Hey Look how easy it is to sell pot in Colorado....Freedom!

How much you want to bet he blew up the photo of your greenhouse and can calculate how many turds were in teh cat box in the corner?

My best estimation is pounds and pounds of almond roca.

I enjoyed the irony of your op having "freedom" following that huge wall of regs.

Nice to learn you want to keep the right to grow homegrown without compliance.
 
My best estimation is pounds and pounds of almond roca.

I enjoyed the irony of your op having "freedom" following that huge wall of regs.

Nice to learn you want to keep the right to grow homegrown without compliance.

how much more bitter do you get when you see that black people are allowed to eat at the same restaurant as you?
 
My best estimation is pounds and pounds of almond roca.

I enjoyed the irony of your op having "freedom" following that huge wall of regs.

Nice to learn you want to keep the right to grow homegrown without compliance.

I'm ok with commercial sales as long as you can grow without burdensome regulations.
History says that wont happen. Too much money to be made and protected.

Plus my motives when I suggest my path is just to get it legalized the quickest way possible.
 
I laughed so hard.....so hard I laughed. Thank you for that. I do hope the regulations force you to improve your ethic.

I believe in Colorado you have to radio tag every plant and submit it to the MITs system

In July 2011, Colorado's Department of Revenue issued medical marijuana regulations requiring that the pot plants' and products' status and whereabouts be recorded throughout the supply chain. The agency also indicated that the state will eventually require the use of EPC Gen 2 ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) RFID tags to authenticate and identify each product or plant (see Medical Marijuana Companies Use EPC Tags to Keep Things Straight). The rules resulted in the creation of what the state calls Marijuana Inventory Tracking Solutions (MITS)—a system that the Department of Revenue's Marijuana Enforcement Division intends to use to track the pot from the greenhouse in which it is grown to the store where the drug is sold. MITS consists of software developed by Florida technology company Franwell. The MITS software, residing on Colorado's database, is designed to track each plant or package—beginning with the moment a marijuana cutting is first planted. To monitor what each cannabis plant or product consists of, as well as where it originated, the state is employing EPC Gen 2 UHF RFID tags supplied by Franwell. Marijuana growers must purchase these tags—available in various forms, including as a hangtag or an adhesive label—and attach them to the plants themselves, or to packages of processed marijuana - See more at: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11283#sthash.y19ZRKqg.dpuf
 
how much more bitter do you get when you see that black people are allowed to eat at the same restaurant as you?

hahaha hmmm lemme think....how bitter? about zero. Unlike yourself, I dont see black people, just people....your hypothesis of the south is actually the antitheses.

On a social level and a business level.....something to do with having a job I suppose.

unlike your post mine was quite on topic.

Would you like to see the visual for the topic of discussion once more?
 
I laughed so hard.....so hard I laughed. Thank you for that. I do hope the regulations force you to improve your ethic.

i don't need any regulations, i just needed to realize that 15 pounds of cannabis hanging to dry fills every room of the house.
 
I believe in Colorado you have to radio tag every plant and submit it to the MITs system

In July 2011, Colorado's Department of Revenue issued medical marijuana regulations requiring that the pot plants' and products' status and whereabouts be recorded throughout the supply chain. The agency also indicated that the state will eventually require the use of EPC Gen 2 ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) RFID tags to authenticate and identify each product or plant (see Medical Marijuana Companies Use EPC Tags to Keep Things Straight). The rules resulted in the creation of what the state calls Marijuana Inventory Tracking Solutions (MITS)—a system that the Department of Revenue's Marijuana Enforcement Division intends to use to track the pot from the greenhouse in which it is grown to the store where the drug is sold. MITS consists of software developed by Florida technology company Franwell. The MITS software, residing on Colorado's database, is designed to track each plant or package—beginning with the moment a marijuana cutting is first planted. To monitor what each cannabis plant or product consists of, as well as where it originated, the state is employing EPC Gen 2 UHF RFID tags supplied by Franwell. Marijuana growers must purchase these tags—available in various forms, including as a hangtag or an adhesive label—and attach them to the plants themselves, or to packages of processed marijuana - See more at: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11283#sthash.y19ZRKqg.dpuf

I hope FLA is next.

Given the situation in DC I seriously fail to realize how anyone is arrested for cannabis cultivation anywhere in the country....The DC conforming to conflict to its own policies and all....seems to negate the schedule1 argument to me.
 
I hope FLA is next.

Given the situation in DC I seriously fail to realize how anyone is arrested for cannabis cultivation anywhere in the country....The DC conforming to conflict to its own policies and all....seems to negate the schedule1 argument to me.

We are this close > < to the tipping point.
only a few more states and Schedule 1 will be irrelevant.
 
We are this close > < to the tipping point.
only a few more states and Schedule 1 will be irrelevant.


Good news....SC already has medicinal laws on the books from the 80's...schedule1 is all that held it up this year. That and the laws were written for the Dept of Health to grow and distribute. They intend to give out a "grow license" to growers and let the payment details be mitigated between patients and growers, so that the State bears no cost burden.
 
Our state is no where near Any form of legalization
We lost our voice when ben masel died and no one has effectivly taken his place here unfortunatly
 
Private market regulation has been a failure since it's first attempt

BTW
Ron Paul Lost


You are absolutely correct. Regulation of the private market is a failure. A market is a meeting place where people make exchanges. If both beleive the exchange has value to them, they proceed with the exchange. In a regulated market, an often unwanted third party intervenes and doesn't add value to either of the original people in the exchange, they TAKE value.

I see you are now modifying your position, good for you.
 
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