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Out of the smoke, a new challenge emerges. Collect. Combine. Compete. This is only the beginning. Stay locked in. 👀 Weedcoin - Like bitcoin but way higher, the coin for the culture. 21nnfR4TkbZNLwvRrqEseAbz7P3kxKjaV7KuboLJpump $Weedcoin #WeedcoinOG #Crypto #Gaming #Solana #ComingSoon
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$weedcoin is on top of the mountain. Buscalan Mountains, Philippines
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THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY WASN'T A ROBBERY. It was a law. In 1937, they banned a plant. Not because it was dangerous. Because it was too useful. Hemp could replace timber. Cotton. Petroleum. Concrete. It could clean soil, sequester carbon, feed people, house them, heal them. So they buried it. Called it a drug. Demonized it. Criminalized it. And in its absence — we burned the forests. We poisoned the rivers. We built cities out of petrochemicals that will outlive our grandchildren in landfill. 90 years of prohibition didn't just cage a plant. It caged an entire alternative civilization. One that ran on regeneration instead of extraction. On soil health instead of chemical dependency. On biomass instead of crude oil. The Amazon didn't have to burn. The Great Barrier Reef didn't have to bleach. The plastic continent floating in the Pacific didn't have to exist. This wasn't ignorance. It was a business decision. Made by people who owned the alternative. Now we're paying the price. In floods. In droughts. In species extinctions. In climate bills that arrive generation after generation. The good news? The plant is still here. Still viable. Still miraculous. Still waiting to do what it always could. The question is whether we're ready to stop apologizing for knowing the truth — and start building with it. 👇 This is why I built the Industrial Hemp Science Academy. Not a movement. Not a protest. A curriculum. An industry. A new material civilization. Learn what prohibition tried to erase. 🌿 industrialhempscience.com #HempProhibition #IndustrialHemp #ClimateChange #RegenerativeEconomy #HempBuilding #FossilFuelAlternative #HempScience #EnvironmentalJustice #HempEngineering #Hempcrete #Biomass #CarbonSequestration #SustainableConstruction #GreenRevolution #ProhibitionHistory
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30 YEARS AGO WOODY PLANTED HEMP On June 1, 1996, Woody Harrelson orchestrated his own arrest. After purchasing a quarter-acre of land in Beattyville, Kentucky, he plowed a tiny plot and planted four hemp seeds in order to challenge the state's absurd hemp laws. In the 19th and early 20th century, Kentucky had been the biggest hemp producer in the nation, but that was long ago. All forms of cannabis had been made illegal. Wearing an-all hemp ensemble, he hoed his tiny field and planted the seeds. Then, his cohort Joe Hickey called the Lee County sheriff. When he arrived, he ordered Woody: “Dig ‘em up.” Woody clawed through the dirt, but came up empty. “I don’t wanna be difficult,” he explained, “but I don’t think I’m gonna find ‘em.” He was busted, booked and released. The case took four years to move through the courts and I was present throughout. I was able to place the story in People magazine. At Woody's trial, I saw the Lee County sheriff who testified. He smiled warmly when I asked him if he'd seen himself in People. "Sure did," he drawled. "I liked that." The late Louie Nunn, a former Kentucky governor, was on Woody's defense team. In his summation, he ate a hemp protein bar in front of jurors telling them: "Now I got hemp in me. I guess I'm a criminal now, too!" Woody was acquitted, but it wasn't until 2014 that a modern, legal hemp crop was planted in Kentucky, though it was only “experimental.” His victory was tainted though. On Aug. 24, 2000, the same day of his acquittal, the Feds raided the first two hemp crops that had been planted on the Pine Ridge reservation. Although an ordinance had been passed by the Oglala Lakota tribe allowing hemp cultivation, the DEA, FBI and tribal police seized and destroyed the crops. A coincidence? I think not... (Featured in my book) MalcolmMacKinnon.com
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How Ganja Hit Jamaica - A Tale of Buds, Brits, and Bold Cultures: The journey of ganja from India's sacred fields to Jamaica's Irie vibes is a legendary blend of history, hustle, and herb. Picture this: the British Empire, running two colonies like a global monopoly board—India on one side, Jamaica on the other. After abolishing slavery in 1834, they needed a new workforce to keep the sugarcane cash flowing in the Caribbean. (3) Their solution? Ship over thousands of indentured Indian laborers. Between 1838 and 1917, over 36,000 Indians landed in Jamaica, bringing not just their sweat for the fields but also their spirituality, culture—and cannabis. In India, ganja was already the OG green, and it has been celebrated in religious ceremonies, medicine, and chill sessions for centuries. The word itself? Straight out of Sanskrit (gāñjā)—a shoutout to the cannabis flower. Indian workers lit up the island, sharing their traditions of puffing to ease hard labor and connect to the divine. Jamaican workers and farmers quickly saw the magic, integrating the herb into their culture. Fast-forward, and you’ve got Rastafari taking ganja to spiritual heights, treating the plant as a holy sacrament that brings unity and peace. But don’t just take my word for it—research backs this history. A 2015 Ethnobotany Research and Applications study highlights how Indian cannabis rituals shaped Jamaican folk medicine. (1) Another gem from The Journal of Caribbean History (2017) maps how indentured workers spread their culture across the islands, including their sacred herb. (2) By the 20th century, ganja wasn’t just an Indian import; it was a Jamaican icon. From sugarcane fields to reggae beats, ganja has been a cultural bridge, proving that cannabis isn’t just a plant—it’s a revolution in a rolling paper. Keep it lit, -Mike Robinson, The Researcher OG Founder Global Cannabinoid Research Center Plant Chat™ #CannabisMyMedicine #HempMyMedicine References: 1.) Bisnauth, D. (2015). "Cannabis traditions in Caribbean ethnomedicine." Ethnobotany Research and Applications, 13, 73-88. 2.) Shepherd, V. (2017). "Indentured labor migration and cultural diffusion in the Caribbean." The Journal of Caribbean History, 51(1), 45-60. 3.) Clarke, J. D. (2018). "Cannabis and colonial legacies in Jamaica." Historical Anthropology, 29(2), 185-204.
