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Drug war, food insecurity, malnutrition & climate change
Artificial distinctions block consideration of the impact that US/UN Cannabis policy has on food security, nutrition, and an organic agricultural response to climate change. Cannabis agriculture is key to resolving all of these and more.
People often take drugs because there is something perceived as missing in their lives that drugs are meant to compensate for. Escape, pleasure, confidence, sensation, exhilaration, adventure, romance...Whatever reason, good or bad doesn't matter. People will always use drugs. Prohibition only makes it more likely that they will.
The horrible conditions we see getting worse (environmental, economic, social) are happening in the context of prohibition. How bad do things have to get before all solutions are considered?
If you agree that our forefathers didn't suffer and die for the freedom to complain,
If you agree that the freedom to farm "every herb bearing seed" is the first test of religious freedom,
If you agree that unique and essential natural resources are beyond the rightful jurisdiction of any court
if you agree that climate change mitigation is an urgent, top priority
if you agree that Cannabis "monoterpenes" are worth considering for the effect that hemp agriculture could have in protecting the Earth from increasing UV-B radiation and global warming
If you agree that the "drug war" is counter-productive to its own stated objectives
Then please get in touch to help support a definitive valuation of Cannabis agriculture, manufacture and trade in the context of present deteriorating environmental, economic, and social crises.
Take appreciation of Cannabis to the next level...
California Cannabis Ministry
http://www.californiacannabisministry.blogspot.com/
"If Cannabis and humans were the only two species living on this planet, we'd still have all of the nutritional resources we need to thrive. This cannot be said of any other plant or animal. Cannabis is more than merely "legal" -- Cannabis is essential to sustainable human existence." -- Paul J. von Hartmann, USA
















