New Green Revolution: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "<blockquote>"Hemp is what I call the new green revolution. For the past 5 years I’ve been growing hemp in the state of Minnesota, but I’m interested in fiber hemp because it is the new green revolution. They say 70 years ago we had a choice between a carbohydrate economy and a hydrocarbon economy – carbohydrate or hydrocarbon – and we made the wrong choice. The carbohydrate economy was hemp. Anything that you can do with fossil fuels you can do with hemp, plus mo...")
 
 
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<blockquote>"Hemp is what I call the new green revolution. For the past 5 years I’ve been growing hemp in the state of Minnesota, but I’m interested in fiber hemp because it is the new green revolution. They say 70 years ago we had a choice between a carbohydrate economy and a hydrocarbon economy – carbohydrate or hydrocarbon – and we made the wrong choice. The carbohydrate economy was hemp. Anything that you can do with fossil fuels you can do with hemp, plus more. Just think about the fact that the word “canvas” comes from cannabis.
As contrasted with the destructive/greenwashing "[[Green Revolution]]" promoting chemical fertilizers and pesticides from the 1960s on.
 
= Definition =
 
As defined by [[Winona Laduke]]:
 
<blockquote>"Hemp is what I call the new green revolution. For the past 5 years I’ve been growing hemp in the state of Minnesota, but I’m interested in fiber hemp because it is the new green revolution. They say 70 years ago we had a choice between a carbohydrate economy and a hydrocarbon economy – carbohydrate or hydrocarbon – and we made the wrong choice. The carbohydrate economy was hemp. Anything that you can do with fossil fuels you can [[Hempurgy|do with hemp]], plus more. Just think about the fact that the word “canvas” comes from [[Qannabis|cannabis]].


It turns out that lot of our tribes have both feral varieties of hemp leftover from the eradication program. Somehow they didn’t get to us. So there is some hemp in our territories, some Cannabis sativa in our territories; that still grows. There is an initiative underway now for tribes of large land areas to begin looking at hemp as a part of transforming the materials economy. If you could take all the things you make out of plastic and make them out of hemp, that’d be revolutionary. And that’s what I want to see.
It turns out that lot of our tribes have both feral varieties of hemp leftover from the eradication program. Somehow they didn’t get to us. So there is some hemp in our territories, some Cannabis sativa in our territories; that still grows. There is an initiative underway now for tribes of large land areas to begin looking at hemp as a part of transforming the materials economy. If you could take all the things you make out of plastic and make them out of hemp, that’d be revolutionary. And that’s what I want to see.


Up in northern Minnesota, we’re growing hemp. It is going to be part of the revolution. If you want to transform the world, this is our opportunity. Systems are crashing. Idols are falling. Fossil fuels are failing. Now will be the time to walk through that portal and to make that new economy. From my little neck of the woods, up on the White Earth reservation, to all of you elsewhere, let’s get local, let’s get renewable energy, let’s get local foods. Let’s grow some hemp. And let’s use our Indigenous knowledge of transition. Remember, we’re a people that are post-apocalyptic. We have lived through our own apocalypse and, as the world around us is shaking, we can be coherent because we know how to get through this: stick with our traditions and pray hard. Get yourself a green thumb – now is the time."<ref>https://www.mofga.org/events/fair/winona-laduke/
Up in northern Minnesota, we’re growing hemp. It is going to be part of the revolution. If you want to transform the world, this is our opportunity. Systems are crashing. Idols are falling. Fossil fuels are failing. Now will be the time to walk through that portal and to make that new economy. From my little neck of the woods, up on the White Earth reservation, to all of you elsewhere, let’s get local, let’s get [[renewable energy]], let’s get [[local foods]]. Let’s grow some hemp. And let’s use our Indigenous knowledge of [[Just transition|transition]]. Remember, we’re a people that are post-apocalyptic. We have lived through our own apocalypse and, as the world around us is shaking, we can be coherent because we know how to get through this: stick with our traditions and pray hard. Get yourself a green thumb – now is the time."<ref>https://www.mofga.org/events/fair/winona-laduke/
</ref></blockquote>
</ref></blockquote>
= Scaling Indigenous Agriculture =
<blockquote>To further scale Indigenous-led sustainable development in agriculture, LaDuke founded Anishinaabe Agriculture Institute (AAI). The Anishinaabeg are a group of culturally related indigenous peoples in the Great Lakes region of Canada and the United States. They include the Ojibwe, Odawa, Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing, and Algonquin peoples.
The AAI works to restore [[Agricultural Biodiversity|agro-biodiversity]] by restoring [[local food systems]], hemp, and [[traditional farming practices]]. With the AAI, LaDuke created Winona's Hemp & Heritage Farm, a small, tribal-owned farm focusing on creating hemp fiber for textiles and building materials.<ref>https://daughtersforearth.org/women-climate-leaders-winona-laduke/</ref></blockquote>
= Sources =

Latest revision as of 05:30, 13 July 2023

As contrasted with the destructive/greenwashing "Green Revolution" promoting chemical fertilizers and pesticides from the 1960s on.

Definition

As defined by Winona Laduke:

"Hemp is what I call the new green revolution. For the past 5 years I’ve been growing hemp in the state of Minnesota, but I’m interested in fiber hemp because it is the new green revolution. They say 70 years ago we had a choice between a carbohydrate economy and a hydrocarbon economy – carbohydrate or hydrocarbon – and we made the wrong choice. The carbohydrate economy was hemp. Anything that you can do with fossil fuels you can do with hemp, plus more. Just think about the fact that the word “canvas” comes from cannabis.

It turns out that lot of our tribes have both feral varieties of hemp leftover from the eradication program. Somehow they didn’t get to us. So there is some hemp in our territories, some Cannabis sativa in our territories; that still grows. There is an initiative underway now for tribes of large land areas to begin looking at hemp as a part of transforming the materials economy. If you could take all the things you make out of plastic and make them out of hemp, that’d be revolutionary. And that’s what I want to see.

Up in northern Minnesota, we’re growing hemp. It is going to be part of the revolution. If you want to transform the world, this is our opportunity. Systems are crashing. Idols are falling. Fossil fuels are failing. Now will be the time to walk through that portal and to make that new economy. From my little neck of the woods, up on the White Earth reservation, to all of you elsewhere, let’s get local, let’s get renewable energy, let’s get local foods. Let’s grow some hemp. And let’s use our Indigenous knowledge of transition. Remember, we’re a people that are post-apocalyptic. We have lived through our own apocalypse and, as the world around us is shaking, we can be coherent because we know how to get through this: stick with our traditions and pray hard. Get yourself a green thumb – now is the time."[1]

Scaling Indigenous Agriculture

To further scale Indigenous-led sustainable development in agriculture, LaDuke founded Anishinaabe Agriculture Institute (AAI). The Anishinaabeg are a group of culturally related indigenous peoples in the Great Lakes region of Canada and the United States. They include the Ojibwe, Odawa, Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing, and Algonquin peoples. The AAI works to restore agro-biodiversity by restoring local food systems, hemp, and traditional farming practices. With the AAI, LaDuke created Winona's Hemp & Heritage Farm, a small, tribal-owned farm focusing on creating hemp fiber for textiles and building materials.[2]

Sources