|

Paper, Fiber, Fuel, Food, Clothes, Plastics,
Metals, Cements, Ceramics and Environmental Remediation.

We are ready to help the United States move
towards energy freedom through the raw power of the biggest,
strongest, and best plant on earth hemp!
Hemp, Corn, Kiri Trees, Flax, Soy, and Canola combined
into our energy crop rotations already established shall boost the
American Economy and our Energy Independence.

Enerag's twenty year proven ethanol
biomass production facilities can be transformed with the addition
of hemp.
Strong ties and genetics from Manitoba's largest and most proven
Industrial Hemp farmers who border North Dakota from Canada.


The North Dakota Hemp Council is offering a
wonderful opportunity for the right farmer, individual, or business
organization.
Plans for farmers with available land in
North Dakota, wanting to add agricultural industrial hemp into their
crop rotation.
Plans for Hedge Funds and Investment groups
who want to diversify their portfolio with a wide range of new
environmental and agricultural products from Industrial Hemp.
These products include: Biodiesel, Cement, Ceramics, Cloth, Energy,
Fiber, Food, Fuel, Metals, Oil, Paper, Plastics, & Soap.
Non-profit donations and contributions spent
specifically on planting the hemp seed in North Dakota.
Each dollar donation ($1.00) helps plant ten
(10) hemp plants in North Dakota. Make a donation for the
cause and help us turn North Dakota Green with hemp power. Please, feel free to
show your support to
help us plant the entire State of North Dakota with gods most
precious gift
"Industrial Hemp". This action within itself will help transform the
United States towards sustainability, energy stability, a
better standard of health, independence and freedom.
Thank you,
Chris Sanders
The North Dakota Hemp Council
The ideal candidate will be someone who:
- Has a basic understanding of Agriculture, Leasing, Organic
Farming, and Hemp.
- Has a basic understanding of (and preferably experience in)
the Natural Food industry, plastics, energy, biomass, or the Organic
sector.
- Has successful experience running a
businesses.
- Has marketing expertise to match the unique challenges of
hemp issues and education in The United States.
- Has between $500,000 to $1 M to invest per
project (or the ability to raise it).
- Has the ability to work with the US
Federal Government, State of North Dakota, and the DEA, FDA,
NIDA and their regulations.
- Knowledge about Organic Foods, Raw
Diets, natural food and eco-friendly
businesses, while Supporting local rural communities and family
farms.
- Wants to do something significant, fun
and exciting in the United States of America.
- Wants to help the United States in become Energy Independent!

PROJECTS AND LINKS
www.enerag.com
| www.jackherer.com |
www.prescriptionpot.com |
www.productionclips.com |
www.sustainableangels.com
The non profit Federal IND -
Education 501c3 this program will educate The United States about
the Federal Cannabis Program which has existed since 1976 at the
University of Mississippi


For more information about
these opportunities in Industrial Hemp or if you have more land
available in the State of North Dakota contact us:
e-mail
productionclips@yahoo.com

