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Robert Robinson


Last Updated: 6/18/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 43
Sign: Aries

City: MINOT
State: North Dakota
Country: US
Signup Date: 5/25/2006

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009 
Do you think that DEA will plow up the lawn? or  Will we see a pleasant surprise in the spring?

What do you think of the farmers and HIAs civil disobedience?
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 

Current mood:  accomplished
Farmers, Hemp Industry Leaders Arrested for Planting Industrial Hemp at DEA
Headquarters in Act of Civil Disobedience to Protest 'Reefer Madness'





Fed Up Captains of Hemp Industry Plant Hemp Seed on DEA's Lawn With Ceremonial
Shovels


DEA's Continued Blockade of State Industrial Hemp Programs Violates Common
Sense as Well as Obama's Presidential Directive to Federal Agencies to Respect
States' Rights


WASHINGTON, Oct. 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- At approximately 10 a.m. this
morning, North Dakota farmer Wayne Hauge, Vermont farmer Will Allen, and fed
up American entrepreneurs, who have dedicated their livelihoods to developing
and marketing healthy, environmentally-friendly hemp products, for the first
time turned to public civil disobedience with the planting of industrial hemp
seed at DEA headquarters (700 Army Navy Dr Arlington, VA 22202) to protest the
ban on hemp farming in the United States. Even though the U.S. is the largest
market for hemp products in the world, and industrial hemp is farmed
throughout Europe, Asia and Canada, not a single American farmer has the right
to grow the versatile crop which is used for food, clothing, body care, paper,
building materials, auto paneling and more.


Hoping to focus the attention of the Obama Administration on halting DEA
interference, North Dakota Farmer Wayne Hauge; Founder of Cedar Circle Organic
Farm in Vermont Will Allen; Hemp Industries Association (HIA) President Steve
Levine; Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps President David Bronner; Vote Hemp
Communications Director Adam Eidinger and Founder of Livity Outernational Hemp
Clothing, Issac Nichelson were arrested while digging up the DEA's lawn to
plant industrial hemp seed imported from Canada. At this time, they are
currently being held in Arlington County jail and are awaiting charges. They
are expected to be released later this afternoon and will be available for
interviews upon release. The six protesters planted hemp seeds with ceremonial
chrome shovels engraved with:


Hemp Planting Oct. 2009 ~ DEA Headquarters ~ American Farmers Shall Grow Hemp
Again


Reefer Madness Will Be Buried


Mr. Hauge is licensed by North Dakota to cultivate and process non-drug
industrial hemp, just as Canadian farmers across the border have done
profitably for over ten years supplying the booming U.S. market. However, the
DEA refuses to distinguish non-drug industrial hemp cultivars grown for
millennia for seed and fiber and has unconstitutionally blocked all state hemp
programs such as North Dakota's. Mr. Hauge, along with North Dakota State Rep.
David Monson, sued the DEA in the U.S. District Court of North Dakota in 2007,
and the case is currently before the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. "In
recent years there has been strong growth in demand for hemp in the U.S., but
the American farmer is being left out while Canadian, European and Chinese
farmers fill the void created by outdated federal policy," said
fourth-generation farmer Hauge. "When hemp is legalized, land grant
universities across the nation will develop cultivars suitable to different
growing regions to enhance yield and explore innovative uses such as
cellulosic ethanol."


Pictures and video of the action for free and unrestricted use, along with
hemp farming footage and background information are available upon request in
hardcopy and online. An HIA produced video of the action will also be posted,
after 6 p.m. on 10/13 at: www.votehemp.com/DEAhempplanting.html


In the back drop of the spectacle at DEA headquarters, dozens of hemp business
owners in town attending the HIA convention over the weekend fanned out across
Capitol Hill to lobby lawmakers in support of hemp legislation introduced by
Representatives Ron Paul (R-TX) and Barney Frank (D-MA) that would permit
states to cultivate non-drug industrial hemp under state industrial hemp
programs. Nine states have such programs, but their implementation has been
blocked by DEA bureaucratic intransigence. This spring, however, President
Obama instructed federal agencies to respect state laws in a presidential
directive on federal pre-emption:


"Executive departments and agencies should be mindful that in our federal
system, the citizens of the several States have distinctive circumstances and
values, and that in many instances it is appropriate for them to apply to
themselves rules and principles that reflect these circumstances and values.
As Justice Brandeis explained more than 70 years ago, 'it is one of the happy
incidents of the federal system that a single courageous state may, if its
citizens choose, serve as a laboratory and try novel social and economic
experiments without risk to the rest of the country.'"


- Source:
www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Presidential-Memorandum-Regarding-Preemption/


Vote Hemp and the HIA are dedicated to a free market for low-THC industrial
hemp and to changes in current policy to allow U.S. farmers to once again grow
this agricultural crop. Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps President and Vote Hemp
Director David Bronner stated: "Dr. Bronner's has grown into the leading
natural soap brand in the U.S. since incorporating hemp oil in 1999, due in
significant part to the unsurpassed smoothness it gives our soaps. As an
American business, we want to give our money to American farmers and save on
import and freight costs. In this difficult economy, we can no longer indulge
the DEA's self-serving hemp hysteria."






SOURCE Hemp Industries Association

Ryan Fletcher, +1-202-641-0277, for Hemp Industries Association; or Adam
Eidinger of Hemp Industries Association, +1-202-744-2671
....
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 

Current mood:  accomplished
Here's the video!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJgHS6SLEe4
Hemp farmers, business owners and Vote Hemp representatives plant industrial hemp seeds on the DEA headquarters lawn and are arrested.
A must see
Tuesday, September 15, 2009 
Tuesday, March 10, 2009 
Thursday, November 13, 2008 

Current mood:  awake
From:
http://www.startribune.com/local/34332829.html

US appeals court hears arguments in ND hemp case

By Elizabeth Dunbar, Associated Press

Minneapolis Star Tribune - Minneapolis, MN

November 12, 2008 - 3:08 PM


ST. PAUL, Minn. - An attorney for two North Dakota farmers argued
Wednesday they should be able to grow industrial hemp under state
regulations without fear of federal criminal prosecution.

