u/meat_for_the_beast

Beyond the Strait of Hormuz: How MY H-Series Protocol Reclaims the Energy Stolen in 1913
▲ 3 r/hemp+1 crossposts

Beyond the Strait of Hormuz: How MY H-Series Protocol Reclaims the Energy Stolen in 1913

Yesterday was an interesting response, here is my positive approach to this whole thing. While the media keeps us hyper-focused on tankers and global supply chain theater in the Strait of Hormuz, we are ignoring the fact that the answer was murdered in 1913 and buried in 1937.

The EROEI Trap

I've seen the comments about EROEI. Critics claim biofuels are a "net zero" gain because of the energy required to grow them. They are right—if you are talking about the "single-use" model of industrial corn or soy.

But the H-Series Protocol isn't a "crop"—it's a Sovereign Industrial System.

When you factor in that one hectare of hemp provides:

  1. Fuel: B100 biodiesel with 97% conversion.
  2. Building Materials: Hempcrete that replaces the wood/drywall monopoly.
  3. Soil Health: Nitrogen-fixing taproots that eliminate the need for petroleum-based fertilizers.

The effective EROEI is 4x higher than any "single-use" fuel because the "waste" from the fuel is the "raw material" for the house.

The 1913 Heist

Rudolf Diesel vanished from a ship in 1913 because he wanted engines to run on local seed oils. He wanted to empower the farmer and bankrupt the cartels. The H-Series is the technical realization of that murdered vision.

The 1937 Rebrand

We don't use the word "Marijuana" here. That was the linguistic weapon used by Harry Anslinger and the DuPont/Hearst alliance to demonize a sovereign industrial competitor. They didn't ban a drug; they banned the independence of the local acreage.

The Time is NOW

The current crisis in the Middle East is a choice. We can keep fighting for the "black gold" of the parasites, or we can adopt the H-Series Protocol and grow our own sovereignty.

The protocol is simple: Standardized on-farm processing, integrated building material output, and regional energy independence. It's time to stop looking at the tankers and start looking at the fields.

u/meat_for_the_beast — 8 days ago
▲ 556 r/WayOfTheBern+1 crossposts

While the mainstream media has everyone hyper-focused on tankers and global supply chain theater, they are ignoring the fact that we've had the answer for over a century.

  1. The Diesel Hit: In 1913, Rudolf Diesel vanished off a ship while heading to meet with the British Admiralty. He wasn't just a guy with an engine; he was a guy with a plan to run the world on vegetable and seed oils. He wanted energy in the hands of the people (farmers), not the cartels. The Russians, the Germans, and the Standard Oil/DuPont giants all had a motive to see him go over that railing.
  2. The Hemp Suppression: Shortly after Diesel was removed, the 1930s War on Cannabis was launched. It wasn't about a plant that makes you high; it was about a plant that makes you independent. One crop of industrial hemp provides Biodiesel from the seeds and Cellulosic Ethanol from the stalks. It’s a closed-loop energy system that makes the petrodollar obsolete.
  3. Modern Gatekeeping: I've been looking into modern Big Hemp businesses. Notice how they only push CBD and hemp hearts? It's high-margin wellness fluff designed to keep the plant in a niche. The moment you start talking about standardized industrial fuel protocols — the stuff that actually runs tractors and semis at a fraction of the cost of petroleum — the conversation stops.

I’ve been tracking the technical infrastructure needed to verify these fuel protocols. The gear exists. The science is settled. But as long as we are fighting over tankers in the Middle East, they keep us from looking at the plots of land in our own backyards.

They didn't just ban a plant; they derailed a revolution. Stop looking at the pump and start looking at the history they scrubbed.

HEMP IS THE ANSWER TO SO MANY THINGS!

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u/Orangutan — 9 days ago