Vnsmkr
Well-Known Member
Pretty close to that in my world . If Southeast Asia is heaven I'm right in the middle of itSo you live in heaven then .
Pretty close to that in my world . If Southeast Asia is heaven I'm right in the middle of itSo you live in heaven then .
As a Colorado resident working in the cannabis industry, I feel qualified to comment;I would think that in a legal state, if what you say is true, the price would fall and quality would go up but has that happened? I have no clue what it's worth in Calarado but have prices dropped? Why would the price in say Europe effect the price here? Again I would love to see it drop to a point where it makes no sense to grow my own (indoors) but don't see it happening.
Uh huh... Talk to me about cropping out in the monsoon!Pretty close to that in my world . If Southeast Asia is heaven I'm right in the middle of it
Covered greenhouse take care of that though. Those come fucking cheap. And if Id had a job this whole monsoon (ie money to build a proper roof), probably would have never fucked with me once.....Uh huh... Talk to me about cropping out in the monsoon!
If cannabis becomes legal in VN, I'm packing my bags.Covered greenhouse take care of that though. Those come fucking cheap. And if Id had a job this whole monsoon (ie money to build a proper roof), probably would have never fucked with me once.....
I also hear there is a lot of traffic heading east and south, trunks full of Colorado green. I also hear it's like running a gauntlet of doom lol. Partners kid decided to head out on his own following in his old mans footsteps, made it just past the state line . They shipped him back here after a year .As a Colorado resident working in the cannabis industry, I feel qualified to comment;
1. It's legal here, but all surrounding states aren't- leading to excess demand due to all the out of state plates in dispensary parking lots.
2. Cannabis is perhaps the world's most tightly regulated crop, both in terms of possession such as plant counts and cultivation, like seed to sale tracking and ever tightening parameters on production techniques and facilities, like security.
3. This regulatory environment, including permitting and taxes not mentioned above, drives up cost and gets reflected in the bottom line
4. Much of the regulations basically require indoor production, and the current technology indoors is inefficient and power/labor/space intensive. It is this part of the puzzle my own company is being built to address.
5. Colorado's temperate climate allows for only one outdoor crop a year, hardly enough to satisfy year round demand.
6. Many individual counties and municipalities have banned commercial production altogether, raising costs in places that do, due to competition for scarce warehouse space.
All these factors combine to support the current pricing- and to some extent or another will continue for the foreseeable future.
Too much money to be made jailing non violent drug 'offenders' carrying a harmless plant.I also hear there is a lot of traffic heading east and south, trunks full of Colorado green. I also hear it's like running a gauntlet of doom lol. Partners kid decided to head out on his own following in his old mans footsteps, made it just past the state line . They shipped him back here after a year .
The reason why you had trouble finding work outside the industry has nothing to do with any stigma; it's because the economy sucks and has for Mr Obama's entire presidency- nevermind the Bush 43 trainwreck. One cannot blame Mr Obama; he did the best he could with the unfolding disaster dropped into his lap, and he did a good job considering the Republican majorities in both House and Senate were openly hell bent on making his a failed presidency.At least some states are legalizing it. In Ohio, where I am from (I moved away to the golden land of Denver and I will never look back) they almost legalized it recreationally this year but it failed. So the state legislature decided to simply decriminalize it, taking the vote out of the hands of the people. Now there is very little chance of recreational support and the state itself has no motivation to try to enact laws for medicinal use in a timely manner, meaning they effectively filibustered the passage of marijuana laws in Ohio. Since decriminalization the momentum of the movement has basically died while the public tries to figure out exactly what the state did.
And even here in Colorado I got out of the cannabis industry (officially, unofficially I still do my work) because of the stigma around it. As a college grad from a legit 4 year university and a solid resume I had a hell of a time finding good work outside of the industry, even with 2 years as inventory manager of one of the largest dispensary chains in the world under my belt.
To answer your first paragraph; the oligarchs won't allow the REAL solution; tax the rich and corporations!^ fact right there.
There is a reason nearly every country round the world has record low interest rates. We are all still recovering from the GFC and the money invested to lesson its impact.
Global stability doesnt help with America and Russia doing its normal thing in a foreign country and the America vs China blustering in the disputed sea.
An election looming doesnt help. How the hell are either of these two going to replace such a great man and leader as Obama is? Dont answer that was rhetorical.