Attorney Joe Sandler told a panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals that his clients' lawsuit against the federal Drug
Enforcement Administration should move forward so that the farmers'
might have a chance to use their state permits to grow hemp for seeds
and oil. The lawsuit was dismissed in U.S. District Court.

At the heart of the dispute is whether the farmers - state Rep. David
Monson of Osnabrock, N.D., and Wayne Hauge of Ray, N.D. - can
cultivate hemp under North Dakota laws without violating the federal
Controlled Substances Act. Hemp is related to the illegal drug
marijuana, and under that law, parts of an industrial hemp plant are
considered controlled substances.

Sandler argued that while hemp plants might fall under the federal
law, the law doesn't apply because the parts of the plant that could
be considered a drug would never leave the farms. He also underlined
the differences between marijuana and the crop the farmers want to
grow, saying the judge who dismissed the case incorrectly treated
marijuana and hemp as the same thing.

Industrial hemp is legally grown in several countries, including
Canada, and the U.S. imports many products made from hemp seed, oil
and fiber. The plant has much lower concentrations of the
psychoactive chemical THC found in marijuana plants.

"The type of industrial hemp they're allowed to grow under North
Dakota law ... is useless as drug marijuana," Sandler said.

A nonprofit hemp advocacy group called Vote Hemp is helping pay for
the farmers' legal case.

Melissa Patterson, a Justice Department attorney, told the appeals
panel that Congress does have the power to regulate the crop in this
case and that Congress has determined through the Controlled
Substances Act that the plants, whether used for drugs or not, should
be restricted.

"The question is whether or not it was rational for Congress to act
as it did, and I think previously this court has said yes," Patterson
said, urging the appeals court judges to uphold the dismissal.

Patterson also argued that the farmers must, as directed by Congress,
first go through a registration process with the DEA to grow hemp
rather than taking the issue to court. The farmers' registration
request with the DEA is still pending.

But one of the appeals judges, Judge Michael Melloy, questioned
Patterson about comments the judge dismissing the case had made about
lengthy delays in that process. For example, it took the DEA eight
years to give North Dakota State University permission to grow
industrial hemp for research.

"Is that what happens with these? They sit around for eight, nine, 10
years?" Melloy asked.

Patterson replied that there had been "no unreasonable delay" in the
farmers' request and said there were other legal actions they could
have taken if they felt there had been too much of a delay. She
declined to comment to reporters following the hearing.

"The Justice Department doesn't want the court to look at this. They
want the DEA administrative process to go on and on," Tim Purdon, the
other attorney representing the farmers, said following the hearing.

Monson said he paid a $2,300 fee and has been waiting since February
2007 to get a definitive answer from the DEA on whether he can grow
hemp. Purdon and Sandler said an initial letter from a DEA official
indicated the agency would not grant the farmers permission to grow
hemp because the agency considered the plant a drug.

In the meantime, Monson said he has lost out on the opportunity to
rotate hemp with his wheat and barley crops that have been hit hard
by blight and scab diseases in recent years. He said he and Hauge
will wait for their case to run its course before planting hemp.

"I don't want to risk losing my farm and going to jail," Monson said.

The three-judge appeals panel isn't expected to issue a written
decision on the matter for several months.


Copyright (c) 2008 Star Tribune
Monday, October 20, 2008 

Current mood:  amused
Also online at the HIA:

http://www.thehia.org/PR/10-19-08_hemp_lahde.html

and Vote Hemp:

http://www.votehemp.com/PR/10-19-08_hia_hemp_lahde.html

Thanks,

Tom


From:
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/10-19-2008/0004906877&EDATE=

Hemp Advocates to Andrew Lahde: 'Can You Spare a Million to Make Your
Vision Reality?'

Hemp Food and Body Care Sales Stronger than Ever in 2008

U.S. Farmers Suing DEA to Grow Hemp are Back in Court November 12

BOSTON, Oct. 19 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Hemp Industries
Association (HIA), a trade association made up of hundreds of hemp
businesses meeting in Boston today, is appealing to millionaire
retired hedge fund manager Andrew Lahde to use a portion of his
recent windfall made betting against sub-prime mortgage-backed
securities to help bring back hemp farming in the United States. Mr.
Lahde garnered media attention for stating in a resignation letter
that hemp is needed as an alternative food and energy source and
should be grown again in the U.S.

"Mr. Lahde's perspective is right on the money," says HIA out-going
President David Bronner. Retail sales of hemp food and body care
products in the United States have continued to set record sales over
the past twelve months, according to new data released by the HIA.
The strong sales of popular hemp items like non-dairy milk, shelled
hemp seed, soaps and lotions have occurred against the backdrop of
state-licensed hemp farmers in North Dakota fighting a high stakes
legal battle against DEA to grow hemp for U.S. manufacturers. The new
sales data validates U.S. farmers' position that they are being left
out of the lucrative hemp market that Canadian farmers have cashed in
on for eleven years.

The sales data, collected by the market research firm SPINS, was
obtained from natural food retailers only, excluding Whole Foods
Market and mass-market food and pharmacy stores, and thus
under-represents actual sales by a factor of two to three. The new
report shows that hemp grocery sales grew in the sampled stores by
65% over the previous year (from August 2007 to August 2008), or by
$2.4 million, to a total of $6.12 million. Based on the
representative growth of this sample, the HIA Food and Oil Committee
now estimates that the total retail value of hemp foods sold over the
past 12 months in North America grew from $20 million last year to
approximately $33 million this year. In addition, the SPINS data show
that sales of hemp body care products grew 10% over the past 12
months in the sampled stores to $12.24 million. Due to the large hemp
body care line sold by The Body Shop, as well as the fact that many
unreported leading mass-market brands of sun tan lotion and sunscreen
products include hemp oil, the HIA estimates the total retail value
of North American hemp body care sales to be at least $80 million.

"Farmers who want to grow hemp to support the steady double-digit
growth are mad as ever about being shut out by our backward federal
government," says Mr. Bronner, who makes Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps
and uses hemp oil in all his top-selling products. "The HIA is
confident that the total North American hemp food and body care
market over the last 12 months accounted for at least $100 million in
retail sales," adds Mr. Bronner.

