Legalization Next Door

  • Thread starter Thread starter Marie Edinger
  • Start date Start date
M

Marie Edinger

Guest
A wooden sign saying Leaving Colorful Colorado


Although a vast majority of Americans support legalizing marijuana in at least some fashion, a majority does not equal a whole. 8% of the United States still doesn’t want any form of legal cannabis, and another 31% think it should only be accessible for people with debilitating medical conditions. Because the country can’t agree and the federal government has yet to decriminalize cannabis, states remain divided. As a result, one state may choose to legalize marijuana while its neighbor remains starkly against it. However, because people can travel from state to state unhindered, legalization tends to bleed over across states’ border lines.

Economy​


Cannabis sales have been booming. In 2019, sales within the United States reached $13.3 billion; in 2020, that number soared to $18.5 billion. As more states continue to legalize the product and access is expanded, total sales are projected to reach $28 billion in 2022.

A trend called “marijuana tourism” is growing. People who can’t get legal bud in their own states will travel elsewhere to try out the product. And of course, because everyone has different interests and looks for different things while they travel, there are many different forms of cannabis tourism.

Cannabis pairing, for instance, has been taking off. Fine dining is its own form of luxury activity, and now you can go to restaurants that artfully pair cannabis with select food and beverages. In some cases, you smoke and then eat; in others, the food you’re eating contains THC.

Marijuana tourism is centered around food in other ways, too. The Sushi & Joint Rolling Class, for example, is fairly on-the-nose for what it offers. Or you can take classes teaching you how to cook with hemp. Or maybe you prefer to alternate between Kush and Candy. After that, you could stay overnight at a Bud and Breakfast.


A women touring a cannabis grow facility in Oregon

Source: Shutterstock


People enjoy taking bus rides that show them around town, pointing out historical sites and explaining some of the magic of the city. Now, you can do that while stopping by different pot shops. In the Centennial State, the Original Colorado Cannabis Tour features stops at two dispensaries, and people are encouraged to partake in their purchases while on the bus.

Visitors go to a growing facility and attend a glass-blowing demonstration to see how pipes are made.

That same company also offers the Puff, Pass, and Paint class – similar to outlets that offer art supplies, instruction, and wine, but with weed instead.

There are walking tours, too. For instance, My 420 Tours takes people to see graffiti murals, the viewing of which is enhanced by the occasional sparked doobie.

Laws and Limitations​


Advocates of marijuana legalization say the move not only increases tax revenue and stimulates the economy, but also reduces crime and benefits the criminal justice system by lowering the amount of time and money spent prosecuting marijuana offenses. But some studies have found that marijuana being legalized in one state increases the number of cannabis-related arrests in neighboring states where the product is still banned.

The surprising twist in those findings is that the effect of increased arrests is limited to adults; juvenile marijuana arrests have not increased. That’s likely because dispensaries check to ensure the buyer is 21 or older, so the people purchasing marijuana and transporting it to a place where it’s illegal are, by a vast majority, adults.

Take those findings with a grain of salt, though, because other studies say just the opposite. Even a report funded by the federal government says legalization laws are not associated with an increase in what’s considered criminal activity in adjacent states or counties. The nonprofit Justice Research and Statistics Association published three major findings:

“Analyses of the available data suggests that: One: Legalizing the recreational use of marijuana resulted in fewer marijuana related arrests and court cases; Two: Legalizing marijuana did not have a noticeable impact on indicators in states that bordered those that legalized; and Three: There were no noticeable indications of an increase in arrests related to transportation or trafficking offenses in states along the northern or southern borders.”

In response, the Executive Director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, Erik Altieri, stated,

“This federally funded report is further evidence that legalizing and regulating marijuana works largely as intended. It reduces arrests, and it does not lead to increased youth use or a rise in serious crime, and with these latest findings, it is clear that these policies are not adversely impacting bordering states. It is time to let science and facts dictate public policy and end prohibition nationwide.”