Farm Characteristics
| 1992, 1997 and
2002 Census of Agriculture |
| |
1992 |
1997 |
2002 |
| Total land area
(million acres) |
44.16 |
44.16 |
44.14 |
| Total farmland
(million acres) |
39.44 |
39.68 |
39.29 |
| Percent of
total land area |
89.3 |
89.9 |
89.0 |
| |
| Cropland
(million acres) |
27.47 |
27.38 |
26.51 |
| Percent
of total farmland |
69.7 |
69.0 |
67.5 |
| Percent
in pasture |
6.2 |
5.3 |
4.9 |
| Percent
irrigated |
0.7 |
0.7 |
0.8 |
| |
Harvested Cropland
(million acres) |
19.22 |
20.67 |
19.91 |
| |
| Woodland
(million acres) |
0.34 |
0.28 |
0.24 |
| Percent
of total farmland |
0.9 |
0.7 |
0.6 |
| Percent
in pasture |
60.4 |
49.4 |
53.2 |
| |
| Pastureland
(million acres) |
10.28 |
10.29 |
10.98 |
| Percent
of total farmland |
26.1 |
25.9 |
28.0 |
| |
Land in
house lots, ponds,
roads, wasteland, etc.
(million acres) |
1.34 |
1.72 |
1.57 |
| Percent
of total farmland |
3.4 |
4.3 |
4.0 |
| |
| Conservation
practices |
Farmland in
conservation or
wetlands reserve programs
(million acres) |
2.12 |
2.70 |
3.04 |
| Percent
of total farmland |
5.4 |
6.8 |
7.7 |
| |
| Average farm size
(acres) |
1,267 |
1,227 |
1,283 |
| |
| Farms by size
(percent) |
| 1 to 99
acres |
9.6 |
11.5 |
12.6 |
| 100 to
499 acres |
22.5 |
27.3 |
30.5 |
| 500 to
999 acres |
21.6 |
19.1 |
16.1 |
| 1000 to
1,999 acres |
28.1 |
23.3 |
19.6 |
| 2,000
or more acres |
18.3 |
18.7 |
21.2 |
| |
| Farms by sales
(percent) |
| Less
than $9,999 |
18.3 |
27.8 |
38.5 |
| $10,000
to $49,999 |
33.0 |
28.0 |
20.1 |
| $50,000
to $99,999 |
20.9 |
16.8 |
12.6 |
|
$100,000 to $499,999 |
26.2 |
24.9 |
24.8 |
| More
than $500,000 |
1.7 |
2.2 |
4.0 |
| |
| Tenure of farmers |
| Full owner
(farms) |
9,898 |
12,002 |
14,499 |
| Percent
of total |
31.8 |
37.1 |
47.4 |
| |
| Part owner
(farms) |
16,058 |
15,373 |
13,070 |
| Percent
of total |
51.6 |
47.5 |
42.7 |
| |
| Tenant
owner (farms) |
5,167 |
4,973 |
3,050 |
| Percent
of total |
16.6 |
15.4 |
10.0 |
| |
| Farm organization |
Individuals/family, sole
proprietorship (farms) |
27,093 |
28,323 |
27,578 |
| Percent
of total |
87.1 |
87.6 |
90.1 |
| |
Family-held
corporations
(farms) |
325 |
530 |
418 |
| Percent
of total |
1.0 |
1.6 |
1.4 |
| |
|
Partnerships (farms) |
3,504 |
3,218 |
2,289 |
| Percent
of total |
11.3 |
9.9 |
7.5 |
| |
| Non-family
corporations (farms) |
24 |
30 |
28 |
| Percent
of total |
0.1 |
0.1 |
0.1 |
| |
Others -
cooperative, estate or
trust, institutional, etc. (farms) |
177 |
247 |
306 |
| Percent
of total |
0.6 |
0.8 |
1.0 |
| |
| Characteristics of
principal farm operators |
| Average
operator age (years) |
50.0 |
51.4 |
54.4 |
Percent
with farming as their
primary occupation |
80.9 |
72.3 |
70.7 |
| Men
(persons) |
30,184 |
30,863 |
28,125 |
| Women
(persons) |
939 |
1,485 |
2,494 |
| |
More information on farm characteristics
•
Census of Agriculture
• Contact
NASS Customer Service, 1-800-727-9540.
Data from the 1992 Census of Agriculture is not
adjusted for coverage.
See
Coverage Adjustment from NASS.
|
Farm Financial Indicators
| Farm income and
value added data |
| |
2004 |
2005 |
| |
| Number of farms |
30,300 |
30,300 |
| |
| |
Thousands $ |
| Final crop
output |
2,910,799 |
3,100,416 |
| + Final animal
output |
905,226 |
1,010,593 |
| + Services and
forestry |
434,189 |
490,611 |
| = Final
agricultural sector output |
4,250,214 |
4,601,620 |
| |
| - Intermediate
consumption outlays |
2,340,331 |
2,488,562 |
| + Net
government transactions |
261,594 |
612,927 |
| = Gross value
added |
2,171,476 |
2,725,985 |
| |
| - Capital
consumption |
520,491 |
534,309 |
| |
| = Net value added |
1,650,985 |
2,191,676 |
| |
| - Factor
payments |
796,641 |
911,628 |
| Employee
compensation (total hired labor) |
152,225 |
171,654 |
| Net rent
received by nonoperator landlords |
357,454 |
407,443 |
| Real
estate and nonreal estate interest |
286,962 |
332,531 |
| |
| = Net farm income |
854,344 |
1,280,048 |
| |
| |
Top Commodities, Exports, and Counties
|
Top 5 agriculture commodities, 2005
|
| |
Value
of receipts
thousand $ |
Percent of state total
farm receipts |
Percent of US value |
| 1. Wheat |
1,019,628 |
26.0 |
15.0 |
| 2. Cattle and
calves |
799,083 |
20.4 |
1.6 |
| 3. Soybeans |
493,698 |
12.6 |
2.9 |
| 4. Corn |
205,905 |
5.3 |
1.1 |
| 5. Sugar beets |
191,417 |
4.9 |
17.3 |
| |
| All commodities |