Over the last three years, hemp food sales have averaged 47% annual
growth, making hemp one of the fastest-growing natural food
categories. "Last fall we expected the double-digit growth of the
hemp food sector to continue in 2008, as the excitement about hemp
milk had led to more brands in the market," comments Eric Steenstra,
HIA Executive Director. "We project that growth in the markets for
hemp food and body care will keep pace into 2009," says Steenstra.

CORRECTION: In Mr. Lahde's letter, he said that; "Hemp is the 'male
plant' [metaphorically speaking, hemp is, like the male Cannabis
plant, useless as a drug] and it grows like a weed, hence the slang
term." This is not quite correct, however, as hemp is both female and
male, but is distinct from the drug varieties of Cannabis because it
contains virtually no THC, the chemical that generates a high.

http://www.thehia.org



SOURCE Hemp Industries Association

Related links:
http://www.thehia.org

Copyright (c) 1996-2008 PR Newswire Association LLC., a United
Business Media company.
Thursday, October 09, 2008 

Current mood:  cheerful

You're Not Hallucinating— Hemp Is A Prime Ingredient

Don't tell Cheech & Chong, but hemp is one of the healthy constituents that French Meadow Bakery is using to build its organic product line to drive growth and sales.

Oct 6, 2008

-By Becky Ebenkamp


Chris Steinmetz and his 9-year-old son are having "That talk," only it's not going the way most parents rehearse it. "Dad, are you going to talk about hemp . . . AGAIN!?"

And Steinmetz the elder isn't even lecturing about the evils of how hemp can be cultivated and turned into hallucinogenic products such as hashish and marijuana. Instead, his focus is on all the wonderful uses of hemp. As the managing director at organic outfit French Meadow Bakery, Steinmetz is aiming to appeal to more than the crunchy granola crowd. Hemp has increasingly become a key ingredient as French Meadow—whose lines include bread, rolls, bagels, tortillas, gluten-free products for people with dietary restrictions and performance-based products for athletes—expands its products to reach beyond the organic category and appeal to more consumer segments within the mainstream market.

Lynn Gordon, who was on a macrobiotic diet, opened French Meadow Bakery and Cafe in 1985. It now bills itself as "the longest continuously running certified organic bakery in the country." In 2006, French Meadow was acquired by Rich Products, Buffalo, N.Y., where Steinmetz was managing director-new ventures group. (Gordon retained the Cafe side of her business.) The portfolio at Rich, which does more than $2.5 billion in annual sales, was driven by appetizers, barbeque and deep-fried seafood offerings. But the company wanted to expand its consumer base by moving into organic foods.

"Nothing that Rich does is healthy for you," Steinmetz jested. "We had to innovate outside of our core business. French Meadow became the cornerstone of our health-and-wellness strategy."

However, Rich wanted the brand to go beyond the generic organic pitch. "Everyone who goes into a Whole Foods goes in for a different reason," said Chris Heile, vp-marketing and advertising at hyperQUAKE, Cincinnati, the brand design agency that helped French Meadow reposition its products. "Some are heavily informed and really committed to this lifestyle. Others are more casual consumers who know this is something they should be doing for themselves and not quite sure what they should be doing. There are athletes who want high protein to enhance their output, and others have a physical need for [special] foods, [because] they have celiac disease." Heile said the philosophy came down to this: "[Most brands] just talk to people because they want 'organic.' We wanted to build a brand that spoke to consumers in a more sophisticated way."

Four archtypes were identified: committed consumers, performance/athletes, casual consumers and beginners. Each got a customized campaign that drove everything from product development and package design to distribution, event outreach and communications.

"Segmentation is always a smart idea because it allows you to get more bang out of your marketing dollar to focus a specific message on a specific customer," said Kevin Coupe, founder/editor at MorningNewsBeat.com, a food industry newsletter. "And now with the current economic situation, people are paying more attention to price. If a $7 bread makes me a better marathon runner, I might see the value of that bread."

The strategy appears to be working. Sales at French Meadow are expected to double from 2007 to an estimated $20 million in 2009, said Steinmetz, thanks to new products, marketing and distribution.

A Web site redesign includes video podcasts and forums for consumer groups such as people with celiac disease who must have a gluten-free diet. The brand is also busy making friends at Facebook and MySpace. Here, too, the company has seen success: Online sales are up 30%, while Web traffic has risen 150%.

Regarding that father-son talk, Steinmetz might quote French Meadow's Web site, which calls hemp "an amazing resource, often considered one of nature's most perfect plants. Packed with protein, fiber and amino acids

. . . the industrial hemp plant is abundant and environmentally sustainable, requiring no pesticides or herbicides to flourish." Because of this, "there's a lot of opportunity among young people, and at colleges," said Heile.

In fact, HempMunchies.com will soon redirect users to FrenchMeadow.com.
Thursday, October 09, 2008 

Current mood:  amused
Found at:
 http://pr.cannazine.co.uk/content/view/709/27/

Tesoro calling the ethanol kettle black?

by Bobby Fontaine
October 7, 2008

This week, Tesoro Corporation, a Fortune 150 company, one of the biggest oil refiners in the world launched a lawsuit against the state of California alleging that new rules for air quality will worsen pollution rather than make it safer. Central to their complaints is the raising of the rate ethanol added gasoline from 5.7 percent to 10 percent. Ethanol is the only true threat to the monopoly fossil fuels have over our transportation industry so a lawsuit by them against ethanol has to be viewed carefully.

I applaud anyone who stands up publicly declaring in a court record that ethanol worsens air quality because it truly does. It's supporters say it lessens emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) but even that is nowhere near true. Instead it creates far worse emissions of other pollutants than plain gasoline causing extreme harm to the environment and human health. In fact according to a recent report released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), it's causing climate change. This new science outlined in "Climate Projections Based on Emissions Scenarios for Long-Lived and Short-Lived Radiatively Active Gases and Aerosols" has been adopted by the Bush administration as a new guideline for how to view climate change. In it, professors Hiram Levy and Drew T. Shindell along with a litany of other greenhouse gas scientists outline how carbon monoxide (CO) and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC's) affect water vapor in the atmosphere to cause regional weather pattern changes where the pollutants occur.

