July 4, 2026

15 thoughts on “How US hemp ban could criminalize CBD products – and derail Medicare plan

  1. On one hand this would criminalize “the vast, vast majority of hemp products, including most non-intoxicating CBD products”, says Jonathan Miller of US Hemp Roundtable. But at the same time inesa Ponomariovaite, owner of Nesa’s Hemp, which specializes in CBDA hemp extract, met with members of Congress this week to advocate for laws that would keep her products legal.

  2. Basically lawmakers have been trying to pass legislation to delay the hemp ban or replace it with regulation since it first passed, Miller said. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  3. The bigger issue here is inesa Ponomariovaite, owner of Nesa’s Hemp, which specializes in CBDA hemp extract, met with members of Congress this week to advocate for laws that would keep her products legal. That changes the calculation.

  4. Considering but the program’s definition of hemp comes from the 2018 Farm Bill, which created the loophole that has allowed so many cannabis products to be sold outside state-authorized dispensaries, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

  5. Basically this would criminalize “the vast, vast majority of hemp products, including most non-intoxicating CBD products”, says Jonathan Miller of US Hemp Roundtable. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  6. When you look at inesa Ponomariovaite, owner of Nesa’s Hemp, which specializes in CBDA hemp extract, met with members of Congress this week to advocate for laws that would keep her products legal, the implications are hard to ignore.

  7. Considering lawmakers have been trying to pass legislation to delay the hemp ban or replace it with regulation since it first passed, Miller said, it raises some real questions about what happens next.

  8. But the program’s definition of hemp comes from the 2018 Farm Bill, which created the loophole that has allowed so many cannabis products to be sold outside state-authorized dispensaries. Meanwhile this would criminalize “the vast, vast majority of hemp products, including most non-intoxicating CBD products”, says Jonathan Miller of US Hemp Roundtable.

  9. Think about it: lawmakers have been trying to pass legislation to delay the hemp ban or replace it with regulation since it first passed, Miller said. That speaks volumes.

  10. Reading that lawmakers have been trying to pass legislation to delay the hemp ban or replace it with regulation since it first passed, Miller said — hard to argue with the logic there.

  11. Think about it: but the program’s definition of hemp comes from the 2018 Farm Bill, which created the loophole that has allowed so many cannabis products to be sold outside state-authorized dispensaries. That speaks volumes.

  12. In other words but the program’s definition of hemp comes from the 2018 Farm Bill, which created the loophole that has allowed so many cannabis products to be sold outside state-authorized dispensaries. Curious to see how this develops.

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