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The Most Powerful Plant on Earth? | The Hemp Conspiracy | Documentary

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    What if there was a plant
    that had over 60,000 uses?
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    A plant that had the ability to heal
    some of the deadliest diseases we know?
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    Could replace many chemical medicines
    for problems like depression and insomnia?
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    A plant that could reduce the growing
    and devastating effects of deforestation?
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    Preventing the habitat destruction
    of many endangered animals?
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    A plant that was illegal for reasons
    that simply don't make sense?
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    That plant is cannabis and the name alone
    invokes various thoughts in our minds.
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    Maybe your parents have their views on it,
    and that has rubbed off on you.
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    Or perhaps you associated it with people
    sitting in their rooms and smoking it.
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    But linking cannabis to something that
    just gets you high
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    is like saying
    water only serves one purpose.
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    This video is about to get interesting
    so sit back and relax.
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    Let's take things back to the basics.
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    There are three species
    of cannabis:
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    all of which can be split,
    although usually the sativa type,
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    into an industrial compound
    referred to as hemp,
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    which is where the industrial
    side of cannabis comes in.
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    Hemp has been used for thousands of years
    and its usability is unlike anything else.
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    It can be used for oil for cooking
    and converting to fuel.
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    The seeds, which are among
    the most nutritional ones on the planet,
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    supply nearly every mineral and vitamin
    the body needs.
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    It can be used for clothing, and not only
    needs half the amount of water than cotton
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    but also requires no chemicals
    or fertilisers.
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    It can also be used as housing insulation,
    fibre boards; and it's a phytoremediation,
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    a plant that can remove toxins, radiation
    and contamination from water and soil.
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    Hemp was used in the agricultural fields
    around the Chernobyl nuclear disaster site
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    to help remove the heavy metals
    and radiation from the unusable land.
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    Scientists behind the plant used hemp
    as a phytoremediation, and stated
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    that as well as being excellent
    for the job of removing harmful waste,
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    the hemp could then be converted
    to bio-diesel afterwards.
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    Now, the conversion to bio-diesel is far
    from environmentally friendly,
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    but the fact that this plant
    has the ability to do this is incredible.
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    Hemp's natural process
    of removing harmful toxins
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    was also considered
    for the nuclear meltdown in Fukushima.
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    Due to the strict cannabis laws in Japan,
    hemp was not used, though.
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    But the two main resources
    that can be produced using hemp
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    that could have a deep impact on planet
    and our lives are paper and plastic.
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    According to a study conducted in 1916,
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    it's believed one acre of hemp
    over the course of twenty years
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    can produce four to ten times
    the amount of paper than trees.
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    And, although the deforestation problem
    we face now is attributed to many things,
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    reducing the need for tree paper
    by using hemp
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    would still reduce the damaging effects
    paper production has
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    which sees roughly four billion trees
    being cut down a year for that purpose.
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    Yet, less than 0.1% of the paper we use
    is made with hemp.
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    Hemp plastic, which can not only be made
    to be completely biodegradable,
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    reducing extensive pollution on beaches
    and destruction to marine life,
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    can also be produced with little
    or no chemicals,
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    which we all know makes up
    the majority of plastic we use today.
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    Those who discredit the broad use of hemp
    as a material say
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    it can be costly and overlong to produce
    the equivalent of what we have today,
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    and they're right.
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    However, cheaper is not always best,
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    as shown with the impact of chemical-laden
    and non-degradable products we consume.
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    Hemp would most likely cost more to use,
    but the overall impact would be justified.
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    Where do I begin
    with the medical side of cannabis?
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    Let's start with what scientists
    and researchers believe
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    is the reason it has profound benefits
    in the first place.
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    So far they have been able to identify
    483 chemical compounds within the plant,
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    80 of which are called cannabinoids.
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    Though the studies are becoming
    a lot more popular,
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    so far we do not know a whole lot
    about these 80 cannabinoids
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    or their effect on humans, as the research
    has been focused on just a few of them,
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    such as delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol,
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    by far the most studied chemical,
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    binding the receptors in your nervous
    and immune system when heated,
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    causing you to get high, and it's the only
    compound in cannabis to do so.
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    It's the chemical that medical marijuana
    is most active in,
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    as it acts as a side-effect-free
    muscle relaxant,
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    anti-inflammatory, anti-depressant,
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    and current studies are showing that
    it could be used as a therapy for anxiety,
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    the side effects of chemotherapy,
    cancer growth reduction, Crohn's disease,
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    chronic pain, insomnia
    or multiple sclerosis, just to name a few.
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    The next one is
    tetrahydrocannabinolic acid,
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    which is the same chemical as the one
    just talked about in its unheated form,
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    which means
    it's a non-psychoactive compound.
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    This is administered by juicing cannabis
    like wheat grass or any other plant,
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    as it contains medical properties
    that are lost when heated.
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    Though the chemical is in its early stages
    of research,
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    it's thought to be an effective treatment
    as an anti-inflammatory
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    and of a variety of illnesses
    without any significant side effects,
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    and will not give patients
    the feeling of a high either.
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    Cannabidiol is similar and has been linked
