Pot Is Called Biggest Cash Crop

Dankdude

Well-Known Member
The $35-Billion Market Value Of U.S.-Grown Cannabis Tops That Of Such Heartland Staples As Corn And Hay, A Marijuana Activist Says.

SACRAMENTO -- For years, activists in the marijuana legalization movement have claimed that cannabis is America's biggest cash crop. Now they're citing government statistics to prove it.

A report released today by a marijuana public policy analyst contends that the market value of pot produced in the U.S. exceeds $35 billion -- far more than the crop value of such heartland staples as corn, soybeans and hay, which are the top three legal cash crops.

California is responsible for more than a third of the cannabis harvest, with an estimated production of $13.8 billion that exceeds the value of the state's grapes, vegetables and hay combined -- and marijuana is the top cash crop in a dozen states, the report states.

The report estimates that marijuana production has increased tenfold in the past quarter century despite an exhaustive anti-drug effort by law enforcement.

Jon Gettman, the report's author, is a public policy consultant and leading proponent of the push to drop marijuana from the federal list of hard-core Schedule 1 drugs -- which are deemed to have no medicinal value and a high likelihood of abuse -- such as heroin and LSD.

He argues that the data support his push to begin treating cannabis like tobacco and alcohol by legalizing and reaping a tax windfall from it, while controlling production and distribution to better restrict use by teenagers.

"Despite years of effort by law enforcement, they're not getting rid of it," Gettman said. "Not only is the problem worse in terms of magnitude of cultivation, but production has spread all around the country. To say the genie is out of the bottle is a profound understatement."

While withholding judgment on the study's findings, federal anti-drug officials took exception to Gettman's conclusions.

Tom Riley, a spokesman for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, cited examples of foreign countries that have struggled with big crops used to produce cocaine and heroin. "Coca is Colombia's largest cash crop and that hasn't worked out for them, and opium poppies are Afghanistan's largest crop, and that has worked out disastrously for them," Riley said. "I don't know why we would venture down that road."

The contention that pot is America's biggest cash crop dates to the early 1980s, when marijuana legalization advocates began citing Drug Enforcement Administration estimates suggesting that about 1,000 metric tons of pot were being produced nationwide. Over the years, marijuana advocates have produced studies estimating the size and value of the U.S. crop, most recently in 1998.

Gettman's report cites figures in a 2005 State Department report estimating U.S. cannabis cultivation at 10,000 metric tons, or more than 22 million pounds -- 10 times the 1981 production.

Using data on the number of pounds eradicated by police around the U.S., Gettman produced estimates of the likely size and value of the cannabis crop in each state. His methodology used what he described as a conservative value of about $1,600 a pound compared to the $2,000- to $4,000-a-pound street value often cited by law enforcement agencies after busts.

In California, the state's Campaign Against Marijuana Planting seized nearly 1.7 million plants this year -- triple the haul in 2005 -- with an estimated street value of more than $6.7 billion. Based on the seizure rate over the last three years, the study estimates that California grew more than 21 million marijuana plants in 2006 -- with a production value nearly triple the next closest state, Tennessee, which had an estimated $4.7-billion cannabis harvest.

California ranked as the report's top state for both outdoor and indoor marijuana production. The report estimates that the state had 4.2 million indoor plants valued at nearly $1.5 billion. The state of Washington was ranked next, with $438 million worth of indoor cannabis plants.

California also is among nine states that produce more cannabis than residents consumed, Gettman estimates. According to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the state's 3.3 million cannabis users represent about 13% of the nation's pot smokers. But California produces more than 38% of the cannabis grown in the country, the study contends.

Nationwide, the estimated cannabis production of $35.8 billion exceeds corn ($23 billion), soybeans ($17.6 billion) and hay ($12.2 billion), according to Gettman's findings.

Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Pubdate: Mon, 18 Dec 2006
Copyright: 2006 Los Angeles Times
Contact: [email protected]
Author: Eric Bailey, Times Staff Writer
 

Wavels

Well-Known Member
Bingo...

