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Alabama Senate Proposes Delta 8, Delta 10 Ban

Last Wednesday, the Alabama Senate Judiciary Committee passed an amendment that could potentially ban both Delta 8 and Delta 10, two low-potency strains of CBD. This is being vehemently opposed by leaders and retailers in the hemp industry. Delta 8 and 10, both of which have become popular products in hemp businesses recently, help users with general anxiety, pain and mood elevation, all without the effects of getting high like marijuana offers. Sonya Lowrey, the owner of Tuscaloosa’s Freedom CBD & Wellness, has been involved in the hemp business since June 2019 and takes CBD products to help with chronic pain and inflammatory-related illnesses. CBD products can come in a variety of forms, such as gummies, smokable flower, oils, capsules and even coffee.

Alabama yoga bill stalls after conservative groups object | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source

Kim Chandler March 31, 2021 - 4:33 PM MONTGOMERY, Ala. - Alabama s decades-old ban on yoga in public schools could stay in place a little longer following push-back from conservative groups. The Alabama Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday did not advance the bill after a public hearing in which representatives from two conservative groups objected, saying they were worried it could lead to the promotion of Hinduism or guided meditation practices. The Alabama lawmaker sponsoring the bill, a former college athlete, said the bill is about exercise and not religion. ”This whole notion that if you do yoga, you’ll become Hindu — I’ve been doing yoga for 10 years and I go to church and I’m very much a Christian,” Democratic Rep. Jeremy Gray of Opelika.

Alabama fails to reverse ban on yoga as conservatives say they fear rise in Hinduism

Alabama fails to reverse ban on yoga as conservatives say they fear rise in Hinduism Akshita Jain © Provided by The Independent A ban on yoga in Alabama public schools is expected to stay a little longer as conservative groups raised objections to a bill that would have reversed the current restrictions.  At a public hearing on Wednesday, representatives from two conservative groups said they were worried it could lead to the promotion of Hinduism or guided meditation practices. The bill did not advance in the Alabama Senate Judiciary Committee.  Democratic representative Jeremy Gray of Opelika, who has been trying since 2019 to get the ban revoked, sponsored the bill. “This whole notion that if you do yoga, you’ll become Hindu I’ve been doing yoga for 10 years and I go to church and I’m very much a Christian,” he said.

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