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View Full Version : Rolling Stone credits Massie, Ron, and Rand for "epic hemp victory"




jct74
06-03-2014, 11:17 AM
The Other Cannabis War
: The Battle Over Hemp
How a 20-year campaign to distinguish industrial hemp from marijuana scored an epic victory

By Coco McPherson
June 3, 2014 9:40 AM ET

http://assets-s3.rollingstone.com/assets/images/story/the-other-cannabis-war-20140603/1000x600/hemp-600-1401802604.jpg


In the annals of strange bedfellow politics, the story of how, in 2014, industrial hemp emerged from Drug War purgatory is an epic one. But even for long-time hemp advocates, the sight of Rep. Thomas Massie, a conservative Republican from northern Kentucky, biting jubilantly into a hemp bar (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ymKXfseamQ) on live TV last month was startling.

Buried in February’s $956 billion farm bill is an amendment, co-sponsored by Rep. Massie, that legally distinguishes industrial hemp from marijuana after decades of conflation. It defines hemp as an agricultural crop (http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/cpquery?%26dbname=cp113%26r_n=hr333.113%26sel=TOC_ 834691) rather than a drug — and effectively frees American farmers to grow it for the first time in almost 60 years.

Widespread cultivation won't happen overnight - for one thing, the U.S. has no hemp seeds or hemp-processing facilities. But the sudden change in hemp's fortunes shocks its supporters. "If you'd asked me five years ago if I thought we could get Mitch McConnell to introduce a hemp bill, I'd have told you it was impossible," says Eric Steenstra, president of Vote Hemp, the advocacy group formed in 2000 to educate and lobby for hemp legalization in state legislatures and on the Hill. "This is huge."

It’s also been a long time coming. For 20 years, legislators, farmers, hippies, activists, agency heads and agronomists have worked to recast hemp as a game-changer, an American cash crop that could jump-start the country's next economic revival. Kentucky took the legislative lead with outright advocacy by its agriculture department. Unlike a high-profile 2007 lawsuit in which two North Dakota hemp farmers (http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/10/17/pip.hempregulation/) took on the DEA without support from their elected officials in Washington, Kentucky brought its entire federal (and much of its state) delegation to the party.

Among hemp’s biggest advocates are Kentucky’s Republican senator, Rand Paul, the avowed champion of limited government who tweets about the tragedy of the drug war (https://twitter.com/SenRandPaul/status/472362352277729280), and James Comer, the state’s young Republican agriculture commissioner who successfully sued the DEA last month for seizing Kentucky’s imported hemp seeds and for interfering with the implementation of pilot programs made legal by the farm bill. And Massie, a fiscal hawk active in last year’s government shutdown who once studied robotics (http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/massiepg.html) at MIT.

...

read more:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-other-cannabis-war-20140603

Warlord
06-03-2014, 11:50 AM
Good article

Ender
06-03-2014, 11:53 AM
read more:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-other-cannabis-war-20140603


The whole reason that marijuana became "evil" in the first place, was to shut down hemp.

Hemp is a huge competitor to the oil/plastic/cotton industries and we couldn't have that. :rolleyes:

BuddyRey
06-03-2014, 12:31 PM
Does this mean we can start driving indestructible hemp-built, hemp-powered cars again?

jct74
06-03-2014, 01:14 PM
http://i.imgur.com/oH1XFIa.gif http://i.imgur.com/1zK6E9g.gif

http://i.imgur.com/1zK6E9g.gif http://i.imgur.com/oH1XFIa.gif

francisco
06-03-2014, 03:17 PM
Does this mean we can start driving indestructible hemp-built, hemp-powered cars again?

I hope that the lack of some kind of Smiley at the end of your post was merely an oversight.

:p

Occam's Banana
06-03-2014, 04:26 PM
Does this mean we can start driving indestructible hemp-built, hemp-powered cars again?

Cars? Forget that! Hemp-built, hemp-powered jet-packs FTW! ;)

Suzanimal
06-03-2014, 05:57 PM
I had to stick this in here for people that didn't read the whole piece.



Rand Paul’s father — who got on the hemp bandwagon on a dare from Ralph Nader — saw it coming. "I use [hemp's illegality] quite frequently as an example of government stupidity," Ron Paul told Mother Jones in 2011. "And I am sure I get credibility for this, especially with the young people, because that's where I get my strongest support. If you are concerned about the economy, then why are we doing these dumb things?”

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-other-cannabis-war-20140603#ixzz33civz72c
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Occam's Banana
06-03-2014, 06:00 PM
I had to stick this in here for people that didn't read the whole piece.

And this:


When the first hemp bill was introduced in Congress in 2005, it was lonely business. "At that point we had Ron Paul, a pariah in the Republican Party, recalls Steenstra. "Nobody wanted to do anything with us and we could barely get co-sponsors. We'd say hemp and they’d say 'no, no, no, that's pot.' We banged on a lot of doors and worked in state legislatures to get laws changed there. A lot of states considered marijuana to be all cannabis and they didn’t distinguish. We knew we had to change minds in both places." It wasn't until 2012 that the first hemp bill was introduced in the Senate [...]

Ron Paul - way ahead of the curve - yet again ...