Rynar wrote:
DiamondEye:
Your positions on this don't make much sense, and carry the weight of your career bias.
Of course they do. When in doubt, return to the Appeal to Motive! After all, there's no reason to actually engage in discussion when you can just appeal to the Glade's visceral distrust of all things law enforcement.
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First of all, if the cartels decided to go to a legitimate business model, and transitioned away from murder, intimidation, and drug trafficking in favor of boardrooms, import taxes, and business suits; who the **** cares. Certainly not me, nor any other reasonable and thinking person, other than to be thrilled that they are no longer committing heinous crimes in the process of filling an market need created by our own poorly thought out drug policies. It is not the job of our government to commit resources to stopping legitimate business practices because of the indignation of border patrol agents who are, quite frankly, to close to the issue to form reasonable opinions. We should not be in the business of deciding who gets to participate in legal market-places, especially internationally.
In other words, I'm biased because of your appeal to motive. Good thinking. We can add your blatant poisoning the well to it; you're just spouting your opinions and claiming no "reasonable, thinking person" could possibly disagree with them. Guess what? Reasonable and thinking people do not simply proclaim themselves correct and dismiss any and all disagreement in that fashion. I am not the biased one here. You are. You are so in love with your own political philosophies that you cannot see how anyone might think differently.
As to who cares, anyone with a shred of decency cares about not rewarding brutal murdering kidnapping criminal organizations. If I need to explain that to you, it certainly does not bode well for the "reasonable and thinking" aspects of your position.
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Secondly, the notion that they would be able to smoothly transition to legitimate business models is dubious at best. It's not something they do well. If it was, there are thousands of legitimate enterprises they could have entered into. The truth is, that the types who are attracted to black-markets find those markets attractive because they are more inclined to use force than to offer better products at a lower cost. Those cartels will simply move on to other enterprises. Additionally, going to a legitimate business model is not some magical absolution of past criminal actions. It will not absolve those already implicated in crimes of those crimes. It does not turn Pablo Escobar into Eberhard Anheuser absent a policy decision by our government.
Sorry, but you are not in a position to know what cartels do and do not do well. It is not at all dubious to suggest that they could transition to legitimate business especially in view of A) decreased losses to enforcement action and B) the even more hilarious suggestion that American growers would somehow instantaneously replace them. I'm sure someone will now whine that they never said it would be instantaneous, but the fact is no one ever gave even the slightest hint of an actual estimate of at what point American growers would supposedly become dominant. Interestingly, however, I suggested a ban on imports would only need to last 5 to 10 years.
As for not absolving them of past actions, I ahte to break it to you but it doesn't matter because they're
in Mexico. I see no real likelyhood we're going to send SF down there to grab them.
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Lastly, The fact that you are unfamiliar with the product being discussed precludes you from speaking to any business models surrounding that industry intelligently. You remarked earlier in this thread that you don't know that marijuana grown domestically "tastes any different" than what is currently imported from Mexico speaks volumes. Not only do all (read: hundreds of thousands) strains of marijuana taste different, they all have different smells, effects, potencies, grades, etc. Many already carry brand names. The market for each product is very different, exactly in the same way that the market for Natural Light is very different from the market for a hops heavy craft beer. There is also a market for everything in between.
I hate to break it to you, but those minor variations in taste are nowhere comparable to the variations in types and differences in alcohol, which was the comparison being made when I made that remark. Way to take it completely out of context, however, and in any case, the mere existence of variation does not somehow imply Mexican varieties are inferior. I'm quite familiar with the product on question, and your attempt to claim I'm unfamiliar when you have no way of knowing my level of familiarity is simply more of your tactics of simply trying to score points by trying to claim anything you read and don't like must be because of ignorance.
Here's a clue: Smoking marijuana does not mean you actually know anything about the marijuana trade, and so far I'm seeing nothing but a couple people who want to get high and therefore are knee-jerk arguing against a 5 to 10 year ban on imports with domestic legalization because of the typical marijuana-lover assumption that smoking it means you actually know something about it, and are just in a huff at the idea that the governemnt might regulate your beloved plant in any way, shape, or form. That's augmented of course with a fairly typical level of "free market curez ALL RAARRR!!" nonsense, and arbitrary dismissal of anything you don't like.
You haven't actually addressed why a ban for the short term would be a problem at all. Everyone here agrees with domestic legalization. No one is talking perma-ban on imports. The disagreement is solely over a temp ban; you guys seem to think the cartels would be seriously weakened in the marijuana trade even without it; I'm saying that it's necessary to ensure that same serious weakening, so at worst a ban would be moot, at best it would weaken them even faster. No one's given any logical reason to oppose a short-term ban, and it's pretty clear it's just personal offense at the idea of regulation of any kind.
If you're going to assert that the ban would somehow allow the cartels to remain strong because it's their "business model", in the face of growing competition from legitimized American production, then I can only say that you are a total stranger to reason.