Club 600

DoobieBrother

Well-Known Member
Happy Sunday 600!

I agree, nothing major most likely, and maybe years off from saying, MAN I wish I would have bought some of that! But that doesn't mean someone can't double or triple their money on these little fellas in the short term, maybe even hold onto a fair amount of shares with a very small investment. If and when the feds open it up, the most established companies in CO, CA or OR could have an advantage over the rest of the market. Food for thought.
Unfortunately for me double or triple of next to nothing is too much for me to risk.
But my skin is a bit flinty.
When I go to Vegas with the wife I spend $20 total on video poker, video blackjack and maybe $5 of that goes into a slot machine.
I always break even.
:-)
 

lexsworld

New Member
forever a member of club 600.....the give/take ratio just seems to be so ideal at 600 Watts. Granted, soon I'll be going LED anyway.
 

DoobieBrother

Well-Known Member
("Don't forget a towel!")
The Universe's most gorgeously beautiful and incomprehensibly awesome beach towel LIVES!!!!!!



When it sways in the breeze it's as if they're swimming and cavorting with great jocularity and wonderment.... :eyesmoke:

Hmmm... I wonder where I can get a "Dogs Rolling Joints" beach towel.... maybe I should make one... :eyesmoke:
 

budolskie

Well-Known Member
quick few pics from today about 14 days of 12/12 not seen any balls the last couple days.... also setting up another cfl in the veg room and potting up seedlings today i will get more pics on later but hers whats on flower

1st 3 dog no1
2nd 3 dog no2
3rd 4 gigabud
last 2 them together and my temp
 

DST

Well-Known Member
haha, that beach towel cracks me up Doob:)

you could always try and get a Coolidge towel, if such a thing exists!
 

curious old fart

Well-Known Member
Why Colorado and Washington Were Wise to Legalize Pot


By SCOTT SHANE/
Published January 24, 2014/
Entrepreneur.com

Like water finding a path, entrepreneurs will always figure out a way to respond to business opportunities. That's why other states should follow the example of Colorado and Washington and legalize the recreational use of marijuana. Harnessing the power of entrepreneurs is much more productive than fighting it.

On January 1, Colorado legalized the sale of small amounts of marijuana for recreational use. Later this year, Washington will follow suit. Alaska, Arizona, California, D.C. and Oregon may be the next states to permit cannabis businesses.

Cultural attitudes, fairness, economics, and entrepreneurial behavior all point to extension of this trend toward legalization. Much like policy makers were caught flat-footed as American attitudes towards same-sex marriage changed, so too have they missed the shifting views toward the legalization of pot. According to an October 2013 Gallup Organization poll, 58 percent of Americans now favor legalization of marijuana -a jump of ten percentage points over the previous year. Many policymakers seem to have missed the memo showing that voters' views on the topic are fundamentally different from the late 1960s, when only one-in-nine Americans favored sanctioning it.

Related: High Hopes and Blunt Truths for the Legal Marijuana Market

Fairness, too, justifies legalizing cannabis. In the 48 states that do not permit recreational use of marijuana, smoking tobacco, which causes cancer, is legal. By contrast, smoking weed, which is used to treat the symptoms of cancer treatments, is not. Moreover, some experts believe that alcohol, which is legal in virtually all parts of the United States, is more harmful than marijuana, which is illegal in almost all of the country.

Fairness dictates that policymakers either need to play nanny and ban everything that's bad for us - from sugar-laden soda to fat-filled fast food - or they need to allow Americans to make adult decisions about what they want to put in their bodies. Making cigarettes, beer, and whiskey legal, while banning joints and hash brownies, unfairly favors the makers of certain harmful products.

Making pot legal has economic benefits. Policymakers can tax sales of the product - and are doing so relatively heavily. Both Washington and Colorado are charging a 25 percent tax on pot sales, with even higher rates in some municipalities. The non-partisan Tax Foundation estimates that Colorado will bring in nearly $70 million in new taxes, with initial proceeds being used for school construction. Because tax revenues are expected to exceed school building needs, Colorado public officials are already thinking of additional ways to use the tax windfall.

Related: The Half-Baked Plan for Pot Legalization

By making pot legal, police can focus their attention on stopping more destructive illegal drugs like cocaine and heroin, which are more likely to cause crime and health problems. That would help financially strapped states. If all states legalized cannabis sales, the reduced drug enforcement costs and higher tax revenues would be worth more than $17 billion to them, a 2010 Cato Institute study revealed.

Legalized pot will also produce public health benefits, Forbes reports. Because alcohol consumption is more harmful to people than marijuana use, but the two are substitutes, legalizing pot will lead customers to shift to the better of the two choices.

Entrepreneurs find and pursue market opportunities wherever they are. Making a business illegal doesn't get rid of the efforts of entrepreneurs to pursue it. Everyone knows that entrepreneurs are selling marijuana for recreational use in all 48 states where it is illegal.

Making a business legal makes it easier for policymakers to tap entrepreneurial efforts to benefit society. Colorado and Washington are using taxes and regulation to channel pot entrepreneurship more productively than other states, where policy makers are wasting resources trying to stop it, and, consequently, driving it underground.


:peace:
cof
 

jimmer6577

Well-Known Member
This is the first time in a year I don't have anything flowering and it sucks. My girls vegging just hit 2 months old, so Sunday I'll pick some to flip. The rest I'll put in later to stagger finish, so I can take my time trimming.

COF, I love the reads you are always posting, thank you!

I signed up for stress management for my Phy. ed credit. Well fri. when I went to class and the instructor said she finds yoga the best stress management for her and that is what we will be doing for the whole class. The course description didn't mention this. but I'll deal with it. It's got it's good and bad. Bad: I'm 40 years old that is 240lb, had back surgery, 2 hernias you get the pic. Good: 40 years old and a bunch of collage girls in yoga pants doing downward facing dog.
 

DST

Well-Known Member
Agreed, cof is always bringing interesting articles. That one should have a water mark on it that reads COMMON SENSE (which is something that is not applied in politics or the Leadership of countries..
Good: 40 years old and a bunch of collage girls in yoga pants doing downward facing dog.
Hell to the yeh! that's what we're talking about!!!! Almost makes me want to sign up for a college course:)
 
Top