The difference between what they're saying and the long held belief that CO2 is causing global warming is that CO2 is a long term gas while CO and VOC's are short term gases. What this means is that the weather pattern changes we've been attributing to CO2 global measuring standards are actually being caused by short lived gases regionally with carbon monoxide from gasoline and volatile organic compounds from the ethanol being mixed with it.

I was told by one of the administrators of the report, who wished to not be named, that after congressional investigations into why the Bush administration and Dick Cheney have been systematically altering these scientists work to reflect science not resembling their beliefs, it's become much easily for them to publish their work. But still there are political roadblocks. If you read the full report and know how to understand it, clearly it tells a different story from what we are being told is the cause of climate change. But on its face, it looks like Shindell and Levy are saying that weather pattern changes we're experiencing now especially in the Midwest are being caused by soot emission from coal and  wood burning in Asia.

Of course this is helpful in being able to get the administration to stand behind their work since it allows Bush to blame one more of our problems that are his responsibility on China like he's been doing since he came in office. But in truth the report only speculates on the potential that soot from Asia has for giving us problems by the year 2050 based on inconclusive computer modeling. Up until now, scientists have thought soot causes global cooling.

But the report clearly and conclusively states that we need to get our CO and VOC emission under control now because it is already a problem. It says CO causes atmospheric methane to fail to break down and that VOC's lead to higher levels of lower level ozone formation, both of which result in having dramatic effects on atmospheric water vapor.

However what all this has to do with the Tesoro lawsuit is excessively complicated so I will try keep it simple so you can have a better idea of what the lawsuits and the complaints against it by the ethanol industry are really all about.

Tesoro played a central role in lobbying for oxygenates to be added to gasoline along with Enron, EXXON/Mobile, and Halliburton in 1990. Oxygenates in theory are supposed to be good for air quality but they actually worsen it significantly. But since near a hundred percent of congress in 1990 voted for an oxygenate requirement that was supposed to produce better air quality, that is what we're still told oxygenates do.

The Kettle

The ethanol being added to gasoline now is an oxygenate, not a fuel. It's actually called anhydrous ethanol. It replaced an oxygenate called MTBE in 2006 because MTBE was polluting groundwater nationwide and around the world. When the state of California took the EPA to court proving that oxygenates worsen air quality by increasing VOC emissions, the Bush administration stepped in and said that ethanol was no longer being required as an oxygenate but as a fuel to lessen our dependence on foreign oil.

The problem with that argument is that anhydrous ethanol is not a fuel, it is an oxygenate. It causes many engines a greater loss of power than it gives back meaning it doesn't offer any mileage but also produces a loss for the gasoline it is added to. Even in a best case scenario, there is still a 3 to 5 percent loss of mileage caused to the gasoline. For it act as a replacement for fossil fuels, we would have to be using hydrous ethanol like the state of Louisiana is studying how to do successfully adding it to gasoline with a no mileage loss of increase in VOC emission.

What Louisiana is doing at the state level could be streamlined much quicker by the federal government but the politics of energy and the environment in Washington are preventing a national debate over how anhydrous ethanol is stressing our economy now. Its seems our leaders are well aware that talking about switching hydrous ethanol would lead to a better understanding of anhydrous ethanol and the oxygenate program that it road the coattails of into our gasoline supplies pretending to be a fuel.   

The MTBE oxygenate that ethanol replaced was the brainstorm of Enron and Tesoro. They came up with it as a way to increase VOC emissions knowing it would mix with nitrogen oxide (Nox) smog in heavily polluted metropolitan regions and form into ground level ozone. Low level ozone is less visible a smog than Nox smog caused by diesel engines and coal burning. So MTBE was sold as better for air quality even though low level ozone is more dangerous to our health, the environment, and causes changes in climate.

Although the evidence that proves oxygenates cause climate change was not part of our environmental policy in 1990, the science was available. In fact its backers voiced their concerns about MTBE causing the problems that it later did to congress who seemed to have been made deaf by Enron's doling out of millions of dollars around Washington. Of course the idea of dissolving heavy pollutants into smaller particulate using exhaust pipes as delivery systems for deadly gases that mix in the suns rays with the unsightly smog forcing it to burn in an invisible fire as it turned it into low level ozone would seem to be obvious enough to anyone to be fraught with negative consequences.  But to the producers of MTBE and our political leaders, it was simply a way to get us to stop complaining to the EPA about the more visible Nox smog. And it worked.

Actually for those who stood to benefit from MTBE's sales like Tesoro, it was a great way to get rid of highly toxic isobutylene, ether, an unwanted plentiful byproduct of refining crude oil that was costly to dispose of legally. Refiners hated having to lose profits managing it responsibly while releasing it around refineries made the local populations mortally ill. It was a time when Houston was being said to be the most polluted city in the world with the higher cancer rates than anywhere else also. So they figured since the country wanted crude oil products at the same time it wanted Houston to clean up its act, they would spread the pollution around so everyone was breathing their fair share of it while at the same time getting rid of smog complainers. That was the mentality of the first Bush White House. The second Bush president has done nothing but try to hide the truth about what his father did by forcing MTBE to be added to our gasoline.

The MTBE mandate also created a market for our huge natural gas inventories that there was a lack of demand for at the time. Old man Bush, Enron, and Tesoro all have historical interests in the natural gas industry while in 1990 they prided themselves on how efficient they had become at finding and extracting it from the ground although they lived with the daily frustration of not having a market they could sell it all in. MTBE solved that issue for them.    

The Pot

The Tesoro lawsuit is not saying anything about ethanol's VOC emissions or how it causes weather pattern changes. They can't. They and the ethanol industry, as well as our leaders in Washington, know it is an issue not open to public consumption because it would backfire on all of them if any of them raised it. I don't doubt that the lies told by all of them form the greatest conspiracy of all time. But they have used their catty manipulation of the truth about oxygenates do dig our planet and economy into a hole we will be very lucky if we ever get out of it trying to cover it up.

