seed meal and nutritious seed oil rich in Omega 3 and 6 in the ideal ratio for humans. The plants also suck up soil toxins, so can be used for soil remediation. Hemp is naturally resistant to insect attack (hemp can be used to create insect-repellent), and so very little to zero pesticides are needed for hemp as a crop.

In the USA, INC., completely under the control of mobster corporatists, there will be clash after clash with and within the industries that hemp replaces. If you read about the history of hemp in the US, you'll know that DuPont aggressively pursued replacing hemp fibers with synthetics, and that Hearst fought against hemp because of the vast forests that he owned in addition to his newspaper empire would lose value if hemp replaced wood in paper. It won't just be the pharmaceutical industry fighting against cannabis, it will be many varied industries that fight against cannabis replacing some non-cannabis component.

Big Energy is far too powerful to allow the potential of hemp as fuel to occur, so I expect little change in that sector. In short, the new green revolution is citizen-centric and eco-centric, but to the established status quo that is corporate-centric, hemp is an unwanted -and superior- competitor. On its own merits, hemp could drastically alter the industrial economy and job market very quickly - but that won't happen quickly because it disrupts established business as usual.

dynamo
1st July 2018, 16:32
Well put, thanks Dennis Leahy.

..On its own merits, hemp could drastically alter the industrial economy and job market very quickly - but that won't happen quickly because it disrupts established business as usual.[/opinion]
Most of us here are aware that "disrupting established business as usual" is what this world needs ASAP.
The present paradigm is in need of hasty change, no ifs, ands or buts, IMO...

onawah
1st July 2018, 16:50
That information was also posted here: http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?101778-Reasons-to-Legalize-Hemp-Cannabis-CBD-Internationally&p=1232485&viewfull=1#post1232485 Perhaps a merge would be in order.