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print quality? Feb 23, 2008 i thought the book was very positive, giving hope for a future through mass sanity. it's hard to imagine sometimes as one watches the news unfold. it seems to spiral more towards insanity daily. hemp prohibition has become a grudge match for the man. admitting a 70 some year mistake is hard to do. especially when you take into account all those who have suffered as a result. there are solutions. i remember ten years ago seeing something about a government program already set in place to start up to start biomass agriculture using flax and 'other crops' as they 'become available'. the mechanisms are in place, but those in power have to squeeze out that last little dribble of black juice. biomass agriculture is a forgone conclusion, and the best crop for that is hemp. in response to a post about the print quality. some of the most relevant and politically stirring comentaries in history have been mass produced on newsprint for distribution. i felt the print quality quite good by comparison. perhaps mr. dan l. dudgeon, hardback w/ archieval, acid free paper and goldleaf may have been more appropriate considering the relevance of this topic. get a reality, folks. the topic is worthy, but unless you are daddy warbucks, you are just haplessly bound within the constraints of your resources. mr. dudgeon is obviously a visionary. i could go through any manuscript and find changes i may make, things i may change grammatically, because i am me. mr. dudgeon is himself and his expressions are appreciated. he has obviously done a lot of research and put in a lot of thought. at least he wrote a book. more than one. i haven't even done that yet. have you? the importance and the relevance of this work is in giving us one man's glimpse of perhaps how things might work out in the future in a POSITIVE way, which is something conspicuously lacking in american media. sometimes a little positivity sent out comes back in a big way. a gift that keeps on giving.
The Plant Feb 08, 2008 The subject matter and content was somewhat interesting. The negative was the print in the book. The last half of the book had very difficult to read font that were often run together. It looked like pages of typos.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Great story, Great theme Sep 22, 2006 This is a great novel, and I am excited to give the first review. I was recommended the book by a friend who saw an ad in Mother Jones magazine, so I bought it. At first I thought I could guess what the story would be about, but you really can't judge a book by its cover, especially in this case. So even though it has a giant "leaf" on the cover, the story is much more about the world in the very near future, and a scary future at that.
At the heart of the story is two guys, one who sticks to his activist lifestyle, while his friend chose to run away from what he thought was a hopeless cause. The book basically picks up around the year 2008, but is partially told through a series of flashbacks that allows the future/past to unfold for the reader without confusion. The story includes a new terrorist group with a sinister plot to ruin America, a Middle East war, a fallout in the global economy, all appearing not too far from reality, and a great ending that will make you think. But it really has something for everyone - action, politics, conspiracy, history, war, comedy, and even romance. It would only disappoint someone that DIDN'T read it. Oh, and there is a portion of the book about the benefits of cultivating industrial hemp, which is apparently different from marijuana.
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