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They didn't ban a plant. They banned a threat. Hemp could build homes. Feed families. Replace petrochemicals. Heal bodies without patents. So they did what power always does when something challenges the machine They wrote a story. "It makes you crazy. "It's a gateway." "It destroys communities." Same playbook as every political campaign. Hit the nerve before reason wakes up. And it worked. For 80 years, entire economies were criminalized. Farmers couldn't grow it. Scientists couldn't study it. Communities were incarcerated for it. Not because it was dangerous. Because the narrative said so. And narratives don't need truth. They need repetition, fear, and the right emotional trigger at the right political moment. Cannabis prohibition is the greatest marketing campaign in modern history. Funded by oil. Timber. Pharma. Cotton. They didn't defeat hemp. They rebranded it as a criminal. Now we're unlearning 80 years of engineered ignorance one study, one law, one harvest at a time. The plant didn't change. The narrative is finally losing. If you want to understand what industrial hemp can actually build the science is at industrialhempscience.com #Cannabis #HempHistory #Prohibition #IndustrialHemp #NarrativePower #SystemsThinking #DrugPolicy #HempEngineering #Sustainability #TellTheTruth #HempScience
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The “lazy stoner” stereotype ignores how much cannabis culture has created. Music. Comedy. Fashion. Art. Food. Glass. Events. Memes. Small businesses. Communities. and more... That doesn’t come from nothing.
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Replying to @BitMartExchange
🤣😶‍🌫️
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Even legends need a little green fuel. Bruce Lee knew the way😂
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I'm on the hunt for my mermaid. 😜 let's get lit!
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Holy is the PLANT
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🚨 BREAKING: Pope Leo XIV stuns the Catholic world during Sunday Mass by revealing that Jesus Christ was, in fact, "a frequent cannabis user." 🌿 The Last Supper wasn't just bread and wine 🍷 Pope Leo said... #sacrament
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Market's sending! Peace at last? Printers will come on before end of year 🖨 x.com/i/broadcasts/1qxvvvvMA…
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Even if you've never smoked! We normally create it. It's as natural as sunlight! 💚💚💚
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One plant. So many possibilities. Most people still think hemp is just one thing. The reality is, it could play a role in some of the biggest challenges we face. Food. Housing. Plastics. Farming. Hemp seeds are highly nutritious. Hemp building materials can help create healthier, more energy-efficient homes. Hemp bioplastics can reduce reliance on fossil fuels. And as a crop, hemp can fit into regenerative farming systems while supporting regional jobs and industry. After almost 30 years working in hemp around the world, I still believe we’ve only scratched the surface of what’s possible. The future of hemp isn’t about one product or one industry. It’s about creating connected systems where food, fibre, building materials and manufacturing all support each other. That’s part of why I launched The Hemp Consultant, to help businesses, governments, farmers and entrepreneurs better understand the opportunities and avoid the mistakes. If you’re curious about hemp, the industry, or where things are heading, take a look: thehempconsultant.com Which area interests you most: food, building, plastics or farming?
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States where medical marijuana 🍃 is legal: 1996: California 🇺🇸 1998: Alaska 🇺🇸 1998: Oregon 🇺🇸 1998: Washington 🇺🇸 1999: Maine 🇺🇸 2000: Colorado 🇺🇸 2000: Hawaii 🇺🇸 2000: Nevada 🇺🇸 2004: Montana 🇺🇸 2004: Vermont 🇺🇸 2006: Rhode Island 🇺🇸 2007: New Mexico 🇺🇸 2008: Michigan 🇺🇸 2010: Arizona 🇺🇸 2010: New Jersey 🇺🇸 2011: Delaware 🇺🇸 2012: Connecticut 🇺🇸 2012: Massachusetts 🇺🇸 2013: Illinois 🇺🇸 2013: New Hampshire 🇺🇸 2014: Maryland 🇺🇸 2014: Minnesota 🇺🇸 2014: New York 🇺🇸 2016: Arkansas 🇺🇸 2016: Florida 🇺🇸 2016: Louisiana 🇺🇸 2016: North Dakota 🇺🇸 2016: Ohio 🇺🇸 2016: Pennsylvania 🇺🇸 2017: West Virginia 🇺🇸 2018: Missouri 🇺🇸 2018: Oklahoma 🇺🇸 2018: Utah 🇺🇸 2020: South Dakota 🇺🇸 2020: Virginia 🇺🇸 2021: Alabama 🇺🇸 2022: Mississippi 🇺🇸 2023: Kentucky 🇺🇸 2024: Nebraska 🇺🇸 2025: Texas 🇺🇸 Data from NCSL, NORML, Wikipedia, & state reports.
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Replying to @CoinMarketCap
The next trillion dollar industry that decentralizes $Weedcoin “Like Bitcoin but way higher”
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