Why the demand for illegal cannabis is still rising in Canada

gb123

Well-Known Member
Why else ??
maybe because The Government won't include the ones who MADE THIS INDURY WHAT IT IS TODAY!:idea::idea::hump::finger::wall:

So

PPPHHHTTTTT em .........................To bad YOU LOSE MOFOS" :)
and it looks friggin awesome on yas all!!

THIS IS OUR S TO CONTROL AND ALWAYS WILL BE UNITIL YOU INCLUDE AND LEARN THAT YOU DONT KNOW SHIT ABOUT THIS INDUTRY!

Ya its;ll never happen :lol:

Same old same old Do yer own thing and keep to yourself ..............alls well..

There is NO SHORTAGE OF SUPPLY OF AWESOME LEGAL MEDS FROM JUST ABOUT ANHYONE YOU KNOW! :):clap::weed:bongsmilie:idea::idea::idea::-P:-P
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
he demand for illegal cannabis is still on the rise despite widespread legalisation of the drug across Canada, according to a recent report by CBC.


Some 60 per cent of Canadians are continuing to purchase weed on the black market or from illegal sources, one year on from the legalisation of recreation cannabis in the country.


The shocking news details how Canadians are still more likely to purchase cannabis from illegal drug dealers as opposed to legal dispensaries.


The black market remains a $4 billion-a-year industry, despite the amount of sales from illegal products decreasing since October last year.


There are a number of reasons as to why this may be the case, the first and most important of which is the price. Illegal cannabis dealers don’t have to pay for licenses or regulatory approval, where as legitimate firms are forced to spend millions in order to abide by regulatory standards.


In the province of New Brunswick, Jay LeBourque runs a lounge where he sells cannabis in spite of the fact that he disagrees with the practices of the government-operated stores, which often sell high priced weed of a weaker-strength product.

Gift to customers

LeBourque has admitted that he doesn’t grow his own cannabis but chooses to buy it from someone who produces it illegally, and goes on to “gift” it to customers in exchange for buying a sticker at his lounge, from around $3 up to $30.


He gets around the law by offering the cannabis as a gift as opposed to a direct sale, stating that he’s “pushing it, yeah” adding “because I do not agree with it”.


Another reason is the lack of physical stores in Canada. In Ontario just 25 stores obtained licenses to sell cannabis in January of this year, a further 50 were added but it is still a relatively small number compared with the likes of California, where they are situated on almost every street.


Back in New Brunswick, the only government authorised retailer of recreational cannabis is Cannabis NB. It charges a premium price for the product, which consequently pushes potential customers back into the arms of illegal street dealers.


Earlier this year, Cannabis NB released its first 166 day sales report, which totalled at $18.6 million, a disappointing 58 percent lower than what the company had initially projected for itself before the stores were launched.

Lack of supply

A spokesperson from Cannabis NB insisted in a statement that “price point is not the driver of sales shortages – lack of supply is”. However, their website has more than 80 cannabis products listed, which suggests that stock remains plentiful, although the company has certainly suffered from national shortages in the past.


Price is still a big issue for potential customers of Cannabis NB, as the cheapest available product it sells currently is the dried bud from the company Plain Packaging which retails at $8.57 per gram and can only be purchased in seven gram packages totalling to $59.99, with a single gram being worth $1.20 more than the national average in Canada for legal cannabis.


With Canada being at the forefront of the legalisation of cannabis, the product it produces is highly valued as an exported good, and is worth a high price from countries purchasing the Canadian-grown cannabis for medicinal products, if the government is then selling the same product to consumers in the country for the same high price as it’s being shipped out for, they could maybe look at balancing it out by demanding a lower price from citizens for the homegrown product.


There are hopes that the upcoming cannabis 2.0 legalisation movement, which will see edibles and food products sold in licensed environments, will help push people towards purchasing cannabis legally.

How law enforcement need to target the black market

As the black market in Canada continues to rage on, local law enforcement needs to ensure that illegal growing operations are still being sought out and shut down. In order to do this, a smart way would be to contact stores that sell lighting and growing equipment and ensuring that they are doing the correct checks on customers to guarantee they are selling to people with licenses.


Canada is one of the world’s largest cannabis producers, meaning there is also significant demand from countries abroad. Local customers and border force need to step up their game to ensure illegal cannabis doesn’t find its way to being exported out of the country as it will ultimately continue to fund illegal operations.

How can dispensaries tempt users to move towards the legal market?

Cannabis has a huge amount of medicinal properties but as a result of its illegal status over the past few decades education on the plant is simply not up to standard.


If a movement started to educate users on the potential benefits of cannabis, as well as the possible risks of unregulated and potentially tainted cannabis, it could encourage users to move towards dispensaries and away from the illegal nature of black market weed.


Another way of doing it would be to lower the prices. The average price of weed in Canadian dispensaries is currently around $7.37 per gram, which has actually lowered by 6.4% since the second quarter of 2018 when legal weed was priced at around $10.65, however these prices still can’t compete with the average street price of cannabis, which was last valued in the third quarter of last year at $5.59.


In order to incentivise users to utilise the legal dispensaries, the price should be dropped, which would even itself out to most likely bring in the same amount of profit, if not more once more customers flocked to the legal stores.


With the upcoming movement to allow for edibles, drinks and concentrates to be sold by legal cannabis retailers, companies could use this as a unique selling point as many black market dealers most often sell the flower version of weed.