Big, Big Government
By John Stossel
Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Two weeks ago, U.S. drug agents launched raids on 11 medical-marijuana centers in Los Angeles County. The U.S. attorney's office says they violated the laws against cultivation and distribution of marijuana.
Whatever happened to America's federal system, which recognized the states as "laboratories of democracy"?
According to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, 11 states (Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington) have eliminated the penalties for physician-approved possession of marijuana by seriously ill patients. In those states people with AIDS and other catastrophic diseases may either grow their own marijuana or get it from registered dispensaries.
But the U.S. government says its drug laws trump the states' laws, and in 2005, the Supreme Court agreed.
This is not the way it was supposed to work. The constitutional plan presented in the Federalist Papers delegated only a few powers to the federal government, with the rest reserved to the states. The system was hailed for its genius. Instead of having decisions made in the center -- where errors would harm the entire country -- most policies would be determined in a decentralized environment. A mistake in California would affect only Californians. New Yorkers, Ohioans, and others could try something else. Everyone would learn and benefit from the various experiments.
It made a lot of sense. It still does. Too bad the idea is being tossed on the trash heap by big-government Republicans and their DEA goons.
Drug prohibition -- like alcohol prohibition -- is a silly idea, as the late free-market economist Milton Friedman often pointed out. Something doesn't go away just because the government decrees it illegal. It simply goes underground. Then a black market creates worse problems. Since sellers cannot rely on police to protect their property, they arm themselves, form gangs, charge monopoly prices, and kill their competitors. Buyers steal to pay the high prices.
Alcohol prohibition in the 1920s gave America Al Capone and organized crime. Drug prohibition has given us South American and Asian cartels that finance terrorism. Even the government admits that the heroin trade bankrolls terrorists. Prohibition's exorbitant black-market prices make that possible. In the United States, drug prohibition spawns gangs that are sometimes better armed than the police. Drug prohibition does more harm than drugs.
The war on drugs hasn't even accomplished what it promised to do. Drugs are abundant and cheaper than ever. "ABC News" reported last month, "marijuana is the U.S.'s most valuable crop. The report, 'Marijuana Production in the United States,' by marijuana policy researcher Jon Gettman, concludes that despite massive eradication efforts at the hands of the federal government, 'marijuana has become a pervasive and ineradicable part of the national economy.'"
The destructive failure of the drug war is why it makes so much sense to let states experiment, which 11 of them have done with medical marijuana.
Legalizing only medical marijuana brings its own problems. For one thing, it invites state authorities to monitor the practice of medicine to make sure doctors don't prescribe pot promiscuously.
But government officials shouldn't be the judges of what is and isn't medicine. That should be left to medical researchers, doctors, and patients. The effectiveness of medicine is too dependent on individual circumstances and biochemistry. One size does not fit all, so politicians and bureaucrats should butt out.
More fundamentally, why should only people whom the state defines as sick be able to use marijuana? This is supposed to be a free country, and in a free country adults should have the right to ingest whatever they want. A drug user who harms someone else should be punished, but a peaceful user should be left alone.
Despite my reservations about medical marijuana, the states' experimentation is still better than a brutal federal one-size-fits-all crackdown. There is no role here for the federal government. If the people of a state want to experiment by loosening drug prohibition, that should be their right. Washington should mind its own business. The feds and rest of us should watch. We might learn something.


John Stossel is an award-winning news correspondent and author of Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
 

7xstall

Well-Known Member
Too bad the idea is being tossed on the trash heap by big-government Republicans and their DEA goons.


couldn't agree more...most conservatives are not being very conservative anymore...
 

ViRedd

New Member
"This is supposed to be a free country, and in a free country adults should have the right to ingest whatever they want. A drug user who harms someone else should be punished, but a peaceful user should be left alone."

How anyone can be an advocate of legalizing pot while at the same time be supportive the Welfare State is beyond me.

Vi
 

medicineman

New Member
"This is supposed to be a free country, and in a free country adults should have the right to ingest whatever they want. A drug user who harms someone else should be punished, but a peaceful user should be left alone."

How anyone can be an advocate of legalizing pot while at the same time be supportive the Welfare State is beyond me.

Vi
There is a myriad of things beyond you and the only thing that matters is the "welfare state", Grow up!
 

smartsoverambition

Well-Known Member
let's face it the war on drugs is never gonna stop it employs too many people and to many people (including politicians) are makin ill gotten gains in it
all we can do is grow our own and they won't let us do that because then we will just smoke and we wouldn't have to use other stuff to make us happy cuz, well were high lol
 

darthCannabis

Active Member
This is supposed to be a free country, and in a free country adults should have the right to ingest whatever they want. A drug user who harms someone else should be punished, but a peaceful user should be left alone. That is exactly it, if your a peaceful user than coips should leave you alone. Fuck you cops! :finger:
 

medicineman

New Member
This is supposed to be a free country, and in a free country adults should have the right to ingest whatever they want. A drug user who harms someone else should be punished, but a peaceful user should be left alone. That is exactly it, if your a peaceful user than coips should leave you alone. Fuck you cops! :finger:

I have a healthy dislike for cops. It seems to me that all cops have a giant chip on their shoulder. Ever notice when the cops are pummeling a perp and the camera is rolling, they keep yelling "quit resisting" even when the poor guy is just laying there. Have you seen them get all crazy when they find a matchhead size piece of crack, "whoa, we've just struck the motherlode". Their most favorite part of the job, (Well outside of busting heads), Is the car chase. I mean, how much fun is it playing cops and druggies when you have the guns, badges and numbers on your side. It's like shooting fish in a barrel. They always have a reason to search your car, even if you say no. I say if the cop asks you to get out of your car, ask why, when he threatens you, get out, take your keys and lock your car upon exit. stick your keys in your pocket and refuse to give them up. Keep asking why you are being detained. At this point you'll be placed in cuffs and they will forcefully take your keys. Now anything found in your car will be thrown out in court as illegal search. Never talk to them once you are arrested, not one word, just name, age, and address.
 

ilkhan

Well-Known Member
You know what Med your right-ish not All cops but many are that way. But Cops get stuck in Group think. I've done cell extractions we get 5-6 guys in all kinds of armour and whatnot and go in and tackle an inmate. I've had cops start yelling that "stop resisting" crap. The dude was on his belly hands behind his back the second we came through the door. And some officer is squeeling about "stop resisting" But what can you do in that situation. Your supposed to have his back, if you don't then when the chips are down maybe he will not be their for you. You may have heard of a "code of silence" its very real. PBSP had "most" of it fixed when I retired.

We never play fair we allways have numbers and guns. We don't want to risk our lives any more then we have to.

Oh and BTW notice how they lump in Pot with Opium and Coca. Well if you can't die from chewing/smoking a coca leaf then legalize it to. They just want it illegal thats it. Fund that prison industrial complex, right along with the war industry and God only know what else government and industry have gotten into bed together about.

Rant..
 

misshestermoffitt

New Member
cannabis production of $35.8 billion and yet the government is still trying to run that money out of the country. :roll:

This is the farthest we've ever come in this fight, it's a pretty exciting time. I think we're finally beating them down with the facts. Go team Cannabis.

 
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