Tuesday, August 25, 2015

These elected officials eat hemp to make a point



These elected officials eat hemp to make a point |#shyamis

by Katie Herzog
Last week in Colorado, The Man gave the finger to The Man.
Reps. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) shared an illegal meal at Denver's Jezebel restaurant. On the menu? Raw milk, hemp scones, kombucha, and non-USDA-inspected steak and eggs.
All of those foods are heavily regulated or illegal for purchase, but the representatives skirted the law by bringing their own fare, giving new meaning to the term BYOB (bring your own banned foods).
Photo-Aug-21-9-17-01-AM-1024x768
Office of Rep. Jared Polis
The purpose of the meal was to bring attention to a series of bills that would loosen a handful of food regulations and restrictions. The representatives are co-sponsors of the Milk Freedom Act and the Milk Interstate Freedom Act, which would make raw milk legal nationwide, and the PRIME Act, which would allow slaughterhouses to sell beef within state lines without USDA inspection. This would, according to a press release, "make it easier for small farms and ranches to serve consumers."
"What do you put in your own body?," said Rep. Polis. "What's a more intimate decision than that? It really should be entirely up to people. It should be up to the person. You shouldn't have the federal government telling you what you can and can't eat."
Screen-Shot-2015-08-24-at-11.58.37-AM
Office of Rep. Jared Polis
Katie Herzog | August 25, 2015 at 1:33 pm | Categories: Food, Politics | URL: http://wp.me/plpRp-1gxa
by Katie Herzog
Last week in Colorado, The Man gave the finger to The Man.
Reps. Jared Polis (D-Colo.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) shared an illegal meal at Denver's Jezebel restaurant. On the menu? Raw milk, hemp scones, kombucha, and non-USDA-inspected steak and eggs.
All of those foods are heavily regulated or illegal for purchase, but the representatives skirted the law by bringing their own fare, giving new meaning to the term BYOB (bring your own banned foods).
Photo-Aug-21-9-17-01-AM-1024x768
Office of Rep. Jared Polis
The purpose of the meal was to bring attention to a series of bills that would loosen a handful of food regulations and restrictions. The representatives are co-sponsors of the Milk Freedom Act and the Milk Interstate Freedom Act, which would make raw milk legal nationwide, and the PRIME Act, which would allow slaughterhouses to sell beef within state lines without USDA inspection. This would, according to a press release, "make it easier for small farms and ranches to serve consumers."
"What do you put in your own body?," said Rep. Polis. "What's a more intimate decision than that? It really should be entirely up to people. It should be up to the person. You shouldn't have the federal government telling you what you can and can't eat."
Screen-Shot-2015-08-24-at-11.58.37-AM
Office of Rep. Jared Polis
Katie Herzog | August 25, 2015 at 1:33 pm | Categories: Food, Politics | URL: http://wp.me/plpRp-1gxa

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