Lenas wrote:
How would the cartels be able to maintain a stranglehold on the market when any John or Jane could grow unhindered across the border? Two plants on rotation is be more than enough for me and my entire group of friends. You say the cartels are "in control of" marijuana production like it's a difficult thing to obtain or grow, but they're not exactly Monsato where the crops only grow for a year and then die out.
If marijuana were that easy to supply, there wouldn't be cartels
now. Plenty of people grow for personal use here as it is; marijuana farming is not uncommon in the U.S. and yet the cartels still supply an enormous amount. If domestic growing could seriously compete with cartels, there wouldn't be cartels. Why ship marijuana from Mexico allt he way to New York with the associated risk of apprehension if New York, or even West Virginia or Kentucky can meet demand?
If, however, Joe Redneck in Kentucky could grow his own and legally sell it, then he could vastly increase his productivity without any need to conceal it from law enforcement; a major impediment to his commercial success would be gone. The cartels, on the other hand, would still have to rely on getting it past
la migra over the border and underground distribution networks. If the assumptions we're making are correct, that would mean that American growers (who are not known to engage in widespread murder, intimidation, and other brutality) would eventually edge out cartel growers (who are known to do those things).
Money starvation should eventually then weaken the cartels to the point that the Mexican government can deal with them. Once they're gone (or, at least, out of the marijuana business; it's not like organized crime in Mexico will just vanish) then we can look at allowing imports from legitimate Mexican farmers.
Essentially, the idea would be to legalize marijuana in order to eliminate the costs associated with enforcement and the human cost of the associated crime, but avoid doing so in such a way that legitimizes the actual criminal that have been running it up to this point. Not only would that reward criminal behavior, but it would be **** Mexico twice; first by creating the problem with our domestic demand for marijuana combined with the ban, second by then legitimizing people that have terrorized their population and corrupted their government. While I always put our own country first, there's no reason to **** a neighbor and an ally over if there's a better way to do things.