Today I Heard My First . . . . .
ChatterBank3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by snotmonkey. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Until there is a proper Royal Comission investigation, nothing will change. The politicians will continue to brand all drugs into unweildy categories: Legal, Pharaceutical, Bad and Very Bad.
The irony is, of course, that dope is a clearly better drug than many legally prescribed pharmacueticals or the government's favourite of alcohol. Dope has fewer social implications, less serious (though let's not be naive here - if you smoke it, it will harm you (but let's not be kneejerk - cannabis can be taken in ways that don't involve smoking and therefore have minimal health implications)) health implications and is a clean, renewable crop whose 'waste' products can be used for other purposes such as paper.
The most significant problem with canabis is that anyone can grow it.
Therefore, it's hard to profit from it. If you legalise it, why would you buy it from a tobacco company (who, make no mistake, are ready to produce pre-rolled anywhere in the world and have copyrighted their packet designs and trademarks already) when you can grow your own at low low low cost?
And there's the rub. If you can't sell it to people, you can't tax it... (However, one can make booze, but how many bother? If it's there, ready to go, the quality is assured and it's available, maybe people would go for it. A decent government would be able to create legislation that meant they reaped the tax benefit.)