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Wheeling & Dealing In Michigan – A Hemp Based Auto Industry?
Topics: Clean & Green | 2 CommentsBy admin | September 1, 2010
Could legalized hemp solve Michigan’s economic woes? Even if it didn’t, the recreational use would sure take the edge off Michiganders’ trademark up-tightness.
I think the solution for Michigan’s economic woes is sitting right under our noses. Or perhaps in someone’s bong. You may have heard recently about the Kestrel, a new electric car with a biocomposite body being engineered by Motive Industries of Canada. What do they mean by biocomposite? Hemp. You may already know that hemp is a versatile material for manufacturing, but you may not be aware of hemp’s connection with the very origins of the auto industry. It seems that Henry Ford not only originally envisioned a world full of automobiles fueled by ethanol (with hemp as one of the primary sources of biomass) but even built a hemp composite car all the way back in the 1930′s . So weed and wheels have a long history. Given Michigan’s recent foray into legalizing medical marijuana, maybe the state should just go all the way and make a commitment to cannabis as an industry. The broad industrial uses are obvious, the medical benefits are becoming widely accepted, and if they then just decriminalized the recreational usage of the stuff, we’d have a powerful tool for dealing with the typical Michigander’s trademark up-tightness. Just be careful with your wheeling and dealing, even if you have a license to do both.
Posted by Jillian Galloway on 09.02.10 6:14 pm
$113 billion is spent on marijuana every year in the U.S., and because of the federal prohibition *every* dollar of it goes straight into the hands of criminals. Far from preventing people from using marijuana, the prohibition instead creates zero legal supply amid massive and unrelenting demand.
According to the ONDCP, at least sixty percent of Mexican drug cartel money comes from selling marijuana in the U.S., they protect this revenue by brutally torturing, murdering and dismembering countless innocent people.
If we can STOP people using marijuana then we need to do so NOW, but if we can’t then we need to legalize the production and sale of marijuana to adults with after-tax prices set too low for the cartels to match. One way or the other, we have to force the cartels out of the marijuana market and eliminate their highly lucrative marijuana incomes – no business can withstand the loss of sixty percent of its revenue!
To date, the cartels have amassed more than 100,000 “foot soldiers” and operate in 230 U.S. cities, and Arizona police are now conceding that parts of their state are under cartel control. The longer the cartels are allowed to exploit the prohibition the more powerful they’re going to get and the more our own personal security will be put in jeopardy.
Posted by Bold Ideas For Re-Branding Michigan | dissociatedpress.com on 01.29.11 11:27 pm
[...] already touched on this one a while ago. Why not become “The Cannabis State”? Not only does the stuff grow like [...]