Home Our Perspective Hemp Laws in America: It’s Time for Common Sense

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Poster advocating hemp-law reform: a cannabis leaf atop a sign reading 'Outdated Laws' between a pile of 'Banned'/'Not Allowed' signs and a sunny field with a city skyline on the right.

The hemp industry in America is standing at a crossroads.

On one side, you have thousands of hardworking small businesses, farmers, manufacturers, and retailers trying to build legitimate companies, create jobs, and provide products people genuinely use every single day for wellness, sleep, stress, recovery, and quality of life.

On the other side, you have a confusing patchwork of federal and state laws that make absolutely no sense.

One state allows hemp beverages.
Another bans them.

One state allows hemp-derived THC.
Another treats it like a controlled substance.

Some states allow gummies but not vapes.
Others allow vapes but ban smokable flower.

Meanwhile, consumers are left confused, businesses are stuck operating in fear, and regulators continue moving the goalposts instead of creating clear standards.

At some point, legislators need to stop pretending hemp is the problem and start fixing the actual problems.

The 2018 Farm Bill Changed Everything

When the 2018 Farm Bill federally legalized hemp containing less than 0.3% Delta-9 THC by dry weight, it opened the door for an entirely new industry.

Farmers invested.
Manufacturers invested.
Retailers invested.

People built businesses around the rules the federal government created.

Then came the confusion.

Instead of building a clear national framework for testing, labeling, packaging, age restrictions, manufacturing standards, and taxation, lawmakers left states to figure it out themselves.

The result?
Chaos.

State-by-State Hemp Laws Are a Disaster

Right now in America, hemp laws can literally change when you cross a state line.

A product that is fully compliant in Florida may be illegal in another state.
A hemp beverage sold openly in one market could be seized in another.

That is not how legitimate industries operate.

Imagine if protein powder, energy drinks, or supplements worked this way.

Businesses cannot scale properly.
Banks hesitate to work with hemp companies.
Investors stay cautious.
Retailers avoid carrying products because they fear regulatory uncertainty.

And the people who suffer most are often the small operators trying to do things the right way.

The Real Problem Isn’t Hemp — It’s Lack of Standards

Let’s be honest.

There are bad actors in hemp.
There are companies selling poorly labeled products, products without testing, products marketed irresponsibly, and products that should never have reached shelves.

But banning hemp entirely because of irresponsible companies is lazy regulation.

The answer is not prohibition.
The answer is standards.

The industry needs:

  • Mandatory third-party lab testing

  • QR code transparency

  • Accurate potency labeling

  • Child-resistant packaging

  • Clear serving guidelines

  • Manufacturing oversight

  • Age restrictions

  • Enforcement against companies breaking the rules

That is how you build a safe, sustainable industry.

Not by destroying the businesses already trying to comply.

Hemp Is Not the Enemy

For years, hemp and CBD were treated as if they were automatically dangerous simply because they came from cannabis.

But millions of Americans now use hemp-derived products regularly.

Veterans.
Parents.
Athletes.
Professionals.
Seniors.

The stigma is fading because people have firsthand experience.

Consumers are realizing there is a major difference between responsible hemp products and the outdated fear campaigns that dominated the conversation for decades.

Small Businesses Are Carrying the Weight

One thing politicians rarely acknowledge is how many independent businesses helped build this industry from the ground up.

Most hemp companies are not giant corporations.

They are local shops.
Family businesses.
Independent brands.
Small manufacturers.

People invested their savings, their time, and years of work into an industry that federal lawmakers themselves legalized.

Now many of those same businesses feel like they are constantly one legislative session away from having the rug pulled out from under them.

That uncertainty hurts real people.

We Need Federal Clarity — Not Political Theater

The hemp industry does not need more confusion.
It does not need fear-based headlines.
And it definitely does not need politicians using hemp as a talking point without understanding the science, the economics, or the reality of the market.

What America needs is straightforward federal guidance.

Clear definitions.
Clear compliance standards.
Clear enforcement.

Good businesses should be protected.
Bad businesses should be removed.

That is how every mature industry works.

The Future of Hemp Depends on Smart Regulation

Hemp is not going away.

Consumers have already spoken.
The demand exists.
The market exists.

Now lawmakers need to decide whether they want to help create a responsible, regulated industry — or continue creating confusion that benefits nobody.

At Good Vibe CBD, we believe in transparency, testing, compliance, and responsible products.

We also believe small businesses deserve fair rules, consistent regulations, and the opportunity to operate without constantly wondering what law might change next.

The hemp industry can absolutely thrive in America.

But only if legislators stop fighting yesterday’s battles and start building laws that actually make sense for today’s reality.

author avatar
Todd Cynecki
Todd Cynecki is the founder of GVM Brands, the parent company behind Good Vibe CBD, Good Vibe THC, and Chakra Skin. With a background spanning the fitness, wellness, and hemp industries, Todd has spent more than 30 years building brands, developing products, and navigating entrepreneurship through both success and adversity. After beginning his career in the fitness industry with ICON Health & Fitness and later helping expand multiple national fitness brands and retailers, Todd transitioned into the cannabis and hemp space in Colorado during the early days of legalization. What started as a grassroots lifestyle concept eventually evolved into Good Vibe CBD and a growing portfolio of wellness-focused brands centered around transparency, education, and real-world experience. Having rebuilt his life after addiction, financial collapse, and personal setbacks, Todd brings an authentic and resilient perspective to everything he creates. Today, he continues to independently operate and grow GVM Brands from Southwest Florida, focusing on product development, manufacturing, education, and building brands that connect with people on a human level.

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