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December 29, 2008
Attorney General: Legalize Marijuana
The operation has so far led to the indictment of 59 people and the arrest so far of 39 of them, some in this country legally and others who were not. Phoenix Police Lt. Vince Piano said the operation was very sophisticated, complete with specially designed heavy-duty trucks to actually let vehicles drive over the border fence. They also had solar-powered radio towers and a network of lookouts who told the trucks, each carrying up to 2,500 pounds of marijuana, when to move and when to hide under camouflage. He said there even was a system of "food drops' to supply the drivers. Piano said this operation was one of several under contract to Mexican drug lords to transport the marijuana from the border through the Tohono O'odham Reservation all the way to Phoenix. Piano said busting this organization doesn't stop the flow of drugs, saying this is one of several "transportation groups' working with the cartel. But he said it does disrupt at least part of the flow. Imagine that. Solar powered drug gangs. Talk about going green. And what does he mean by disrupting part of the flow? Simple. More profits for those who remain in the business. At least he understands the basic point. The only way to defeat the cartels is to under price them which shouldn't be hard. Hydroponic marijuana should cost no more than 10X the cost of hydroponic tomatoes. With hydroponic tomatoes running about $2 to $3 a pound retail that would make hydroponic marijuana cost about $1 to $2 an ounce. Maybe as little as 10¢ to 20¢ an ounce. When you compare that with prices for the illegal stuff running at up to $500 an ounce is it any wonder that even a small town like mine (pop 150,000) has two hydroponic stores? Cross Posted at Power and Control posted by Simon on 12.29.08 at 10:38 AM |
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Simon--
At least he understands the basic point. The only way to defeat the cartels is to under price them which shouldn't be hard. Hydroponic marijuana should cost no more than 10X the cost of hydroponic tomatoes. With hydroponic tomatoes running about $2 to $3 a pound retail that would make hydroponic marijuana cost about $1 to $2 an ounce. Maybe as little as 10¢ to 20¢ an ounce. When you compare that with prices for the illegal stuff running at up to $500 an ounce is it any wonder that even a small town like mine (pop 150,000) has two hydroponic stores?
Given that cannabis sativa grows well all across most of North America, and is much less finicky than tobacco: If it were legal, and if the cigarette companies turned their manufacturing and distribution expertise loose on it, we could expect to find a carton of 200 perfectly-rolled joints available for about $20 (before excise and sales taxes, of course).
I don't have a gram scale any more, but on my postage scale, 20 loose cigarettes seem to weigh about an ounce. That suggests a pre-tax retail cost of about $2/ounce, which suggests a manufacturing cost of less than 70c/ounce.