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Results 481 - 490 of 1012

  1. Hemp not a drug — Tanczos
    A Green Party bill would remove industrial hemp from the Misuse of Drugs Act. Green MP Nandor Tanczos said legislation he had drafted would make it clear industrial hemp was not a drug but a useful cash crop which could be used to make a range of products — such as rope, fabric, paper and fibre board. The seeds can be pressed for cosmetics, soap and health foods.
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  2. Hemp not high
    Naughty Essex dope smokers must have thought Christmas had come early. A whole field of marijuana plants ripe for the picking and an empty car boot just ripe for the filling. However there was a significant drawback to their cunning criminal plan. The marijuana plants were in fact dope’s lookeelikee cousin, industrial hemp.
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  3. Hemp off the menu
    The fledgling industrial hemp industry is considering its future after an Australia New Zealand Food Standards Council decision to ban the use of hemp seed or oil in both countries.
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  4. Hemp offers high hopes for future
    Over the past two decades, the regional branch chairman of Federated Farmers has combined agricultural contracting with growing wasabi, radishes and squash for the Japanese seed market, as well as the usual grain crops. So the opportunity to legally grow a crop from the cannabis species was just too good to miss. Of the hundreds of varieties of cannabis, only some contain a lot of THC, the active compound that provides a high.
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  5. Hemp oil shows huge gains in food and personal care
    Although still a small and developing market, demand for hemp oil in North America has been steadily increasing, particularly in the areas of food and personal care. Industry sources place annual growth at 20 percent, although higher prices are, so far, preventing hemp oil from entering the industrial oil mainstream.
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  6. Hemp oil, natural hempress-a new cosmetic ingredient
    Despite the fact that the more recent variants of the hemp plant have been used for narcotic purposes, research has indicated that the plant may have other uses. New seed variants have been developed which have a very low content of the narcotic agent Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and the plant matter from these is being put to a wide variety of uses from the manufacture of high quality paper to cloth suitable for tailoring.
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  7. Hemp on the go
    Do you ever feel like your travel gear is missing something? Maybe that something is hemp! Artisan Gear offers a complete line of travel accessories woven in the U.S. from hemp fiber.
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  8. Hemp ordinance adopted by Oglala Sioux Tribe
    Today, in a ten-two (10-2) vote in tribal council, the Oglala Sioux Tribe adopted a resolution supporting the development of industrial hemp on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. The resolution, presented by former tribal president Joe American Horse on behalf of the Slim Butte LUA (Land Use Assn.), calls upon the U.S. congress to permit the cultivation of industrial hemp for economic necessity.
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  9. Hemp paper breaks New South Wales ground in recycling
    Australia’s first hemp paper made from recycled waste water is on the market in Tasmania. Ten hectares of hemp grown from purified, high nutrient effluent has been produced by the Hemp Co-operative, for Tasmanian Hemp Enterprises. Brandt Teale from Hemp Enterprises says the product is about turning an environmental problem into a solution.
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  10. Hemp policy absurd
    U.S. government law enforcement agents twice recently invaded a sovereign nation and terrorized and stole from a farmer-citizen of that nation, then fled back across the border to the safety of their courts and armed services. They filed no charges. No crime has been formally alleged. In the context of a less absurd set of circumstances, such an action would be beyond outrageous. It would be in the realm of actions the U.S. regularly criticizes when performed by governments in “less free” nations.
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