Despite the opposition Monsanto receives from the public, there are many others, especially those in places of authority, who back the GMO-supporting company. Now there are reports that argue the only reason for the push for marijuana legalization is so Monsanto could unleash GMO marijuana upon the masses.
According to Natural Society, there is talk among the organic communities that Monsanto has been working on GMO marijuana for years now. Among this talk, it is believed the GMO marijuana is ready to go thus why the government has pushed legalizing marijuana. Apparently, the allegations are hypothesized from what is happening in Uruguay, the first country to fully legalize marijuana. VICE actually sent José Mujica to Uruguay to learn more about how full marijuana legalization has affected the country.
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If the United States were to legalize marijuana from sea to shining sea, what regulations would be incorporated into said legalization? Also, who would benefit the most from legal marijuana? To understand the answer to these questions, it should be known that GMO companies like Monsanto, DuPont, and Dow Chemical (not farmers) benefit from two of the major crops in the United State, corn and soybeans. About 88 percent of all corn and 94 percent of all soy has been genetically modified, as reported by Phys Org.
The one detail purposely left out in the previous paragraph about corn and soybeans is they are major cash crops, used in almost everything made conventionally as ingredients. Companies like Monsanto, DuPont, and Dow Chemical see marijuana as the next big cash crop after corn and soybeans. As a matter of fact, former Microsoft executive, Jamen Shively, previously announced plans back in 2013 to patent in the U.S. the first national brand of produced hemp imported from Mexico prior to countrywide legalization, as reported by Expanded Consciousness.
Eventually, others will follow Jamen Shively’s footsteps possibly purchasing patents on certain strains of marijuana so only their version of it can be grown in the United States. Now it is true much of the news reporting on GMO marijuana push it as a possibility and not an eventuality. However, they are basing a lot of their assumptions on past practices of pro-GMO companies, such as what they did to milk for example.
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