A person being arrested for cannabis possession

Source: Shutterstock


The difference in the two studies may be an argument over what the scientists considered a “significant” increase. It’s possible the numbers were within a margin of error or that the increase was nominal, so one report cited the increase it viewed, and one thought the increase wasn’t enough to mention or base policy on.

Of course, if you do purchase some weed in a state that allows it, it’s illegal to bring it across state lines – even if the product is legal in both states. That violates federal trafficking laws, because the federal government regulates interstate commerce. Plus, many states’ legalization laws stipulate that the legally-purchased marijuana must remain within that government’s jurisdiction. In the end, though, that may just encourage people to come back repeatedly to states with legal marijuana.

The Black Market​


One thing that simply hasn’t gone away is the Black Market. Even in states that have legal marijuana, an illicit underground still holds strong, and at least one report expects illicit sales will make up 53% of all marijuana transactions by 2024. That’s due in large part to price and quality. Government-regulated cannabis is taxed extremely heavily, particularly in states like California, where the price of legal weed is nearly double that of the black market stuff.

Further, people report the crop they can get from their neighborhood dealer is better than what they’d find in a dispensary. That rings especially true in Canada, it seems.

There are also purchase limits on the amount you can buy from a dispensary. People looking to purchase in bulk are more likely to turn to the black market than they are to stop by individual dispensaries and hit the purchase limit at each store until they get their desired amount.

The post Legalization Next Door appeared first on Wikileaf.

Continue reading...
 
It's ridiculous when you consider a few things:

Originally Weed became illegal in the Southwest US because the depression had a bunch of white people in the bread lines, and the government couldn't make being Mexican a crime at the time, so they outlawed their behavior instead much like they did with Opium and the Chinese a few decades before (along with suspending water from a pole being a crime because it was a Chinese custom).

Harry Anslinger then became in charge and through movies like "Reefer Madness" and a single case in Florida where a mentally ill man killed his family with an Axe, they blamed Weed for it.

In WW2 it became sort of legal again with a movie called "Hemp for Victory" because we needed rope or some shit....

After WW2 Weed went back to illegal for the OPPOSITE reason or was first made illegal; instead of making people violent it made them pacifists and people wouldn't be as blood thirsty against the "enemy".

Nixon had a report done on Weed, which I think is the Schaeffer report? And it said it wasn't really a problem so they ignored that because the hemp Tax stamps they tried didn't work out (you had to have the weed in hand to get the legal stamp, but without the stamp you were breaking the law).

Now, in Florida in the 70s, The Ethiopian Zion Coptic Church openly used weed, as they do, as it's part of their Religious Beliefs and we are supposed to have freedom of Religion here, which you'd think would stand up in court, but a few arrests of Priests in Florida later it seemed that they didn't care.

Here we are today, in a nation where I've heard Churches say they don't want weed...... oh the money I'd pay to have a chat with these Churches..... God put it here, and I really do Hope deep down that they have a really good reason when they head Upstairs if they are asked why they thought they knew better than God about the plants He put here and said was fine.....

Jews, Christians, and Muslims are allowed to smoke weed and Hash. In fact the English word Assassin comes from "Hashishien" which is someone who smokes Hash, as warring Muslims sects smoked it. Rastafarian people also use it in their very similar Beliefs.

So why would anyone in their right mind outlaw weed and keep it that way?

We somehow allowed law enforcement to monetize this!

"Oh you got drugs on you? Now we own your car and all your money, and we run the department with it and if this is legal we lose a bunch of money".....

It employs a LOT of misguided people keeping a plant illegal. Also the people paid by big Pharma who want their drugs to be the only option couldn't Trademark a plant so they couldn't make as much money off of it when it can simply be grown at home, and those big companies hold enough government bonds to really wreak some havoc.

So to me it would appear that we are now full circle back to "cause greed and racism are for some reason allowed" as to why it's not yet legal.

I mean in their defense; people think the Spartans were honorable warriors, totally ignoring the fact that every man in Sparta had to be a gay sex slave of the Military.
 
Back
Top Bottom