3,921,139 |
|
1.6 |
| |
More information on North Dakota's top
agriculture commodities
David Sanders - NDHC
productionclips@yahoo.com
•
Leading commodities for cash receipts
• Contact
Larry Traub, 202-694-5593
|
| Top 5
agriculture exports, estimates, FY 2006 |
| |
Rank
among states |
Value
million $ |
| 1. Wheat and
products |
2 |
698.9 |
| 2. Soybeans and
products |
9 |
312.2 |
| 3. Other |
9 |
273.8 |
| 4. Vegetables and
preparations |
4 |
206.7 |
| 5. Feed grains and
products |
13 |
150.3 |
| |
| Overall rank |
12 |
1,882.4 |
| |
More information on agricultural exports
•
State Export Data
•
Agricultural Trade Briefing Room
• Contact
Nora Brooks, 202-694-5211.
|
| Top 5 counties
in agricultural sales 2002 |
| |
Percent of state total receipts |
Million $ |
| 1. Cass County |
6.5 |
209.0 |
| 2. Richland
County |
6.2 |
201.4 |
| 3. Walsh County |
4.6 |
149.9 |
| 4. Grand Forks
County |
4.5 |
144.8 |
| 5. Pembina County |
4.4 |
142.1 |
| |
| State total |
|
3,233.4 |
| |
More information on agricultural sales
•
Census of Agriculture |
|
We believe that the voice of the American public will speak loud and
clear through our donations gathered to plant the hemp seed. With
this support your donation will help us transform the State of North Dakota
and eventually the United States into a greener and more sustainable
nation.
Since 1996 Canada has been growing Industrial hemp and as a result
everyone needing this resource including big US companies have moved
into Canada solely for hemp. The North Dakota Hemp Council will
aggressively go after these US company contracts from companies like Adidas, Ford
and General Motors that now use for foreign hemp parts, plastics, and materials.
The
American farmer has been denied the ability to compete in this
international market and this directly violates the verbiage used in
the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). If Ford and General
Motors use hemp plastic because of acts passed by The Clinton and
Gore Administration and the American farmer is denied the ability to
grow plastic and fiber for American cars the results clearly
demonstrate that we have been violating our own established laws and
policies set by the covenants of the North American Free Trade
Agreement which allow two years for fair, even, competition and
trade. Therefore the United States should have been able to
grow hemp since 1998 because the Canadian government turned it into
a commodity for growth and trade with Industrial Hemp back in 1996.
This two year law in NAFTA has been over looked, avoided, and
manipulated by political textbook jargon and politicians for nine
years. It is time for us to comply with our own established
laws in NAFTA that we force on the countries that border us!
These laws clearly allow the American Farmer to grow Industrial
Hemp!
The power of this one plant
can drastically change our economy in North Dakota which is now
primarily driven by wheat. With the addition of hemp the State
of North Dakota could grow more than just bread and could transform
the nation in its need for energy with bio diesel, cloth,
food, soap, plastics, and paper which simultaneously should
also add thousand of needed jobs to our countries job force and
Industry. This one plant will
drastically transform the economy in North Dakota. Please help
us plant the hemp seed for Americas future!
Donate $1.00 to North Dakota Hemp
(this donation will help us plant 20 hemp plants)
Donate $5.00 to North Dakota Hemp
(this donation will help us plant 100 hemp plants)
Donate $10.00 to North Dakota Hemp
(this donation will help us plant 200 hemp plants)
Donate $20.00 to North Dakota Hemp
(this donation will help us plant 400 hemp plants)
Donate $50.00 to North Dakota
(this donation will help us plant 1000 hemp plants)
Donate $100.00 to North Dakota Hemp
(this donation will help us plant 2000 hemp plants)
The Population of
North Dakota: 635,867
Thank you for helping us
plant the hemp seed!
The people of America will make this change happen -
this green sustainable shift will be the New World Order!
free web counter
The New World Order Inc.
7510 Sunset Blvd. #1073
Hollywood, California 90046
|
this site and its content are not public
domain and are protected by
© COPYRIGHT 2007 unauthorized distribution is a violation of applicable laws
|
|