' the shores of Hudson Bay'

MHz

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How many hours did you watch before you hit the 'post' button?

Do you know how many people are thanking God that they aren't you?? More than a few.
 

MHz

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There goes the lead Canada could have had.


http://12160.info/profiles/status/show?id=2649739:Status:1860468
Industrial hemp is now legal in the U.S., which could loosen laws around the popular marijuana extract CBD.

President Donald Trump signed the 2018 farm bill on Thursday afternoon, which legalized hemp — a variety of cannabis that does not produce the psychoactive component of marijuana — paving the way to legitimacy for an agricultural sector that has been operating on the fringe of the law. Industrial hemp has made investors and executives swoon because of the potential multibillion-dollar market for cannabidiol, or CBD, a non-psychoactive compound that has started to turn up in beverages, health products and pet snacks, among other products.

The farm bill is a sprawling piece of legislation that sets U.S. government agricultural and food policy for the country and is renewed roughly every five years. This version of the bill places industrial hemp — which is defined as a cannabis plant with under 0.3% of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC — under the supervision of the Agriculture Department and removes CBD from the purview of the Controlled Substances Act, which covers marijuana. The law also “explicitly” preserved the Food and Drug Administration’s authority to regulate products containing cannabis, or cannabis-derived compounds.

Don’t miss: Everything you need to know about CBD

The overall effect is not assured because, like cannabis — which is illegal under U.S. federal law although some states have allowed medical or recreational use — states will continue to be able to enact laws related to CBD and industrial hemp, allowing for a potential patchwork of legislation across the country. Other questions remain in terms of how exactly the Agriculture Department will regulate the plant.

As CBD goes mainstream and beverage giants, food companies and others have begun to take serious interest in the roughly $2 billion U.S. market. Tilray Inc. TLRY, +10.28% announced a partnership with Anheuser-Busch InBev SA BUD, -1.48% this week to research marijuana-based beverages, and Constellation Brands Inc. STZ, -3.03% has invested heavily in pot producer Canopy Growth Corp. Other large companies, like Molson Coors Brewing Co. TAP, -0.92% , have invested in research, and Coca-Cola Co. KO, -0.75% and others have at least considered making a play for the space.
 

MHz

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At the moment the villages should be growing enough for their person us in the communities. It isn't like a hemp thread would get a different reply than the quality yours is. Zero to the topic of the post you replied to. Do you have any posts in this thread that are 'on-topic' that you need to point out when one is off topic?? You look like just another troll IMO.
 

MHz

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In that case it is 'Bay' not 'bay'.
https://govtslaves.info/2018/12/22/...cean-could-be-the-final-straw-for-ecosystems/
The deep ocean, which includes anything at depths below 3,000 metres, covers nearly 50 percent of Earth’s surface, and even though only a fraction of this area has been explored, these mysterious depths are full of untapped treasures.
Somewhere out there, leagues beneath the sea, amid a world teeming with countless kinds of marine life, lie unplumbed riches of manganese, sulphide, phosphorite, and, yes, even diamonds.
It’s too much for the mining industry to ignore. And several companies, like Nautilus Minerals and Diamond Fields International, suggest that digging up these materials will ensure a steady supply of resources for decades to come.


The floor of Hudson Bay is as close to primordial ooze as you can get in Canada. The good news is it is protected waters, the bad news is Canadians won't see s cent but they will get to fork over some tax-free grants for exploration by foreign prospecting companies. Fitting end for sheeple.
 

MHz

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Would that include double posting??
I doubt the collective feeds the trolls real facts very often. I was right or my posts would not look so strange to you.
 
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MHz

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Nobody at the moment except for the east side where that circle take out some of the natural shoreline. I saw the name on some article but it would be a shell company would it not. Diamonds on the mainland would be the first targets. The latest rover sent to Mars should be used in the tundra regions in the summer as long as you deploy 100 at a time so they cover a few sq mi. The light hammering is perfect as a seismic signal when the terrain is water and ice. The other rovers are perfect for wandering around a forest where trees are about 1 per 100 sq ft. Their job was to move and sit still for a week at a time while taking 'gravity readings'. Before that PetroCan used vibrators to map the whole north out. The maps were not for public consumption and these methods would be like turning a 2-D map onto full color 3-D and then you decide where to 'permit' so the treasures belong to you alone.
Private citizens might be able to get the maps from the Gov that were made by Russian planes flying low and slow over the north to map it in high detail using a variety of sensors.
Solar drones would be thriving business as every prospector would want a 6-pak. How do you run them from your living room in the summer and winter you would need your own chopper/ultra light just to find them. Solar powered long johns so you leave with same number of parts you came with.
'The Bay' will have to wait for the remote subs, might as well get Amazon on it by telling them how much money the people in the north have and no stores in sight.


I'm pretty sure the end of the Atlantic Rift is where Putin sent that floating nuclear power plant and any chips laying around are 99.99% diamond and the 'overburden' are boulders of precious gems and metals. What are those islands in The Bay made of, I know the big hole is a few billion years old?


https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...ound-in-northern-canada-idUSTRE48O7JW20080925
A pinkish tract of bedrock on the eastern shore of Canada’s Hudson Bay contains the oldest known rocks on Earth, formed 4.28 billion years ago, not long after the planet was formed, scientists said on Thursday.

The rocks may be remnants of Earth’s primordial crust, which formed on the planet’s surface as it cooled following the birth of the solar system, according to Jonathan O’Neil of McGill University in Montreal.
“Maybe it was the original crust, and before that there was no stable crust on the Earth. That’s a big question,” O’Neil said in a telephone interview.
The expanse in northern Quebec, measuring about 4 square miles (10 square km), is made up of the volcanic rock basalt. To determine the age of the rocks, geochemists used isotopic dating methods analyzing the elements samarium and neodymium.
The scientists, who describe the discovery in the journal Science, said studying these rocks can give clues about what the planet was like early in its history. The solar system, including the Earth, was formed about 4.57 billion years ago. These rocks date from roughly 290 million years later.



http://ftp.geogratis.gc.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/raster/atlas_6_ed/reference/bilingual/can_relief.pdf


It is a serious amount of land that would be richer than South Africa in terms of 'useful treasure', Getting there is easy, staying alive, not so easy.