HIGH SOCIETY: Henry Ford’s Suppressed Hemp Car

Source – in5d.com

– We might think that our ethanol and biodiesel “flex-fuel” systems are all very cutting edge, but biofuel development is of course nothing new. Way back in the 1930’s, Henry Ford was hard at work in the alt-fuels sector, and in 1941 he constructed a hemp-fueled and hemp-bodied prototype car. The “plastic” body panels were composed of 70% cellulose fibers, including industrial hemp, mixed with a resin binder, and apparently they were pretty sturdy.

Henry Ford’s Suppressed Hemp Car

The reason marijuana was prohibited in the 20th century was to suppress hemp fuel and fiber production, which is inexpensive to make and naturally decentralized, so that small groups of people could profit from the capital intensive petrochemical alternatives that dominate our political process and economy today.

Hemp will decentralize our economic system and return wealth and control to the majority.

Hemp & marijuana both come from the same plant, cannabis sativa, which is the Latin, botanical name.

Hemp is the fiber from the stalks and stems and the sterile seeds, while marijuana is the leaves, flowers and viable seeds. Some people believe that hemp with a low THC content is one species, and that it becomes a different plant, marijuana, when the THC level in the cannabis plant goes above 0.3 percent, but it is really the same plant. It is really about fuel, fiber and the synthetic subversion of the natural cycle. Drugs are only a smokescreen. Marijuana prohibition has always been about money, power, and control.

http://in5d.com/henry-fords-suppressed-hemp-car/

One thought on “HIGH SOCIETY: Henry Ford’s Suppressed Hemp Car

  1. Reblogged this on The Most Revolutionary Act and commented:
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    The main reason marijuana was prohibited in the 20th century (by corporate interests seeking to promote oil demand and petroleum based plastics) was to suppress hemp fuel and fiber production. Bother are inexpensive to make and naturally decentralized, so that small groups of people could profit from the capital intensive petrochemical alternatives that dominate our political process and economy today.

    See http://stuartjeannebramhall.com/2014/10/06/the-politics-of-hemp/

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