All the Tesoro lawsuit addresses is the fact that in order for ethanol to be added to gasoline at 10 percent rather than the 5.7 percent, since they haven't been given enough time to convert their refineries to be able to produce enough of the special more expensive blend of gasoline that ethanol requires in order for it to work properly, it will result in ethanol being added to gasoline that is not made for ethanol. This they say will worsen air quality even though they are well aware that nothing they can do to their gasoline will make an oxygenate do anything less than worsen air quality. They also add that they shouldn't be required to invest in upgrading their refineries to produced this special gasoline at a time ethanol's future is questionable because it's straining food markets around the world being made from corn.

What they mean is that they see ethanol going the same way their dream child MTBE did and would prefer not to lose any more money over its downfall than they already have. But then if they were really serious about their intent of getting rid of anhydrous ethanol, all they would have to do is run a public relations campaign exposing the truth about its effects on the environment and we could be done with it. But not only would that lead to exposing the truth about MTBE, the ethanol industry is now so deeply embedded in our economy that it wouldn't just be abandoned, especially when there is a way to use ethanol that will work without all the problems it is causing now.

That's where the real problem lies, in the truth about hydrous ethanol. In fact today is a kind of anniversary for hydrous ethanol. On Oct. 1, 1908, Ford Motor Company came out with the Model T Ford. It was designed to use ethanol and gasoline and run for a million miles without needing the engine replaced. It even came with a still to home brew ethanol with in the trunk. Henry Ford had a vision for this country to not only remain forever independent of foreign oil sources by using roadside hemp that thrives in soil that food crops are not able to grow in to produce ethanol from while creating millions of jobs to support his program. Dr. Rudolph Diesel designed the first diesel engines with the intent of them being powered by fuel made from hemp seed. So the original dreamers of our transportation industry saw the future being ripe for hemp and a locally dependent fuel economy rather than the globally dependent one we have now run on fossil fuels.

Big oil in those days didn't plan for anyone but the upper class to be able to afford cars. But Ford's assembly line innovations made the Model T afFordable enough for anyone to have one. Since the oil industry only had filling stations set up around wealthy communities, they feared they would loose their rural market to ethanol. So along came prohibition which outlawed the production liquor including ethanol made for fuel because hydrous ethanol and booze are one in the same. Once the oil industry had time to establish a monopoly on the fuel industry, the liquor laws was repealed and Americans were allowed to get drunk again.

The oil industry however never stopped their campaigns against hemp with their continued persecution of marijuana smoking that started around the same time prohibition ended. Marijuana is hemps medicinal herbal cousin. So for all these years we've been being told that the reason hemp is illegal is because it is too easy to grow marijuana next to and fool drug enforcement agents. But the truth is the oil industry still fears challenges from hydrous ethanol to the markets they very strictly control. Even today after many study's confirm how beneficial marijuana is as an effective herbal healer, the same political factions that support all the oil industry's whims are the same people adamantly outspoken against even the medicinal use of marijuana by AMA approved doctors while still rejecting growing industrial hemp that has no drug properties basing that position on their stand against marijuana  

So the last thing Tesoro would ever do is make an honest claim about air quality problems related to anhydrous ethanol while opening up their refineries to hydrous ethanol as a solution to the problem. But I wonder if they've thought through their reasoning with an objective clear thinking mind. I mean sooner or later the anhydrous ethanol bubble is going to burst where the ethanol industry will have no choice but to exploit how hydrous ethanol is actually a much better the way to go for everyone especially them.

Hydrous ethanol works just fine on its own after minor alterations to an engine without adding it to gasoline. And there's no way they're going to be able to bring back prohibition to stop it from being produced as fuel once Americans learn how easy and profitable it can be if we buy locally produced fuel rather than bring it from half way around the world after it has been pumped out of the ground in the Middle East. So really they're fighting a loosing battle.

But if they exposed the real problems with anhydrous ethanol and offer up the solution of mixing gasoline with hydrous ethanol, then instead of buying oil from the Saudis, they would be buying cheaper locally produced good-ole American hydrous ethanol to mix with their gasoline. Then there would be no need for the ethanol industry to teach this nation that we don't need gasoline at all, that we can just switch over to 100 percent hydrous ethanol. If they did this, not only would much of our climate change problems disappear, we would be getting more mileage for all the wasted effort we're putting towards adding anhydrous ethanol to gasoline now. With corn prices now causing the price of food to go up being the last thing we need next to the high price of gasoline, even getting back a small percentage of mileage would help strengthen the dollar again.

In fact it was when we switched from MTBE to ethanol in May of 2006 that our dollar started to slip over the edge of the economic abyss we're finding ourselves at the bottom of now. The strain ethanol puts on our grain markets along with the loss of mileage it causes, to say nothing of all the damage to property and American lives resulting from the dramatic climate changes it causes, particularly around the refineries where it's produced that emit huge amounts of VOC's, Nox, and especially water vapor, causing extreme drought in some areas and unprecedented flooding in others, is what caused our dollar to weaken.

A weaker dollar means we pay more for oil. Paying more for oil means higher gasoline prices which weakens the economy and further weakens the dollar. As the weak dollar started to effect the value of hedge funds on Wall Street, speculators started using crude oil futures to hedge against the it driving the price of oil up even further to over $4.00 a gallon. The spiraling ping-pong effect between all these factors has landed us where we are today.

But even as the value of the money Tesoro makes selling us their overvalued gasoline declines daily, they still don't seem to be able to just come out with the truth about anhydrous ethanol because they actually supported it in the beginning. They knew that without it, if oxygenate use had stopped altogether, then the weather pattern changes MTBE was causing would have ended just as easy as they started when MTBE use first began. If they had simply stopped using oxygenates rather than replacing MTBE with ethanol, it would have been all people like me needed to make our case that MTBE was the cause of climate change in the 1990's and first half of this decade, not El Nino.

Personal note to Tesoro

Dear Bruce,

Just in case someone from Tesoro is reading this and taking it seriously, let me offer up a bit of advice. Things are getting so bad these days with American worries about climate change and the economy, any good news like hydrous ethanol will be so well received that guys like me would have a hard time exploiting the dire circumstances that forced you to give up blocking its use where no one will want to hear what we have to say. The only reason you've been able to keep the truth from getting out up until now is because Americans don't like bad news. But right now what they want is some heads to put on the ends of stakes and plant them all over Capitol Hill where any bad news that leads to criminal convictions of politicians or CEOs is readily received.

