obiwansativa
New Member
I believe this plant should be allowed to be grown like any other nutritional and or medicinal herb in the garden.
I'm becoming more and more familiar with the history and lore of this remarkable plant, one in which an 18th-century ancestor of mine was fond of, and who sent seeds along to Australia with the First Fleet in 1788. That act also saved Australia in the years to come from famine, twice, and I suspect it could benefit many other nations who are suffering even now, as the seeds are particularly nutritious, and it is an easy plant to grow in abundance.
I firmly believe the prohibition of Cannabis Sativa / Indica in the United States of America is an egregious crime against Humanity, and a coup of our self-evident rights and liberties as Americans, perpetrated by those well-connected individuals in positions of power and influence who stood very much to gain by eliminating it, and who employed calumnious and psychotic propaganda to whip up a largely suffering (thus distracted) populace during the Great Depression into going along with it.
I suppose sometimes a lie becomes so large by virtue of complicit apathy that the falsehood must be maintained at all costs, even at the cost of a nation's integrity and strength, by those who would profit from it.
I appreciate all of you who are committed to ending this unlawful prohibition.
Thank you, 420 magazine, for letting me post my humble opinions.
I'm becoming more and more familiar with the history and lore of this remarkable plant, one in which an 18th-century ancestor of mine was fond of, and who sent seeds along to Australia with the First Fleet in 1788. That act also saved Australia in the years to come from famine, twice, and I suspect it could benefit many other nations who are suffering even now, as the seeds are particularly nutritious, and it is an easy plant to grow in abundance.
I firmly believe the prohibition of Cannabis Sativa / Indica in the United States of America is an egregious crime against Humanity, and a coup of our self-evident rights and liberties as Americans, perpetrated by those well-connected individuals in positions of power and influence who stood very much to gain by eliminating it, and who employed calumnious and psychotic propaganda to whip up a largely suffering (thus distracted) populace during the Great Depression into going along with it.
I suppose sometimes a lie becomes so large by virtue of complicit apathy that the falsehood must be maintained at all costs, even at the cost of a nation's integrity and strength, by those who would profit from it.
I appreciate all of you who are committed to ending this unlawful prohibition.
Thank you, 420 magazine, for letting me post my humble opinions.