Bruce perlowin biography

Hemp, Inc. CEO Bruce Perlowin Featured in Forbes Discussing Tobacco Farmers Who are Turning to Industrial Hemp

SPRING HOPE, NC, April 02, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- via NEWMEDIAWIRE – Hemp, Inc. (OTC PINK: HEMP), a global leader in the industrial hemp industry with bi-coastal processing centers including the 85,000 square-foot multipurpose industrial hemp processing facility in Spring Hope, North Carolina, a state of the art processing center in Medford, Oregon, and a 500-acre hemp growing Eco-Village in Golden Valley, Arizona, announced today that CEO, Bruce Perlowin, was interviewed by Forbes to discuss the trend of farmers who once grew tobacco switching to hemp.

The Forbes article covers various topics relating to the passing of the Farm Bill 2018 and what the legislation means for farmers across the United States. It also discusses how many of the tobacco farming industry workers are turning to hemp as it is seen as the new cash crop.

In regard to tobacco farmers joining The Hemp Revolution, Perlowin is quoted in the article saying, "All the old North Carolina tobacco dr

BRUCE PERLOWIN - TIME LINE

My story is somewhat very simple. I'm still am a product of the 60's, want to help change the world and believe that the world can and will be changed into a much better place - in fact a heaven on earth one day.

I always wanted to be a different person than the stereotypical individual living in traditional society when I grew up. My family and friends thought that was something that wasn't such a bad idea. As it turns out, they were right and so was I.

My life is not your typical one in many respects and in fact quite an unusual one. This keeps me from getting bored with myself and I enjoy the excitement and interesting adventures life has shown me and taken me through.

I have many heroes’ however I think each individual living today is in their own way an unsung hero and each persons story has information, knowledge and wisdom within them that we can all learn from.

The two people from my past who I'd most like to see again is Carol Lane and Robin Lane, because I at one time loved each one of them dearly as childhood friends since elementa

Will the King of Pot go up in smoke?

The King of Pot is shorter than you'd imagine. When you meet a famous drug dealer, one expects scars and a distrustful sneer and some flashy clothes. But Bruce Perlowin, found waiting for an elevator at the Los Angeles Convention Center dressed in jeans and a polo shirt, is more Patch Adams than Tony Montana. Standing about 5 feet 6 inches tall, he has Robin Williams' twinkling eyes as well as his manic energy.

What he lacks in stature, though, he more than makes up for in reputation among pot smokers and those who bust them. Perlowin is the biggest West Coast dope smuggler in U.S. history, a fact he offers like a verbal handshake to every new person he meets. He has his script down cold, a near-giddy 30-second biography of not only himself but also his former marijuana-running buddies, who are at the convention center on this mid-January weekend. There's the Duke of Dope, for instance, a guy who looks like a roadie for the Grateful Dead. And there's the Sultan of Shrimpers, who became famous for running pot into Florida in the 1970s on a fle

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