Good news however would neutralize the vengeful effect your past actions have instilled in the average American citizen while also acting on it would push the value of the dollar back up. So although you might make less of it in the future, what you make would be worth more and you would still have your head about you when you spend it.

And if you really want to do yourself a favor, there is a way to refine gasoline with polymer additives so it gives a lot more mileage with almost no emissions that was almost forced on you in 1990 before your company and Enron converged on Washington and gave us MTBE instead. Diesel fuel can be refined the same way. And it cost no more for you to be able to so, in fact less, than what it costs you to prepare your fuel for ethanol. You can find out more about it from this article I wrote titled "Gasoline with 20% more mileage, 70% less pollution"

Viscon USA who makes this polymer additive has found a receptive audience to this technology in the same polluted regions of Texas that MTBE was dreamt up. It is being used successfully there today to bring air quality standards into compliance with EPA rules. It appears polymers additives are good enough for Texas municipal diesel engines as long as the mileage gain it offer remains a secret where the same people that polluted the rest of the country with oxygenates use it to fend off the same strict environmental policies they helped get mandated. And it just so happens that your refineries are being used to produce it for one niche market while you sell the rest of us poison.

So as long as I'm advising you the best way to get rid of me is to start supporting the use of hydrous ethanol in gasoline, I figure it's only fair to tell you about the other shoe I have hanging over your head so you can dodge them both with one move. If you crunch the numbers after considering adding polymers and hydrous ethanol to your gasoline and don't like what you see, then you're reaching the conclusion that it would be bad for the business you have with the American people to solve our economic, air quality, climate change, and foreign dependence on oil problems in one swift and easy move. So run those number down until you can find a way to make it work.

I can personally think of dozens of ideas right off the top of my head for how to make you more money than you are now solving those problems this way. If you don't have anyone who knows how to figure it out, let me know and I'll work you up a new prospectus that will have Wall Street and the American consumer beating down you doors with hundreds of billions of dollars to throw at you. Oh yeah, you invested all your profits in cancer research and pharmaceutical companies so if the American people were allowed access to any level of better air quality, the bottom fall out of them.

In fact ethanol, as bad as it is, is not near as bad as MTBE is it? So the empire MTBE built you is already turning belly up because ethanol is not making Americans as sick as MTBE used to. And then there's the trillion dollar loan you guys took out to build MTBE refineries that was instead used to build the Wall Street house of cards that's crumbling now, the one everyone in Washington is trying to hide the truth about with a 700 billion dollar expense account written against the Americans peoples credit card. You people never got that trillion-dollar loan paid off in time did you, because of people like me who wouldn't shut up about what you were doing. And you're paying extreme penalties for it now to the Russians too aren't you, which really upsets everyone on this side of the equation. At least the Russians are happy so it hasn't been a total bust. I mean they had a pretty tough time losing the cold war and all that.

So you people in quite a pickle aren't you? You are damned if you try to fix what you broke while it will be worse if you don't. Maybe if the whole economy collapses or World War III starts, you can slither out the back door of a failed world.

Hey? - and this is a good one –

Maybe if the people responsible for this mess can facilitate the end of the world purposely, they can create circumstances that will allow for them to come back out on top of the game. Then you can go back to selling us MTBE and the cure-alls for what it does to us. Now that is an idea you might be able to work with.

Oh yeah, it might not work with my having posted it here where the whole world can see what you are up too. I mean in order for it to work, you would have to make the world believe whatever you told them about what happened. If we don't believe it, you would be right back where you are now, looking at pitch forks and shovels outside the castle walls.

I've given you some great ideas anyway. I hope it's helpful. And have a great day while you think it all through. Watching Joel Osteen  http://www.joelosteen.com/Pages/Index.aspx is great when dealing with pressure or a crisis. It's how I get through the week. Try it, you might start to see the world differently. It might help even though your problem is how the rest of us see you. Just remember what Joel says, that it's only important how God sees you. Oh yeah – that might be so hot right now either would it?

Well good luck anyway. I know you have a lot on your plate right now so I better let you go. Man - I hope you wife and kids don't read this.

If I got any of my facts wrong, feel free to sue me. I would love to discuss it with you in front of a jury of my peers. Perhaps you can set me straight on a few details of this story. I am always open to learning new things.

 Sincerely,
Bobby Fontaine

  BobbyFontaine@verizon.netress is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .. language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript"> .. --> document&183;write( '.. -->' ); document&183;write( 'span-->' ); //--> ..>
Thursday, October 09, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished

Upcoming Symposium To Demonstrate Highly Sustainable Hemp and Lime Biocomposite Building Material

American Lime Technology and Olde World Exteriors are pleased to announce their upcoming architectural symposium on environmentally-friendly hemp and lime biocomposite building materials. This event, titled "Designing with Hemp and Lime Biocomposite," will take place on November 12, 2008 in Montgomery, Texas and will feature world-recognized experts and practitioners in the field of sustainable design and construction.

Chicago, IL (PRWEB) October 8, 2008 -- American Lime Technology and Olde World Exteriors are pleased to announce their upcoming architectural symposium on environmentally-friendly hemp and lime biocomposite building materials. This event, titled "Designing with Hemp and Lime Biocomposite," will take place on November 12, 2008 in Montgomery, Texas and will feature world-recognized experts and practitioners in the field of sustainable design and construction. Presenters will include Ian Pritchett, Managing Director of UK-based Lime Technology, Ltd.; Jeremy Blake, Principal in the UK-based architecture firm Purcell Miller Tritton; and Bruce King, author and structural engineer, among others. There will also be onsite demonstrations of hemp and lime construction techniques, and attendees will enjoy a tour of the Hopewell Project, including the Pottery Studio and Chapel, which is the first Tradical® Hemcrete® building project constructed in the United States. The event will also feature exhibitions by American Clay, an Albuquerque, New Mexico-based company;and the Environmental Science program at John Cooper School, in The Woodlands, Texas.