    as an effective aid for anxiety,
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    nausea, acne, schizophrenia
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    and many neurodegenerative diseases.
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    The studies haven't gone on long enough
    to know full benefits cannabis may have,
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    and there's a reason for that.
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    It's been illegal in nearly
    every country since the early 1900s.
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    Let's talk about that.
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    We have established that cannabis
    has thousands of industrial uses,
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    and many of these can be produced
    with less of an impact on the environment
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    than conventional products,
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    and that cannabis
    may have more medical benefits
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    than any other natural,
    untouched product in the world.
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    So why would something with all these uses
    and benefits be illegal?
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    It can't be due to the high when smoked
    because if that was the case
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    and the law wanted to protect us,
    then why would alcohol and tobacco,
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    substances that kill millions every year,
    or even refined sugar,
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    linked to a lot of health complications
    human suffer from today, be legal?
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    That just wouldn't make any sense.
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    But if it's not illegal
    due to health concerns, then why is it?
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    Well, it's confusing and there's lots
    of false information about the subject,
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    although it seems
    there are three supposed reasons.
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    First, in 1929 Harry Anslinger, the head
    of the prohibition department in the US,
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    was dealing
    with the backlash of the alcohol ban,
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    and once this was removed, his department
    were practically non-operational.
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    So they came up with an idea
    to tell people cannabis was a devil drug
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    that turned men into wild beasts
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    that would attack women.
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    Apparently, Harry contacted 30 scientists
    asking for proof to show to the public,
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    but 29 of them said they could not find
    valid proof that the drug was dangerous.
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    The second explanation is linked to
    the 1900s Mexican immigration to the US.
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    When the Mexicans arrived, they brought
    marijuana as a medicine and relaxant.
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    In order for the US to have an excuse to
    search and deport the immigrants,
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    marijuana became the perfect drug
    to criminalize and label dangerous.
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    And lastly, one that many people reside to
    when asked why cannabis is illegal
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    is that major companies, mainly DuPont,
    became worried at the many uses of hemp,
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    more specifically nylon,
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    which DuPont invented around the same time
    the cannabis laws were being enforced.
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    It was profitable to back and promote
    the government's decision to tell people
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    cannabis was a drug to make people high
    when in fact it was to ban the use of hemp
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    from being a nylon alternative.
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    It's hard to prove why it's illegal,
    as no authentic records seem available.
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    One or a combination of the above seems
    the reasoning for the US to ban cannabis,
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    resulting in other countries to follow.
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    But regarding the last theory,
    I wouldn't say big corporations are greedy
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    and do not want to use hemp.
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    If this theory is factual, I think
    it's now gotten to the stage
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    where it's too far gone for them
    to make the change to hemp,
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    since after it was made illegal,
    all manufacturing was grounded to a halt
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    and no new technology was used
    to advance the hemp production,
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    meaning that getting to it now
    would be very costly.
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    Whatever the reason, cannabis is illegal
    in the majority of places,
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    be it an outdated racial action
    or the greed of big corporations.
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    Only now, nearly 100 years later,
    as it's becoming less frowned upon,
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    are doctors and researchers realising
    how powerful it could be.
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    For me, everything on this planet
    serves a purpose,
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    whether it's the bees and wasps
    that pollinate plants and flowers
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    or whether it's you
    who fulfils your purpose in life.
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    It seems everything
    has some reason for being here,
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    and many say cannabis has the purpose
    of providing humans with thousands of uses
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    with very little impact on the planet.
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    Yet, because just one of many things
    it's used for makes you high,
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    the law has perhaps stinted the research
    and industrial production
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    of one of the most incredible materials
    on the planet.
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    To finish off, I want to state
    I am not a cannabis activist by any means.
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    Probably like you, I never thought of hemp
    apart from the fact that it can be smoked
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    till I started researching for this video,
    which I wanted to talk about for a while,
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    because it's made me,
    and hopefully you, realise
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    that there is so much more to it
    than that.
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    That doesn't mean the benefits of cannabis
    can justify smoking weed, though.
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    For some people smoking it can cause
    social and life problems,
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    and the effects have been shown
    to possibly harm a developing young brain.
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    So if you're unhappy, don't have a job
    and smoke weed in your room all day,
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    I know you need to be going after life.
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    Though weed's linked to busting depression
    and anxiety, and many other problems,
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    quitting your habits
    could be the best thing you do.
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    Certainly do not think to now go out
    and smoke weed for its health benefits
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    because medical and recreational cannabis
    can vary massively,
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    and the potential for long-term
    side effects is still being researched.
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    Those taking cannabis for medical benefits
    mostly don't want to get high
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    and only require a small amount
    of the drug in the first place.
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    An amount that would not have
    any mind altering effects,
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    but still seem to help relieve
    and prevent many illnesses.
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    I hope you've enjoyed this video.
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    I'll see you in the next one.
Title:
The Most Powerful Plant on Earth? | The Hemp Conspiracy | Documentary
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
10:34

English subtitles

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