Beyond the Baja | Rethinking Hemp Markets
In this Special Episode, Aaron releases a recording that almost never made it out. This episode was fully recorded and edited four weeks ago, during the opening days of what is now a rapidly evolving conflict involving Iran, the United States, and Israel. It sat on the shelf. Not because it lacked relevance, but because the weight of what was unfolding made it harder to press publish. If you are here for hemp only, jump to around the 38 minute mark. That is where I lay out why the industry may need to consider suing the federal government to force progress, similar to what we are seeing out of the poultry side with their push to reconcile definitions. Otherwise, stay with me and let the rest of this play out. Since then, the noise has only increased. Global rhetoric has escalated. Narratives have hardened. And as that happens, the same pattern tends to follow. When geopolitical systems come under pressure, domestic policy does not accelerate. It compresses. This episode starts outside of hemp. It walks through energy systems, food systems, and the structural pressures building underneath current conflicts. Not as commentary, but as context. Because policy outcomes in Washington rarely move independently from the larger global board. When priorities shift, attention shifts with them. From there, the episode returns to a familiar problem. Same words, different systems. Whether it is egg labeling or hemp, when language fails to distinguish between fundamentally different production models, markets lose clarity. Signals blur. Capital hesitates. And industries stall inside ambiguity that should have been resolved years earlier. The conversation then moves into a less comfortable question. What happens when the government creates a legal framework, invites an industry to form, and never completes the architecture required for that system to function? That is not overreach. That is underreach. And historically, that is where industries stop waiting and begin applying pressure. Building on S02E13 “Apex Predator Lineage” and S02E12 “The Divorce,” this episode extends the core thesis of the season. When infrastructure and speculation share a legal identity, clarity does not emerge on its own. It is forced, usually under stress. Aaron Furman’s Beyond the Baja Hemp Podcast is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. If geopolitical pressure continues to rise, the federal government will not reward potential. It will prioritize what is clear, essential, and deployable. The question is whether hemp fiber is positioned inside that category, or whether it remains tied to a regulatory structure that was never designed for industrial scale. If this series has helped you think more clearly about systems, structure, and policy, whether in “The Divorce,” “Apex Predator Lineage,” or this episode, consider contributing. Independent analysis continues because serious operators value it. Get full access to Aaron Furman's Beyond the Baja Hemp Podcast at aaronfurman1.substack.com/subscribe [https://aaronfurman1.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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