Preface:
Wow Its actually happened! This is the start of the biggest industry that could lead to the eventual takeover of fossil fuel: oils and fuels, plastics, steels, synthetic medicine, etc. Yes all the things that are wrong and end up eventually polluting this world and our bodies. The exact reason the hemp industry was feared by oil mongers and chemical families like the Duponts in the first place has taken an 80 year shift to regain its legality. Do you realize the Hemp Industry was the #1 textile industry in the United States, not Cotton as the DOE textbooks would have you believe, among many other fibs. The world is waking up and realizing these Oligarchs have nothing but more tax, pain and suffering planned for us all, as you can see with the Yellow Vest Movement in France and Europe. The patriots of every nation are rising up and taking a stand. Hemp is an important piece in how these Oligarchs came to power in the first place. The bodies of the first cars built by ford were made of a hemp, a material 10x stronger than steel, and ran off hemp fuel and oil. You could use it for concrete and steel, for building houses and cities. Clothing, Fabrics, waxes, oils, medicine, lotions, cosmetics, rope, fuel. Literally it has a use for everything, there is nothing the plant cannot do. Which means, the Rockefellers(Steel), the Duponts(Chemicals, Oil, Plastics), the Banking Cartels, were all very scared of this industry, and decided to take out the world's first trillion dollar industry overnight...how? Prescott Bush happened to be a close family member of the Dupont Family and he led the charge in congress. They used fear and propaganda from a mexican newspaper to pass the bill, specifically a story about a man who murdered his family. We all know now marijuana will lead to picking up a bag of potato chips more than anything, at the time there was little known about it in DC. If you read the transcript it was passed without any data or factual evidence.
Is there some correlation to the death of GHWB and the legality of Hemp? The timing is very close. Trumpski!
HERE IS THE ACTUAL ARTICLE
Article from: https://hempindustrydaily.com/farm-bill-hemp-federally-legal/
President Donald Trump has signed hemp legalization into law, a change expected to unleash seismic market changes for the hemp industry.
Trump’s signature on the 2018 Farm Bill immediately removes hemp – defined cannabis below 0.3% THC – from the Controlled Substances Act.
The change also applies to extracts from hemp, including CBD and other cannabinoids.
“This is unbelievable,” said Cory Sharp, a hemp consultant in Washington state who sells hemp seeds and advises new hemp producers. “This industry is blowing up faster than anybody could have guessed.”
Federal drug authorities will have to treat hemp like any other agricultural commodity, such as wheat or potatoes, and hemp farmers will no longer face legal or regulatory burdens of being classified as an illegal drug, such as difficulty getting crop insurance or barriers to getting loans.
Here’s what you need to know about implementation of the new law, which is likely to take months or years.:
Hemp producers holding cultivation licenses in the 42 states with existing pilot programs won’t see an immediate change. Those state laws will remain in effect until the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has time to review the state regulations to decide which pass muster.
The USDA must come up with national hemp regulations “as expeditiously as practicable,” an uncertain timeframe. The national plan must include procedures for checking THC content and plans to destroy plants that test “hot.”
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration retains authority over foods, drugs and cosmetics. That means that while CBD is legal in Jan. 1, that doesn’t necessarily mean it is legal to add hemp or CBD to food products or dietary supplements.
States, territories and Indian tribes have no deadline to submit hemp-regulation plans to the USDA. But once a plan is submitted, the USDA has 60 days to approve or reject it.
If a state’s oversight plan is rejected, hemp growers will be “subject to a plan established by the (USDA) to monitor and regulate that production.”
The USDA has one year to study progress in the 42 states and “determine the economic viability of the domestic production and sale of industrial hemp.” Those findings will then be presented to Congress.
The hemp industry has been pushing for legalization for decades, but the plant’s long association with high-THC varieties kept it locked alongside heroin and marijuana in Schedule 1 of the CSA, the most restricted drug classification in the U.S.
CBD entrepreneurs say the Farm Bill’s passage opens up unbelievable business opportunities, especially because interstate commerce is ensured. In other words, no state will be allowed to intercept or impound hemp products.
But hemp entrepreneurs caution that the industry must now follow the new overseers of the hemp plant and its products, the USDA and the FDA.
“Hemp may be federally legal with the passage of the Farm Bill. However, more importantly, where is it sourced? How is it processed?” asked Lisa Richard, co-CEO of L’eela CBD Body Care of Denver.
“The passage of the Farm Bill,” she said, “is only the first chapter.”
Article from: https://hempindustrydaily.com/farm-bill-hemp-federally-legal/
Thanks Trump! Looks like no one will give a shit about soybeans a year from now. there were a few factual inaccuracies in your report, ford did make a hemp car but it was not his first. Also it was not "a Mexican newspaper" that was the problem. It was Hearst who started the Spanish American war and who the film "Citizen Kane" is based upon who personally wrote the reefer madness articles about Mexican rapists and the evil weed. He also owned the patent on wood pulp paper, his only competition was hemp paper, which is of much higher quality. In order to corner the paper market he used his bankers connections to have Anslinger push for banning cannabis. Thus he created a monopoly on paper and his low quality wood pulp paper gave rise to the term "yellow journalism" because it turns yellow with age, unlike hemp paper that lasts forever.