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Dewmar International BMC, Inc. (DEWM) Announces Investment in New West Genetics, Better Than Expected Progress on the Genetic Engineering of the Hemp Plant
Dewmar International BMC, Inc. (DEWM) Announces Investment in New West Genetics, Better Than Expected Progress on the Genetic Engineering of the Hemp Plant.

About this update from Dewmar Intl Bmc Inc
[{"type":"text","content":"\n \n \n Dewmar International BMC, Inc. (DEWM) Announces Investment in New West Genetics, Better Than Expected Progress on the Genetic Engineering of the Hemp Plant\n \n \nDewmar International BMC, Inc. (DEWM) Announces Investment in New West Genetics, Better Than Expected Progress on the Genetic Engineering of the Hemp Plant\n\nCompany Formally Announces Trials at University of Kentucky, Purdue University and the University of Nevada, Reno\n\n \n NEW ORLEANS, LA--(Marketwired - Aug 11, 2017) - Dewmar International BMC, Inc. (the \"Company\") (OTC PINK: DEWM) today discussed its investment in New West Genetics (\"New West\") and the phenomenal progress that has been achieved in only the past year. \n Dewmar International Health & Wellness Research Consortium, LLC, a subsidiary of Dewmar, is a direct investor in New West Genetics and through New West, the consortium is using proprietary technologies and a knowledge base to genetically engineer the cannabis sativa plant to create low THC varieties that will be far superior to the common varieties known in the world today.\n New West's business strategy is using genomic technology and data-driven discovery to create large-scale, harvestable cannabis, greatly enhancing the sustainability of the industry and paving the way for large-scale product development of novel nutritional and therapeutic extracts, serving the fastest growing and largest segment of the cannabis market, to use its technology and its knowledge base of genetic engineering to develop and market what it believes are superior, differentiated products. \n For thousands of years and since the first farms appeared on the face of the earth, farmers saved seeds from one farming season to another. There wasn't anything that was truly proprietary, seed types mutated to a certain climate and soil type, and all the farmers in a region of the world essentially farmed the same variety. \n The United States Patent and Trademark Office throughout its history refused to grant patents on seed types. They viewed seeds as a form of life and refused to grant patents on a living thing that had way too many variables that couldn't be controlled. This all changed in 1980 when in a 5-4 decision, the United States Supreme Court finally decided to allow the patenting of seeds. This created an entire industry which is a multi-b...