Dont be a lemming by Jack Herer. Jack tried to teach the world - TopicsExpress



          

Dont be a lemming by Jack Herer. Jack tried to teach the world about Cannabis Sativa Hemp being the #1 Food, Fuel, Fiber, medicine and more! The NEW ‘THC-free/.3 thc’ industrial hemp our government is pushing will not go far to replace oil, coal, and uranium for fuel-energy; nor provide the food staple needed by the starving millions; let alone stopping the use of trees for paper, resourcing the lightweight building material, Isochanvre ®, the modern furniture materials, and replacing oil for plastics and man-made fibres, and so on. If this phony industrial hemp ever gets fully legalized it will be a foregone failure -- and that is exactly what the government-corporate vested interests intend... to create a crop that fails miserably when it comes to paper, plastics, fuel, food, fiber and all of the other amazing things the cannabis hemp plant is capable of. DO NOT BE FOOLED! By contrast, Cannabis Sativa Hemp (The one we can smoke) is the full-blooded relaxant plant. It grows prolifically up to and over 15 feet (c. 5 metres), and has the relaxant and health-promoting properties. Yet, approximately half the weight of the large female plant at maturity is comprised of seed, exceptionally rich in the amino acids requisite for the correct functioning of the human immune system. ‘THC-rich’ Cannabis Sativa grows up to and over 15 feet (c. 5 metres) in height without fertiliser in a single season (4 months), yielding: ~delectable protein-rich meat-substitute staple seed food (no relaxant in seed and similar to soya), producing ‘meat-loaf’, cereals, nut-butter, plant milk, yoghurt-curds, cold-pressed vegetable oil for cuisine; contains the requisite amino acids essential to the effective functioning of the human immune system; ~cellulose-rich bulk wood-hurds for virtually unlimited quantities of pyrolytic cannabis-methanol fuel and lubricants for all industrial and domestic electricity generation and transportation requirements; ~hurds for cellulosic polymerisation producing plastics (all types), man-made fibres (e.g. nylon), resins, varnish and paints; ~hurds as a superior resource to trees for paper, newsprint and card; ~hurds for chipboard modern furniture materials; and, ~juvenile to mature plants yield all grades of natural fibre for textiles, clothing, velours, etc. (also see Dresden Cotton ®). democracydefined.org/1report.htm#back
Posted on: Mon, 10 Nov 2014 00:51:34 +0000

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