While new to the American market, Hemcrete® has been used successfully in the United Kingdom and Europe for over ten years. This system, which relies on sustainably produced hemp shiv and lime binder, is being used to construct walls and to insulate floors and roofs, making it a low impact, sustainable and commercially viable construction method. The resulting buildings are thermally efficient, attractive, pest-resistant, fire-resistant, and durable, and these nontoxic, all-natural materials contain no harmful chemicals. Unlike typical new construction materials, hemp and lime are breathable, which discourages harmful mold growth while providing better air quality for the building's occupants. Hemcrete® is also completely recyclable and can be converted to fertilizer at the end of a building's lifespan.

Hemcrete® is particularly notable for its carbon-capturing properties. Hemcrete® mitigates the damaging effects of greenhouse gases by sequestering approximately seven pounds of carbon dioxide per cubic foot of wall area. Hemp, which requires little irrigation or fertilization, consumes carbon dioxide during its growing cycle, and the lime based binder captures carbon dioxide during its curing cycle. As a result, in a typical application the material sequesters more greenhouse gas than is produced during the manufacture and transportation of the material.

This event will be of particular interest to architects and specifiers who are involved in sustainable design and construction. For more information and to register, please visit www.americanlimetec.com or call Bruce Petersen at 773-414-5486.

This event will be followed by an open house on November 13, 2008, at Olde World Exterior showroom, in The Woodlands, TX. The openhouse will feature hands-on demonstrations of a range of sustainable material, including Hemcrete®, lime stucco, and limewash.


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Wednesday, August 13, 2008 

Current mood:  amused

NaturalNews.com printable article

Originally published August 12 2008

The Many Environmental and Health Benefits of Hemp

by Sheryl Walters (see all articles by this author)


(NaturalNews) It seems as though hemp is not only an answer to our global health problems, both for people who don't have enough to eat and for people in the western world who are malnourished from eating the wrong foods, but also an answer to our environmental crisis.

The healing properties of hemp

Hemp seeds are perhaps the purest, most nutritionally dense food on our planet. They are rich in vitamins and minerals, and are also the only edible seeds with gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), which is an essential fatty acid. In fact, its essential fatty acid ratio is absolutely perfect for our bodies.
Many people think that it is impossible to be a vegan because protein comes from animal products such as meat and cheese. In actual fact, hemp seeds are a highly nutritious source of protein that is easily digested by the body in its natural raw state.

Some of the benefits of regularly including this potent and delicious super food in your diet are:

* Heart Health and Lowered Blood Pressure - High blood pressure is a sign that the heart is being overworked from having to constantly force blood through sluggish blood vessels. Clinical studies indicate that hemp products reduce inflammation and improve circulation, which means that the blood can flow and take the pressure off the heart.

* Better Digestion – The fiber and fats work wonders for our bowels.

* Losing Weight Naturally - Hemp will fill you up so you don't feel hungry and crave foods that put on the pounds. Getting enough essential fats and other nutrients that are provided by hemp is one of the best ways to stay slim and healthy.

* More Energy - In our world we need all we can get!

* Healthy Cholesterol Levels - The natural fats and nutrients in hemp help us to maintain balanced cholesterol levels.

* Harmonious Blood Sugars levels - One of the most important ways to defy age and prevent disease is to maintain even blood sugar.

Hemp has a Wide Range of Environmentally Friendly Uses

Hemp offers a way to live in harmony with the environment and ecosystems we depend on.
Hemp is the world's oldest and most versatile crop. In fact there are more than 25,000 known uses for it.

Hemp has the potential to replace all major non-renewable raw materials. Hemp fibre is stronger and more versatile than any other plant derived fibre, including cotton and wood. Hemp could also potentially replace petroleum products including plastics.

Deforestation is occurring at around 3% per year, and hemp is a far superior resource since it can be grown to maturity in 100 days. Hemp paper is far stronger and durable than paper made from trees.

Hemp is used in the world's major currency banknotes because it is so strong and water resistant. It is also a sustainable replacement for concrete.

Hemp can grow anywhere and doesn't require pesticides, herbicides or fungicides. Evidence suggests that it can lift heavy metals from polluted soil. It also adds nutrients to soil by tapping into sub-soil nutrients other plants cannot access.

Hemp biomass fuel produces no sulphur and can be effectively used as a relatively clean power source due to its 95% fuel to feed ratio.

At the end of the day, we need to recognise that protecting our environment and our health go hand in hand.

About the author

Sheryl is a kinesiologist, nutritionist and holistic practitioner.
Her website www.younglivingguide.com provides the latest research on preventing disease, looking naturally gorgeous, and feeling emotionally and physically fabulous.

Thursday, August 07, 2008 

Current mood:  confused

Disappearing Ditchweed

A perennial story in the annals of drug war stupidity is the Drug Enforcement Administration's tally of cannabis plants destroyed under its Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program. Year after year, the figures show that nearly all of the eradicated plants are ditchweed, the feral, nonpsychoactive descendants of hemp that American farmers used to legally grow for fiber. A couple years ago, for instance, I noted that "98 percent of the 223 million or so cannabis plants 'eradicated' by American law enforcement agencies in 2005 were feral hemp." Since these plants do not contain enough THC to get anyone high, the program is a vivid illustration of how drug warriors waste taxpayer money. NORML's Paul Armentano reports that the DEA seems finally to have wised up:

How much ditchweed did police confiscate in 2007? That would be anyone's guess.

Upon referencing Table 4.38 (Number of marijuana plants eradicated and seized, arrests made, weapons seized, and value of assets seized under the Drug Enforcement Administration's Domestic Cannabis Eradication/Suppression Program, by State, 2007) in the latest version of the Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics, visitors will discover that the column that previously reported on "ditchweed" seizures (in prior years' tables, it was seventh column from the left) is now conspicuously missing.

Monday, August 04, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished
From:
http://www.visionmagazine.com/archives/0808/earth_watch.html

Hemp: The Solution for America's Greening Economy

By Adam Eidinger
Vision Magazine - San Diego, CA

August 2008
..

