i don't understand how some of you continue to justify $400+ ounces.
Bluntly, I don't think you understand how markets work.
In a free market you can ask whatever you like. . .$100 an ounce or $10,000 an ounce. The reality is, that ultimately buyers will only pay as much as they think its worth. The intersection of what sellers are asking, and what buyers are willing to pay is what determines the price, not "greed".
The only person that has to "justify" $400 an ounce is the person paying it.
If you can grow it yourself cheaply, weed may not be worth much to you. If its not worth that much to YOU, then YOU don't have to pay it. But just because you think $400 an ounce is too high, doesn't mean *I* think it is. I may not have the ability or desire to grow my own, and in fact, that's probably true of most smokers.
If lots of people ARE happy to pay $400 an ounce (and yes. . .absolutely they are), then that's by definition a fair price.
Again, greed has nothing to do with this. . .its supply and demand. If demand is high, and supply is low, prices will be high. If demand is low and supply is high, prices will be low.
For example, go to Mexico city and you can buy a mid-level OUNCE of decent, if not exceptional stuff on the street for well under $20. A *KILO* can be had for $200. Is that because Mexican drug cartels aren't "greedy"? No, its because supply is high in Mexico, and the economy is weak.
divided by the 14 hours i spent = $179 an hour
by some of your standards the time i spend should be billed at a rate of $179 a fucking hour??? and that's not greedy?
Again, this has nothing to do with greed.
Growing cannabis requires dedicated space, equipment, specialized skills, and happens to be illegal, the latter thing significantly increasing the asking price.
If the risk you're taking growing and selling might lead to you spending several years in prison, then the $179 per hour you earn growing might be considered ridiculously cheap (especially if you add in the hours spent behind bars to your total hours spent!).
Again, actual manufacturing cost (ie your materials cost in growing) is only one
small factor in the ultimate cost. You also have to factor in distribution, transportation, and most importantly risk costs.