This could mean that if companies prioritised the new wave of products and market them sufficiently, they could take back a large number of customers from the black market and transfer the profits into the hands of legal businesses, as edibles are predicted to contribute $1.6 billion to the cannabis market in Canada.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
"He gets around the law by offering the cannabis as a gift as opposed to a direct sale, stating that he’s “pushing it, yeah” adding “because I do not agree with it”.


and THIS is EXACTLY WHAT IM YAPPIN ABOUT EH....no one needs to buy anything from an LP EVER>. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA GIFTNG IS EASY AND FUN!! Get on the gift list Lol :weed:
 

tooktoomuch

Well-Known Member
In order to do this, a smart way would be to contact stores that sell lighting and growing equipment and ensuring that they are doing the correct checks on customers to guarantee they are selling to people with licenses.
What "correct checks" hahaha? Is this a new law because the current law states zero checks of any kind fools....not to mention I can legally grow 4 plants...so what checks could they do? dum dums
 

CalyxCrusher

Well-Known Member
As the black market in Canada continues to rage on, local law enforcement needs to ensure that illegal growing operations are still being sought out and shut down. In order to do this, a smart way would be to contact stores that sell lighting and growing equipment and ensuring that they are doing the correct checks on customers to guarantee they are selling to people with licenses.
Yep because THAT would help business for sure.......
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
and out come the CLAWS because they AINT GETTIN THEIR WAY!:dunce::hug::finger:
BWAHAHAHAHA:P
Fuck ya morons...
Ill go to court and take ya there!! :):hump::idea:
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
Whoever wrote that was right out to lunch. They pretty much got it all wrong.
And I don't personally believe that 60% of folks are buying legal weed. I'm sure they've skewed that stat somehow with some other stat.
I don't know anyone who buy's legal weed. And they will get a good smack if they do.
\No store in KW and we could care less.
I notice those stores that can now open don't seem to be doing that. Smart move. I wouldn't give you much for a legal store.
I think the players who wanted one see that now.
 

tooktoomuch

Well-Known Member
burn...burn to the ground....useless haters...appropriators of our culture....burn...burn...burn...all your fucking money assholes....
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
It's coming for a lot of them. I personally hope the jwc schwagg and pesticide application factory here in my town burn to the ground
 

gwheels

Well-Known Member
The funniest part of legalaztion.....if everyone were growing legally in Ontario there would only argyle growing everywere.

How stupid is that.

Just grow your own. Grow more than you can smoke and gift some to other people so they can see how much better it is than OCS schwagg.

and 4 plants....because the plant count cops are on the way....who gives a shit. Grow what you want.

I didnt see it like that at first but the cannabis corporations rile me. They break the law constantly and suffer no consequence. They grow crappy product and irradiate or spray it with shit...say they didnt get caught and still carry on.

So grow your own. Fuck those money grubbing big pharma cannabis companies who dont get that its not about bottom line. Its about quality cannabis.
 

gb123

Well-Known Member
T....who gives a shit. Grow what you want.

I didnt see it like that at first but the cannabis corporations rile me. They break the law constantly and suffer no consequence. They grow crappy product and irradiate or spray it with shit...say they didnt get caught and still carry on.

So grow your own. Fuck those money grubbing big pharma cannabis companies who dont get that its not about bottom line. Its about quality cannabis.
I along with a few others have been SCREAMING THAT FOR 6 YEARS!!:weed::clap::idea::grin:
 

cannadan

Well-Known Member
You have to advocate for your own healthcare,,,since the deck is stacked against us.
whether its big pharma ,health Canada, the government... .Lp's...none of them have your best interests in mind.
but its seems but rather the opposite, and have only their own vested interests in mind.
 

The Hippy

Well-Known Member
@gb123 and @The Hippy have been screaming it for years and they were right.
Still waiting for an apology as well. We'll never get one cuz they are NOT sorry. They legalized weed to make money on it. They legalized weed to fuck others out of an industry and steal it for their own under the hand of a paid goon squad called the cops.
They didn't care what they had done to anyone. They still don't. They will still jail you if you don't fill their accounts.
All for selling the same product they now do. If that doesn't grind ya what will?
I'm not going to get over any of that ever.
 

Egzoset

Well-Known Member
Salutations,

Truth is there can't be apologies (much less compensation/repairment!) while accountability still gets diluted until it escapes all control beyond our own democratic institutions, only to serve some failed utopia born of mass-trauma between 2 wars, mainly aligned on emotional involvement as a decoy:

Federal Health Minister Jane Philpott @ UNGASS 2016 .GIF

Which makes me wonder if today's socio-toxic situation ain't just a remnant of the long-forgotten "tempérance" movement when spouses fought their husbands over a self-indulging habit; e.g. a domestic affair, basically, that should never have involved predatory strangers on the lookup to benefit from a bogus parasitic industry turning *consumers* into the actual product, because it's a stealthy war targetting people in their own private lives & homes.

Good day, have fun!! :peace:
 

cannadan

Well-Known Member
How law enforcement need to target the black market

"As the black market in Canada continues to rage on, local law enforcement needs to ensure that illegal growing operations are still being sought out and shut down. In order to do this, a smart way would be to contact stores that sell lighting and growing equipment and ensuring that they are doing the correct checks on customers to guarantee they are selling to people with licenses. "

So you want the hydro stores to rat out their customers....the same loyal customers they had before legalization???
Why would anyone wanting to buy 3 or 4 lights require a licence....if you can grow 4 plants on your property indoors or out or both

So if you read into this correctly the CBC is suggesting the same bull shit as the RCMP did during Allard trial.....
That the black market is comprised of MMAR, MMPR or ACMPR medical licences....
It was already confirmed at the supreme court level that this suggestion is completely untrue and was not proven in the slightest by any of the crowns witnesses and the crowns witnesses were even threatened with contempt of court for fabricating stats / statements and evidence which was considered as extreme reaching by the crown.
 
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