Let's do an experiment. Access in your mind everything you are wearing and what it's made out of. Now think about the last time you bathed. What kind of soap did you use? Look at the paper you're reading these words on. What is it made out of? Finally, what did you eat today? Was it organic and healthy? Did you answer "hemp" for any of these questions? If you did, kudos to you for saving the planet by just being yourself--you're a remarkable environmentalist. We at Vote Hemp, a non-profit hemp advocacy group, salute your conscious consumer choices. You deserve a tax cut for all the savings to the planet's ecosystems you are generating.

Oh, you're not eating, wearing and bathing in hemp? Well that's cool, because if you're reading this, you can make a change to green your life today.

If you are having a hard time answering any of the questions above, you're not alone. The vast majority of Americans are consuming unhealthy, synthetic products every day. While more people want a greener lifestyle, chances are that you're wearing at least some petrochemical-based clothing (or cotton sprayed with chemical pesticides), you bathed in petroleum-based detergent soaps, the paper in your hand came from trees, and the food you ate wasn't as nutritious as it could have been.

Because those products are not organic, biodegradable, or sustainable, they negatively impact the environment long after we are through with them and make it harder for people to have a healthy diet.

The big question in the media this year has been how to be a consumer and not destroy ourselves and the planet at the same time. How do we feed, clothe, and house a rapidly multiplying global population organically and sustainably? How do we print paper and not sacrifice forests? How do we get easily digestible protein and nutritious omega-3 essential fatty acids (EFAs) into our diets without eating meat or fish?

Cannabis, perhaps the most versatile plant known to humans, has been grown for thousands of years to make everything from durable fabric, nutritious food, and a plethora of environmentally friendly products. Because nearly everything can be made out of hemp and none of the plant goes to waste, it's the crop America needs to grow if we are to maximize our farmland while reducing pressure to cultivate and chop down all our remaining wild places.

Yet in America, farmers will be sent to jail if they grow hemp, which today is legally imported into the U.S. at a value of $330 million a year.

It's not a surprise that the media and major corporations have recently figured out that the answer to creating many needed environmental improvements in our lives can be found in hemp. Hemp is not grown in the U.S. because the federal government continues to ban it, along with its cousin, marijuana. Essentially, our greener future is on hold because of a 51-year-old irrational fear held by politicians in Washington, DC which says that if we legalized hemp, children will be corrupted and smoke even more pot than they already do. Should we settle for the next president irrationalizing that a healthy hemp breakfast cereal eaten by an eco-conscious child wearing hemp clothing that is durable and biodegradable is justification for a war on farmers and our economy?

So are you ready to do something about this? Then it's time to make conscious decisions about how and where you spend your money.

With more hemp products in the marketplace than ever before, it is possible to be a consumer without contributing to ground water pollution from pesticides or discarded formaldehyde-treated plywood. A discarded hemp fiber board is 100 percent biodegradable and renewable every year. Paper, auto parts and building materials are just a few of the innovative uses of hemp stalks that now must be imported from other countries such as Canada, China, and Germany.

Hemp is a crop that in one season can simultaneously feed, clothe, fuel and save our forests and doesn't require pesticides or synthetic fertilizers. Hemp leaves the farmer's field in good shape for the next crop, too.

So why is hemp banned? Marijuana remains illegal because of the fear that it is a dangerous drug. The same can't be said of non-drug cannabis which has no drug potential, because it contains only trace amounts of Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive substance found in marijuana. It's not clear exactly why it is banned. According to the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), there is no difference between hemp and marijuana. Drug enforcement officials have also argued that if hemp were legalized, marijuana plants could be hidden among their harmless cousins. The problem with that argument is that no marijuana grower would dare do so. Grown together, marijuana plants would soon be pollinated by the hemp plants, turning the buds into seed pods. While the DEA serves the public in many ways, like reducing the unlawful sale of legal prescription drugs, this federal agency, which is responsible for regulating controlled substances, they couldn't be more wrong about hemp.

More than 30 industrialized nations grow hemp for popular products, including cosmetics, auto body parts and dietary supplements. Walk into health food stores and you'll find many hemp products like bread, cereal, non-dairy milk, energy bars, salad dressing, protein powder, and shelled hemp nut, which can be used in thousands of recipes.

Some people are calling hemp the new soy because it's rich in protein and is actually far healthier as a great source of omega-3 essential fatty acids, which help to promote normal cell function.

Once you get past the confusion over the fact that hemp is not a drug, there remains no rational argument against industrial hemp. It is the answer that can lead us to a sustainable future.

Learn more about hemp at http://www.votehemp.com. Adam Eidinger lives in Washington, D.C., where he is the Communication Director of Vote Hemp. He can be reached at adam@votehemp.com


Copyright (c) 2008 Vision Magazine
Thursday, July 10, 2008 

Current mood:  focused

July 10, 2008 Lotus has taken a different approach to 'green' car building with the announcement of its Eco Elise - featuring hemp-based bodywork and other renewable materials. Taking the position that too many 'green' cars concentrate solely on CO2 emissions at the tailpipe, Lotus has overhauled its entire manufacturing process to reduce energy and water usage, boost recycling, use locally-sourced, renewable and carbon-neutral materials, and provide dash instrumentation to encourage greener driving habits. It's an unique 'holistic' approach to environmentally friendly car building - and the stunning Eco Elise should make at least two sales when the news reaches Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong.

Lotus' new Eco Elise celebrates a new type of eco-engineering, in which the company has taken great pains to make the entire manufacturing and driving process as fuel efficient and environmentally sustainable as possible. To that end, they've built the body panels from a hemp resin, and used eco wool and sisal in the interior. Paint is water-based and all materials are sourced locally to reduce the Eco Elise's total carbon miles in production.

Drivers are asked to play their part too - while the car is light, quick and efficient, the dash features a "green shift" light instead of the usual red power shift light, showing drivers where to shift for maximal fuel efficiency and low emissions. Fuel economy and efficiency meters are on display as well.

The British manufacturer's building processes have been overhauled with large reductions in power, fuel and water usage, and nearly 60% of all waste products from the process are now recycled.

More details and photos over at Transport 2.0.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 

Current mood:  confident